Cum Horny Slut


Anime Insider's 50 greatest anime: 50. Vision of Escaflowne 49. Saikano 48. Beserk 47. Kino's Journey 46. Cardcaptor Sakura 45. Fantastic Children 44. Irresponsible Captain Tyler 43. Giant Robo: The Animation 42. Twelve Kingdoms 41. Azumanga Daioh 40. Urusei Yatsura 39. Astro Boy 38. Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust 37. Fruits Basket 36. Night on the Galactic Railroad 35. Excel Saga 34. Trigun 33. Read or Die 32. Princess Mononoke 31. Gunbuster: Aim for the Top! 30. Samurai X: Trust and Betryal 29. The Place Promised in Our Early Days 28. Planetes 27. Samurai Champloo 26. Mobile Suit Gundam 0080: War in the Pocket 25. Princess Tutu 24. Serial Experiments Lain 23. Galaxy Express 999 22. Patlabor: The Movie 2 21. Tokyo Godfathers 20. Gankutsuou 19. My Neighbor Totoro 18. Boogiepop Phantom 17. Paranoia Agent 16. Grave of the Fireflies 15. Haibane Renmei 14. Ghost in the Shell/Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex 13. Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind 12. Now and Then, Here and There 11. Fullmetal Alchemist 10. Macross Plus 9. Akira 8. The Castle of Cagliostro 7. Jin-Roh: The Wolf Brigrade 6. Neon Genesis Evangelion 5. Revolutionary Girl Utena 4. FLCL 3. Millennium Actress 2. Porco Rosso 1. Cowboy Bebop


the beginning an overview: Where and when Genghis (and his successors) changed history IOTL.

1205-09: Tangutes / Hsi-Hsia 1207: Southern Siberia 1209: Uighurs 1212: Kara-Kitai 1211-15: Northern China 1220: Iraqi Seljuks, slight influence on Georgia/Armenia 1219-25: Choresm 1223: Battle of Kalka - slight influence on Russian princedoms 1227: Hsi-Hsia destroyed 1231: Influence on Korea under the Goryeo Dynasty 1233/34: Strong influence on Northern China 1237: Volga Hungarians, Volga Bulgars defeated 1236-40: Strong influence on Russia except Novgorod 1239: Armenia since ~1240: Small changes (well, compared to the results of a Mongolian conquest) spread through Europe and Northern Africa. 1240/46: Influence on Tibet 1241/42: All of Eastern Europe - Teutonic Order, Drang nach Osten , Poland, Silesia, Moravia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria is influenced. 1243: Rum-Seljuks 1253: Kingdom of Dali in SW China 1255: Remains of Kerman-Seljuks 1256: Strong influence on Korea; Assassins destroyed 1258: Strong influence on Caliphate of Baghdad 1260-: Slight influence on Sultanate of Delhi and Egypt, strong influence on Syria (1258) 1268-79: Southern China 1274/81: No attack on Japan, no "divine wind" necessary 1283: Khmer Empire 1284/85 and 1287/88: Vietnam 1287: Pagan Empire in Burma 1290: No Expedition to Java 1337-52: No / delayed Black Death; influences all of Europe, Asia and Northern Africa. 1398 (OK, probably indirect changes will happen earlier here): Sultanate of Delhi

America, Australia, and parts of Africa south of Sahara will stay unchanged until they're discovered by travelers from other continents. But I won't tell when that's going to happen.

Read a story here...

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Note my experiment with the font colors: Red is for events that happened IOTL but not here, blue is for events that happened IOTL and ITTL, and black is for all events which happen differently ITTL.

Ogadai against Jalal-ad-Din

1200: Temujin dies by an accident. Since his four sons (Jochi, Chagatai, Ogadai, and Tolui) are still too young (they're between 10 and 15 years old now), he has no clear successor. Enemies of Temujin, like his former friend and blood brother Jamukha Gurkhan, some of the clans and people he defeated and some people who're simply ambitious try to use the situation, and the people Temujin already united fall apart. Some of Temujin's "Dogs of war" (Subodai, Chilaun, Jelme and Borchu) and his family are still willing to fight to preserve his heritage, but for the beginning his dream has suffered a setback. The following years are filled by infighting between the various steppe tribes and people, with too many battles and changing alliances to mention them.

(as OTL) Sultan Ala ad-Din Tekish of Choresm dies and is succeeded by his son, Ala ad-Din Muhammad.

1205: Ogadai, the most talented and charismatic of Temujin's sons, is old enough to fight by himself for his father's dream, but he still needs the support of his elder brothers and the supporters of his father. He'll never be able to be a ruler as strong as his father.

(as OTL) Muhammad has conquered all of Great Seljuk and declared himself Shah.

1207: Jochi (who is suspected that Temujin isn't really his father) is killed by his brother(?) Chagatai.

1210: After Chagatai dies in a fight, Ogadai finally becomes the accepted Khan of the Mongols. Now he can continue the suspended work of his father to unite the steppe people. He'll take longer for that than his father and won't be 100% successful, though.

1212 (as OTL): Shah Muhammad defeats the Gur-Khan Kutluk and conquers the lands of the Kara Kitai, to whom the Choresmians once had to pay tribute.

1213: Ogadai defeats the Merkites. Now he plans to fight the Tatars who once killed his father's father, but the attacking Keraites force him to postpone the plan. To make things worse for him, the subjugated people often rebel because he makes them introduce the Mongols' Code of Law.

1216: Keraites defeated by Ogadai. Now he's ready to fight the Tatars.

1217/18 (as OTL): Shah Muhammad plans to attack the Caliphate of Baghdad, but too many of his soldiers die in a blizzard in the mountains, so he has to postpone the attack.

1221: After many bloody fights, the remaining Tatars join his horde.

1222: Shah Muhammad dies, is succeeded by his son Jalal-ad-Din. (OOC: There's not too much known about him; IOTL, he managed to save himself by jumping from a dangerously high place into a river after having lost against the Mongols; even Genghis is said to have been impressed by his courage, so I'm giving him the benefit of doubt and make him a courageous warrior ITTL.) Jalal-ad-Din reigns a great empire, consisting of today's Iran and all the -stans. However, this also means he has to care for various groups trying to rebel against him. Being a good warrior, he eventually succeeds and keeps the empire together.

1225: Naimans defeated.

1227: Uighurs defeated. Ogadai notes that they use writing, which the Mongols don't know yet. He thinks it would be a good idea to use this new knowledge.

Since 1229: Ogadai starts writing down the Yassa, the old and new Laws of the Mongols.

1230: Jalal-ad-Din has consolidated his empire.

1230-32: Ogadai leads the united steppe people against the Tangutes / Hsi-Hsia. Their country is overrun, many of their villages burnt down and their people enslaved. The Mongols don't have the necessary technics to storm their cities, though. OTOH, they manage to capture the secret of gunpowder. Ogadai wants to take the cities by besieging them, but after two years the other Mongols think they have a) spent enough time here and b) there's not enough left to loot for the effort. So Ogadai leaves the country for a high tribute (mostly camels). The Hsi-Hsia empire has suffered extremely under the occupation, and won't recover from it.

1233: Jalal-ad-Din demands formal recognition from the caliph in Baghdad. When the caliph Al-Mustansir rejects his claim, the Shah proclaims one of his nobles caliph and marches towards Baghdad to depose the caliph.

1234: Kara-Kitai defeated by Mongols. Ogadai now reigns the biggest (if sparely populated) empire on the planet.

1235-38: Various campaigns in Southern Siberia against the Kirghiz and Tuvans.

1236: Choresmians take Baghdad, topple the old Abbasid caliph. Al-Mustansir is imprisoned, some of his relatives flee to Egypt and the lands of the Rum-Seljuks.

1239: Choresm Shah Jalal-ad-Din marries his daughter Khadiya to his puppet Caliph.

1240: After a governor of the Choresm Shah insults Ogadai by killing his diplomats, he decides to attack Choresm. In the battle near the city of Otrar, Ogadai and Jalal-ad-Din meet each other. The attack of the Mongols is successful at first, but the courageous Shah manages to collect his men and prevents a catastrophy. The situation at other frontiers is also indecisive.

1241: Ogadai dies. His son Guyuk (not the same-named from OTL) is the designed successor, but some of his family members won't accept him, and some of the allied non-Mongol people (Tatars, Kara-Kitai, Naimans, Merkites) wish for more independency. Jalal-ad-Din can use the situation for a counter-attack and drives the Mongols back behind Lake Balchash. He also manages to get the secret of gunpowder, which will become important in the future. The steppe people once again fall apart, not to be united at least for decades, waiting for another strong leader.

Read a story here...

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East Asia 1200-1300:

1201/04?: Muslims start attacking Bengal, conquering it during the next decades, ending the Sena dynasty.

1203: Khmer ruler Jayavarman VIII occupies Champa (South Vietnam) and makes it a Khmer province.

1206: General Aibak takes power in the Sultanate of Delhi.

1211 / 2908, Yin Metal Sheep (Chinese Calendar): Khitan chief Yelü Liuge doesn't revolt in Liaodong, and the general (and IOTL later warlord) Puxian Wannu doesn't have to fight him.

1213 (2910, Yin Water Chicken): Northern Chinese (Jin) emperor Wányán Yongjì isn't killed, continues to reign twenty more years.

1214/15 (2911, Yang Wood Dog / 2912, Yin Wood Pig): Jin don't move their capital to Kaifeng, as they did IOTL.

1216: Chola Empire in South India falls apart, later to be replaced by the Pandyan