
Summary
In 1408, the Timurid Khanate was no longer at its peak, the Ottoman Empire was in danger, the Byzantines had continued to be in a state of disarray for a hundred years, the Mamluks had recovered their lost territories with trepidation, and the world seemed to have temporarily returned to peace.
But this world was a little different from the one Li Rufeng remembered—a general with horns on his head, an emir with a long tail, a wise man with a divine eye on his forehead, and a slave who was rotten but not dead...
Li Rufeng, who traveled to the Timurid Khanate, was very fortunate to have a cheat code for Mount & Blade 2, which allowed him to steadily develop as a shaman in a small grassland tribe, waiting for the right opportunity to "mount and blade" in this Central Asian region.
Notes, References, and Essays
Dear audience, I offer you a chapter of sincere reading prerequisites.
Every time I open a new book, it is undoubtedly the happiest moment because I can dig new holes.
This time, I'm trying to write a new book. When I wrote the first book, I was a reader who was out of books and started writing a hodgepodge of The Witcher with the background of the Warhammer 40k world. The second book was influenced by Cyberpunk 2077 and The Boys, and I wanted to write a Punisher-style story.
If you are interested, you can go to qd to check out the works of the author of the same name, "The Witcher of the Game" and "I Give the World Destruction and Rebirth".
This time, "Young Dreams" is my third book. It was inspired by a fictional concept about the Roman Golden Horde on Bilibili. The early scenes will be fixed in the chaotic Timurid Empire after the death of Timur the Great.
Writing this story itself is a process of self-learning. Through the method of fictional history, I can actively understand the historical changes in the Arabian Peninsula, Transoxiana and even the entire Central Asia from around 1410 to 1500, and fill in my own knowledge gaps.
As for the introduction of the belief in the Four Winds, it is entirely due to my personal interest. Some Warhammer experts can tell from the name of the Four Winds that it comes from the Warhammer series. The origin should be in a 40k series short story, used to describe the sudden rise of chaos beliefs in the wild world.
After all, in a land already riven by war over religious beliefs, introducing a completely new faith couldn't be any worse, right? Moreover, this faith carried truly extraordinary power. How would those zealots who had fought to the death for Constantinople for centuries react?
It's incredibly rewarding to paint a compelling, or at least interesting, world through my keyboard, and I hope you enjoy it as much as I do.
ps: In conclusion, due to my personal cognitive issues and the lack of information, if anyone finds some historical common sense errors in the article, please point them out and I will make the changes as quickly as possible.
ps: In history, the Timurid Khanate was completely Turkified, so the tribes that I described in the early stage that still believed in the primitive belief of Eternal Blue Sky should not exist at all. But in order to facilitate the development of the plot later, allow me to assume that the Islamization of the Chagatai Khanate was not so serious, and a large number of Mongols in the Eastern Chagatai Khanate still retained respect for this primitive belief.
ps: It is not easy to publish a new book. If you are interested, please cast your precious votes and you are welcome to leave a message in the comment area.
- 1 Page 1
- 2 Page 2
- 3 Page 3
- 4 Page 4
- 5 Page 5
- 6 Page 6
- 7 Page 7
- 8 Page 8
- 9 Page 9
- 10 Page 10
- 11 Page 11
- 12 Page 12
- 13 Page 13
- 14 Page 14
- 15 Page 15
- 16 Page 16
- 17 Page 17
- 18 Page 18
- 19 Page 19
- 20 Page 20
- 21 Page 21
- 22 Page 22
- 23 Page 23
- 24 Page 24
- 25 Page 25
- 26 Page 26
- 27 Page 27
- 28 Page 28
- 29 Page 29
- 30 Page 30
- 31 Page 31
- 32 Page 32
- 33 Page 33
- 34 Page 34
- 35 Page 35
- 36 Page 36
- 37 Page 37
- 38 Page 38
- 39 Page 39
- 40 Page 40
- 41 Page 41
- 42 Page 42
- 43 Page 43
- 44 Page 44
- 45 Page 45
- 46 Page 46
- 47 Page 47
- 48 Page 48
- 49 Page 49
- 50 Page 50
- 51 Page 51
- 52 Page 52
- 53 Page 53
- 54 Page 54
- 55 Page 55
- 56 Page 56
- 57 Page 57
- 58 Page 58
- 59 Page 59
- 60 Page 60
- 61 Page 61
- 62 Page 62
- 63 Page 63
- 64 Page 64
- 65 Page 65
- 66 Page 66
- 67 Page 67
- 68 Page 68
- 69 Page 69
- 70 Page 70
- 71 Page 71
- 72 Page 72
- 73 Page 73
- 74 Page 74
- 75 Page 75
- 76 Page 76
- 77 Page 77
- 78 Page 78
- 79 Page 79
- 80 Page 80
- 81 Page 81
- 82 Page 82
- 83 Page 83
- 84 Page 84
- 85 Page 85
- 86 Page 86
- 87 Page 87
- 88 Page 88
- 89 Page 89
- 90 Page 90
- 91 Page 91
- 92 Page 92
- 93 Page 93
- 94 Page 94
- 95 Page 95
- 96 Page 96
- 97 Page 97
- 98 Page 98
- 99 Page 99
- 100 Page 100
User Comments