After the Mongol Sacking

Jlinker613

Banned
So is there any way that Zoroastrianism, Eastern Orthodox Christianity, Sufi Islam, and Buddhism could have become the dominant religions in the Non-Arabian portion of the Abbasid caliphate after the sacking of Baghdad by the mongol Empire?
 

PhilippeO

Banned
No, after Abbasid Islam has been too large and entrenched on the Middle East society.


after Umayyad non-islamic religion still had hope of recovery, after Abbasid no.
 
Unless, maaaybe, a Mongol ruler converted to one of these non-Islamic religions, became a fanatic and decide to convert or kill all Muslims.

I know that'd be very stretched, given that Mongol rulers usually practiced religious tolerance.
 
Unless, maaaybe, a Mongol ruler converted to one of these non-Islamic religions, became a fanatic and decide to convert or kill all Muslims.

I know that'd be very stretched, given that Mongol rulers usually practiced religious tolerance.

And then all the Muslims rebelled and the Khan was murdered by less insane advisers. That sort of conviction to kill all Muslims when you have millions of them can't come from nowhere.

Anyways, yeah. Maybe Byzantium can become the major power once again in the levant. Other than that I'm not entirely sure how to do Buddhism and Zoroastrianism. Both have been shunted from the area of the Islamic world.
 
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