Hulagu, who had seized Baghdad and defeated …

Years: 1252 - 1395

Hulagu, who had seized Baghdad and defeated the Abbasid Caliphate in 1258 and conquered Mesopotamia and Syria, had returned to Mongolia upon receiving news of Mengke's death.

While he was gone, his forces were defeated by a larger, Mamluk, army at the Battle of Ain Jalut in Palestine in 1260.

This was the first significant Mongol defeat in seventy years.

The Mamluks had been led by a Turk named Baibars, a former Mongol warrior who used Mongol tactics.

Neither Kublai nor Hulagu make a serious effort to avenge the defeat of Ain Jalut.

Both devote their attention primarily to consolidating their conquests, to suppressing dissidence, and to reestablishing law and order.

Like their uncle, Batu, and his Golden Horde successors, they limit  their offensive moves to occasional raids or to attacks with limited objectives in unconquered neighboring regions.

After the failure of two invasion attempts against Japan in 1274 and 1281, Kublai also gives up his goal of expansion to the east.

In January 1293, Kublai invades Java and defeats the local ruler, only to be driven off the island by a Javanese ally who has turned against him.

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