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It refers to a civilization that kept very few records or have very few ruins for us to research, thus there culture is "lost" to our modern day world, and we can never really know what the civilization was like.
Ethnocentrism is perhaps the word you are searching for; the belief that one's own culture is the right one and other cultures are inferior.
A war between factions of the same country; there are five criteria for international recognition of this status: the contestants must control territory, have a functioning government, enjoy some foreign recognition, have identifiable regular armed forces, and engage in major military operations. or in simple words, A violent conflict between opposing groups within a country that becomes so intense that it appears like a war.
It's culture and prosperity!It had a well-earned reputation for torture, cruelty and ruthlessness. In certain places, they would wipe out civilization to the point where it would be unable to recover for generations, or even ever (they sowed salt in the fields, cut the canals, burned orchards, etc.) On the bright side, their huge and relatively stable empire allowed for safe travel, communication and trade between East and West for the first time since the fall of Rome. This was called Pax Mongolica, or Mongol Peace, and Western Civilization kind of owes it one.Its culture and prosperity.It still had its better effects on the upcoming nations as it was more rich in its culture than any other society at that time.It was famous for it miniatures and arts .It was the mughals,who set a trend of exchanging books and illustrations as a gift.
the Indus Valley Civilization was one of the world's first great urban civilizations. It flourished in the vast river plains and adjacent regions in what are now Pakistan and western India. The earliest cities became integrated into an extensive urban culture around 4,600 years ago and continued to dominate the region for at least 700 years, from 2600 to 1900 B.C. It was only in the 1920's that the buried cities and villages of the Indus valley were recognized by archaeologists as representing an undiscovered civilization.