
Some centuries after the Vikings' heyday, Genghis Khan and his Mongol armies, whose reputation for cruelty perhaps exceeded that of the Vikings, conquered most of the known world, establishing a kingdom that would last for several centuries. Yet in so doing, the Mongols brought stability to the Silk Road, that ancient connection between East and West, enabling commerce and exchange between these very different expressions of human culture. Much happened. As the Vikings pioneered international exploration, so the Mongols opened the door to the European Renaissance. Ironically, it took those considered lowest on the prevailing cultural totem pole to enlighten those "higher" to the real truth of the world.
It's a funny sort of wisdom, really, not the wisdom most people would consider genuinely true. Yet it changed the course of history, changed it, in large part, for the good.
It almost makes one think the universe really does have a point. And a God.