Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://citation.dbpedia.org/hash/e07700b2b156f2fd37e8a5cb054b94d0575ac952502412532c358fe0f48c5c49> ?p ?o }
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- e07700b2b156f2fd37e8a5cb054b94d0575ac952502412532c358fe0f48c5c49 first "Will".
- e07700b2b156f2fd37e8a5cb054b94d0575ac952502412532c358fe0f48c5c49 isCitedBy Persecution.
- e07700b2b156f2fd37e8a5cb054b94d0575ac952502412532c358fe0f48c5c49 last "Durant".
- e07700b2b156f2fd37e8a5cb054b94d0575ac952502412532c358fe0f48c5c49 page "459".
- e07700b2b156f2fd37e8a5cb054b94d0575ac952502412532c358fe0f48c5c49 quote "The Mohammedan Conquest of India is probably the bloodiest story in history. It is a discouraging tale, for its evident moral is that civilization is a precarious thing, whose delicate complex of order and liberty, culture and peace may at any time be overthrown by barbarians invading from without or multiplying within. The Hindus had allowed their strength to be wasted in internal division and war; they had adopted religions like Buddhism and Jainism, which unnerved them for the tasks of life; they had failed to organize their forces for the protection of their frontiers and their capitals, their wealth and their freedom, from the hordes of Scythians, Huns, Afghans and Turks hovering about India's boundaries and waiting for national weakness to let them in. For four hundred years India invited conquest; and at last it came.".
- e07700b2b156f2fd37e8a5cb054b94d0575ac952502412532c358fe0f48c5c49 title "The Story of Civilization: Our Oriental Heritage".