Conquerors
Conquerors refers to individuals or groups who achieve military victory and establish control over territories beyond their original borders. The term is widely used in historical and literary contexts to describe leaders whose campaigns resulted in the expansion of states or the creation of new political orders. In ancient times, conquerors included rulers who built empires by subjugating neighboring polities, such as those of Mesopotamia, Egypt, Persia, and Macedon. In the 13th and 14th centuries, steppe empires expanded through coordinated cavalry campaigns. The 12th- to 14th-century Mongol conquests under Genghis Khan and his heirs are among the most expansive examples. In the early modern period, European powers often described their colonial and military campaigns as conquests, with figures labeled as conquerors by contemporaries and historians.
Scholars note that conquering is only part of imperial history; conquest typically involved integration of territories,
In contemporary usage, "Conquerors" may appear as a title or name in literature, film, sports teams, or