Asked by bb
What was the most significant cause of the Ilkhanate’s collapse?(1 point)
Responses
The Ilkhanate collapsed because it was devastated by the bubonic plague.
The Ilkhanate collapsed because it was devastated by the bubonic plague.
The Ilkhanate collapsed because of the its support of Sufism.
The Ilkhanate collapsed because of the its support of Sufism.
The Ilkhanate collapsed because the ruler did not have a male heir.
The Ilkhanate collapsed because the ruler did not have a male heir.
The Ilkhanate collapsed because of internal revolts by the Han Chinese.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
The Ilkhanate collapsed because the ruler did not have a male heir.
When Abu Sa'id died in 1335 without a clear successor, it triggered a succession crisis and factional conflicts that fragmented central authority and led to the state's rapid disintegration (though the Black Death and other problems also weakened it).
When Abu Sa'id died in 1335 without a clear successor, it triggered a succession crisis and factional conflicts that fragmented central authority and led to the state's rapid disintegration (though the Black Death and other problems also weakened it).
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