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ERA 4'2 Interregional Expectation: THE MONGOLS

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Title: ERA 4'2 Interregional Expectation: THE MONGOLS


1
ERA 4.2 Interregional Expectation THE MONGOLS
  • Craig Benjamin
  • Day Two
  • Session 2A

2
Introduction
  • This lecture considers how the Mongol invasions
    altered the course of world history!
  • Invasions are the quintessence of cultural
    evolution and syncretism in Eurasia
  • Second half of 13th C they moved out of Central
    Asia to conquer China, India, the Middle East and
    Europe, establishing a vast world empire
  • Chinggis Khan (1162-1227) claimed to have a
    mandate from heaven to rule the world
  • Although they were destroyers of cities, they
    also fostered trade and exchange between east and
    west, patronized the arts, promoted religious
    tolerance, and provided security and cultural
    unity across Eurasia

www.millikin.edu/history
3
Mongol Origins
  • Mongols were Central Asian nomads who interacted
    with the agrarian sedentary communities from the
    4th C BCE
  • Decisions made by a council of warriors chiefs
    were first among equals but had substantial
    power women had relative freedom, respect and
    influence
  • Mongols held military advantage through their
    cavalry tactics, mobility and prowess with the
    bow and arrow
  • Eventually Mongols themselves became sedentized
    and acquired the languages, religions, cultural
    patterns and administrative skill of the peoples
    they conquered


steppe.hobi.ru/materials/ gorelic-26.shtml
4
Includes
  • Part One Formation of the Mongol Empire
  • Part Two Mongol Military and Tactics
  • Part Three Mongol Imperial Structure
  • Part Four China Under the Mongols

5
Part One Formation of the Mongol Empire
  • Early in the 13th C Mongols began their campaigns
    of conquest - within a century they had subdued
    Eurasia from China to the Danube River
  • Established a Pax Mongolica which facilitated
    trade and exchange across Eurasia until the 17th
    C largest empire the world had ever known
    (similar in size to the Soviet Union)

6
An Empire that is TOO Big?
  • When it expanded far beyond its administrative
    centers it began to weaken, depending on
    provincial governors with autonomous power
  • Empires difficult to hold together once they
    expand beyond the distance that the rulers army
    can march in a single season

trionfi.com/ 0/e1/001/t.html
7
Chinggis Khan
  • Mongol success owed much to the guiding genius
    who launched his people into history
  • Son of a minor Mongol chief, he was born c. 1162
    and named Temujin (Man of Iron)
  • When his father was killed by enemies, Temujin
    spent years in exile on the steppes, gathering
    followers and using tribal war to form a new
    Mongol confederacy
  • 1206 recognized by the Mongol confederation as
    Chinggis Khan (Oceanic Ruler) indicating the
    aspirations to world power of the Mongols

www.stanford.edu
8
Mongol Expansion First Phase Overview
  • In the first stage of expansion (to 1241) Mongols
    conquered the Uighurs and Tanguts, invaded N
    China, seized Turkestan and Afghanistan, then
    invaded Persia
  • Chinggis died in 1227, succeeded by his two-year
    old son Ogedei (1229-1241)

faculty.cua.edu
9
Conquest of Northern China
Jurchen (Jin) Peoples
  • Chinggis Khan himself extended Mongol rule to
    Northern China
  • Since 1127 the nomadic Jurchen people had been in
    control of the north, while the Song Dynasty
    continued to rule in the south
  • In 1211 Mongol armies began to raid Jurchen
    northern China, and by 1215 Mongols had captured
    the Jurchen capital near modern Beijing
  • City was renamed Khanbaliq (City of the Khan)
    which became the capital of Mongol China
  • By 1220 the Mongols had complete control over
    northern China

10
Invasion of Persia
  • Leaving part of his army to control N. China,
    Chinggis Khan led the Mongol forces west into
    Afghanistan and Persia
  • These regions were ruled by the Khwarazm Seljuq
    Turks
  • Mongols had offered the Khwarazm shah the chance
    to establish trade relations, but when the shah
    tried to have Chinggis Khan murdered, the Mongols
    sought revenge
  • The Khwarazm shah died on an island in the
    Caspian Sea, and his armies were shattered

Revenge against the Khwarazam Shah
11
Mongols Ravage Persia
  • To make sure the Khwarazm state could never again
    be a challenge to his own empire, Chinggis Khan
    wreaked destruction on the region
  • Mongols ravaged dozens of cities, demolishing
    buildings and killing hundreds of thousands of
    people
  • Also destroyed the delicate qanat irrigation
    systems, resulting in severely reduced
    agricultural production
  • Devastation wrought by the Mongols was felt for
    centuries afterwards

12
Death of Chinggis Khan
  • By the time of his death in 1227, Chinggis Khan
    had laid the foundations for a vast and mighty
    empire
  • He had united the Mongols and established Mongol
    supremacy in N. China, Central Asia and Persia
  • However, he ruled through his control of the
    army and did not establish a central government
    for his empire
  • Chinggis Khans heirs continued his conquests,
    but also took up the task of designing a more
    permanent imperial structure

Image of Chinggis Khan in a hillside in Nadaam,
Mongolia to mark the 800th anniversary of the
founding of the Mongol Empire
13
Division of the Empire
  • Chinggis Khans death set off a power struggle
    amongst his sons and grandsons
  • Eventually his heirs divided vast realm into four
    regional empires
  • Great Khans ruled China the wealthiest part of
    the empire
  • Descendants of Chaghatai (one of the sons of
    Chinggis Khan) ruled Central Asia
  • Persia was dominated by rulers known as the
    Ilkhans
  • The khans of the Golden Horde dominated Russia
  • But as long as the empire existed, ambition
    fuelled constant tension between the four Great
    Khans

Coins of the Persian Ilkhans
14
Mongol Empire The Four Khanates
depts.washington.edu/
15
Mongol Invasions of Russia and Europe
In the 1230s and 40s, Mongols of the Golden Horde
under the control of Chinggis Khans son Ogedei
invaded Russia and Eastern Europe When Ogedei
died his widow ruled for a time as regent There
was a second period of female rule in 1248 when
Guyuk Khan died
faculty.cua.edu/
16
The Mongols in Russia
  • Mongols of the Golden Horde prized the steppes
    north of the Black Sea as prime pastureland for
    their horses
  • Raided Russia frequently but did not occupy it,
    because they saw Russia as an unattractive land
    of forests
  • However they did maintain hegemony over Russia
    until the mid-15th century, when the princes of
    Moscow rejected Mongol domination and began to
    build their own powerful state
  • But Mongols descended from the Golden Horde
    continued to rule Crimea until the late 18th
    Century

17
Further Expansion in Central Asia and Persia
  • Between 1251 and 1259, Chinggis grandson Mongke
    led armies into Tibet and Korea his brother
    Hulegu defeated the Abbasid caliphate of Persia,
    Palestine and Syria, bringing to an end the
    classical era of Islam
  • But by 1260 the Mongol tide in West Asia was
    stopped in Syria by the Egyptian Mamaluk army
  • Hulegus army was cosmopolitan, including Chinese
    catapult operators
  • He integrated the soldiers, artists and
    professionals of the conquered peoples to create
    an effective syncretic culture

Mongol Suit of Armor
ubpost.mongolnews.mn
18
Mongol Rule in Persia
Persians (right) attack the Mongols
  • The Mongols adopted different tactics in
    different lands they controlled
  • In Persia they made major concessions to local
    interests
  • Mongols occupied the highest positions, but
    Persians served as ministers, provincial
    governors and state officials
  • The Mongols basically allowed the Persians to
    administer the ilkhanate so long as they
    delivered tax receipts and maintained order

19
Mongols and Religion
Courtiers at the Court of Ghazan
  • Over time the Mongols assimilated to Persian
    traditions
  • Mongol rulers observed their native shamanism,
    but they tolerated all faiths Islam,
    Nestorianism, Christianity, Buddhism and Judaism
  • Gradually the Mongols converted to Islam
  • In 1295 Ilkhan Ghazan publicly embraced Islam and
    most of the Mongols in Persia followed his lead
  • Ghazans conversion led to large-scale massacres
    of Christians and Jews, and restored Islam to a
    privileged position in Persia

20
Mongol and Persian Women
  • This 14th C painting shows a Mongol Princess on
    a promenade (a horseback ride) from a Persian
    miniature about mid-14th century. Note that the
    Persian women in the background are veiled.
    Mongol women had their heads covered, but their
    faces were not veiled.

21
Part Two Mongol Military Structure and Tactics
  • Mongol military organization was simple, but
    effective
  • Organization based on an old tradition of the
    steppe, which was like todays decimal system
  • Army was built upon a squad of ten, called an
    "arban" ten "arbans" constituted a company of a
    hundred, called a "jaghun
  • Ten "jaghuns" made a regiment of a thousand
    "mingghan
  • Ten "mingghans" would then constitute a regiment
    of ten thousand ("tumen"), which is the
    equivalent of a modern division

22
Discipline and Planning
  • Army's discipline distinguished
  • Mongol soldiers from their peers
  • Forces tailored for mobility and speed
  • To ensure mobility soldiers were lightly armored
    compared to many of the armies they faced also
    functioned independently of supply lines,
    speeding up army movement
  • Discipline was inculcated in traditional hunts or
    nerge
  • Campaigns preceded by careful planning,
    reconnaissance and gathering of information
    relating to the enemy territories and forces
  • The success, organization and mobility of the
    Mongol armies let them fight on several fronts at
    once

23
Mongol Soldier
  • All males who were aged from 15 to 60 and were
    capable of undergoing rigorous training were
    eligible for conscription into the army

www.photoglobe.info/ gb
24
Siege Skills
  • Unlike other mobile fighters such as the Huns or
    the Vikings, the Mongols were also very
    comfortable in the art of the siege
  • They were very careful to recruit artisans from
    the cities they plundered, and along with a group
    of experienced Chinese engineers, they were
    expert in building the trebuchet and other siege
    machines
  • These were mostly built on the spot using nearby
    trees

25
  • Another advantage of the Mongols was their
    ability to traverse large distances even in
    appallingly cold winters
  • Frozen rivers led them like highways to large
    urban settlements on their banks
  • In addition to siege engineering, Mongols were
    also adept at river-work, crossing the river Sajo
    in spring flood conditions with thirty thousand
    cavalry during one night during the Battle of
    Mohi (April, 1241 pictured below right),
    defeating the Hungarian king Bela IV
  • Similarly, in the attack against the Khwarezmshah
    a flotilla of barges were used to prevent escape
    on the river.

Fieldcraft Skills
26
Mongol Tactics
  • Mongols used terror tactics to control conquered
    people in the early stages of expansion
  • Commanders practiced mass murder, torture and
    forced resettlement on conquered peoples
  • In Baghdad Hulegu probably executed hundreds of
    thousands of men, women and children
  • Destroyed ancient irrigation systems, almost
    ruining Mesopotamian agriculture
  • Mongke moderated these policies by restoring
    economic productivity, and providing security for
    trade

Mongols Attack Baghdad Feb 10th 1258
www.herodote.net
27
Part 3 Mongol Imperial Structure
  • Mongols eventually learned to administer the
    largest empire in history (required many
    languages to control it)
  • Under Mongke cultural differences were
    accommodated, coins were minted, taxes collected,
    a census taken, and a Mongol courier system
    across Eurasia established
  • Trade tolls regularized, roads improved, and
    merchant security guaranteed, all of which
    boosted trade and travel
  • Government within the empire was conducted by
    tributary vassal rulers who were rewarded with
    lavish gifts

www.chuu.com/shop
Nucleus of the military was a cavalry of 130,000
Mongols, augmented by infantry and siege troops
from captured states. 14th C Japanese Woodblock
Mongols attempt to invade Japan
28
Mongol Trade Networks Silk Roads Revived
  • Mongols prized their commercial and trade
    relationships with neighboring economies and they
    continued this policy during the process of their
    conquests and during the expansion of their
    empire
  • All merchants and ambassadors with proper
    documentation and authorization, traveling
    through their realms were protected, which
    greatly increased overland trade
  • During the 13th and early 14th Cs, European
    merchants, numbering hundreds, perhaps thousands,
    made their way from Europe to the distant land of
    China
  • (Marco Polo only one of the
  • best known of these)
  • Well-traveled and relatively
  • well-maintained roads linked
  • lands from the Mediterranean
  • basin to China

29
Maritime Trade
  • However, the Mongol Empire had negligible
    influence on seaborne trade
  • And Maritime trade was much larger, both in
    value and volume than the overland trade that
    passed through the territories under the control
    of the Mongol Empire

30
Part Four China Under the Mongols Kublai Khan
andMarco Polo
  • During the reign of Kublai Khan (1260-1294) the
    Mongol court moved to Peking and the new Yuan
    dynasty established
  • Most of knowledge comes from the Venetian
    traveler Marco Polo who arrived at Kublais court
    in 1275
  • Polo served the khan for about 17 years as his
    trusted advisor before returning home
  • His detailed descriptions of the Chinese court
    was believed to be lies, and when he returned to
    Europe he was imprisoned for a time

Kublai Khan
www.china-inc.com/education
31
Yuan China as Reported by Marco Polo
  • Kublai retained some traditional government
    structures in China, although Mongol law
    prevailed
  • Chinas social system took care of the sick, aged
    and orphaned, and the khan had 12,000 personal
    retainers
  • Mongol court was not greatly influenced by
    Chinese cultural traditions they dismantled the
    Confucian educational and exam system e.g.

www.jugendheim-gersbach.de
Polos description of the great canals,
granaries, social services, technology and
regular bathing (all unknown to Europe) not to
mention amazing creatures he saw on his journey
were astonishing, his book a bestseller. 14th
Century Painting of the Polos in China
32
Decline of Mongol Rule in Persia
  • Excessive spending gradually drained the
    treasury, and the tax revenues also began to dry
    up
  • In the early 1290s the ilkhan tried to resolve
    these financial difficulties by introducing paper
    money (to drive precious metals into the hand of
    the government)
  • But merchants closed their shops rather than
  • accept the worthless paper money, so that
  • commerce ground to a halt
  • After the death of Ilkhan Ghazan in 1304,
  • the dynasty went into a steep decline
  • blighted by factional disputes
  • When the last Mongol ruler died without
  • an heir in 1335, the ilkhanate collapsed
  • and local governors ruled Persia until the
  • arrival of the Turks late in the 14th C

Mongol Ilkhan
33
Decline of the Yuan Dynasty
Kublai Khan hunting
  • The Mongols also used paper money in China (as
    the Tang and Song had done) but did not maintain
    adequate reserves of bullion to back up the paper
    currency
  • The people lost confidence in the economy as
    prices rose sharply
  • Political infighting also hastened Mongol decline
  • From the 1320s on, power struggles, assassination
    and civil war blighted Mongol China

34
Ming China
  • A nationalist rebellion broke out in the south in
    1352- young Buddhist ruler called Hong Wu
    established the Ming Dynasty (which would rule
    until 1644)
  • In 1368 Ming forces captured Khanbaliq and the
    Mongols departed China for good, to return to the
    steppes
  • Under the Ming government was stabilized and
    China defended from invasion for three centuries
    (as we will see next week)
  • Chinas prosperous and indigenous culture
    fostered in an era that blocked out foreign
    influences, although early Ming emperors engaged
    with the west

35
The Pax Mongolica Relinking East and West
  • During the century-long Mongol peace, East and
    West closer than ever before
  • Mongol rulers positively encouraged travel and
    communication
  • They established a courier network that rapidly
    relayed news, information and government orders
  • With this sort of Mongol encouragement,
    missionaries, traders and adventurers journeyed
    with ease to and from Africa, Asia and Europe

36
Diplomatic Missions
  • Throughout the Mongol Era the great khans of
    China, the ilkhans of Persia, and the other khans
    maintained close communication by means of
    diplomatic embassies
  • Also had diplomatic relationships with rulers in
    Korea, Vietnam, India and Western Europe
  • Several European ambassadors traveled to Mongolia
    and China to deliver messages from authorities
    seeking to form alliances with the Mongols
  • Diplomats also traveled west,
  • including Rabban Sauma, a
  • Nestorian Christian monk born in
  • Khanbaliq, who visited Italy and
  • France as a representative
  • of the Persian ilkhan

Modern Mongol women dressed like courtiers at the
Court of the Persian Ilkhans
37
(No Transcript)
38
  • Like the Silk Roads in earlier times, Eurasian
    trade routes during the Mongol Era served as
    highways for missionaries
  • Christian missionaries journeyed to the Mongols
    John of Plano Carpini who was sent by Pope
    Innocent IV to visit the great khan in 1246
  • Later the Flemish Franciscan William of Rubruck
    visited Mongkes court in 1254 and John of Monte
    Corvino made thousands on converts in Peking
    between 1289 and 1322

Missionary Efforts (Map of the journey of
William of Rubruck)
39
Journeys of Ibn Battuta
  • Between 1325 - 1354 famous Muslim traveler Ibn
    Battuta visited Constantinople and every Middle
    Eastern Islamic state, India, Sri Lanka,
    Indonesia and China
  • He noted that traders benefited from lower
    tariffs, and silk and spices flowed from east to
    west along the old Silk Roads, and by sea

40
  • Although renowned for the slaughter and havoc
    wrought by their invasions, Mongol control also
    led to stability
  • Encouraged trade and borrowed from old
    established civilizations, helping spread the
    knowledge of explosives, ship building, medicine,
    printing and navigation to Europe
  • In the Middle East they patronized art,
    architecture and the writing of history brought
    new crops, astronomy and ceramics to China
  • Gave Europe a new
  • awareness of the wider world
  • which eventually set Europeans
  • off on a path of global
  • expansion and colonization
  • But largest empire in
  • history was fleeting, and could
  • not endure because of logistical
  • problems and difficulty
  • of administration

The Mongol Legacy
Descendants of the Mongols working in a Beijing
market
home.tiscali.be
41
Conclusion
  • For millennia either side of the BCE/CE divide
    the role of steppe nomadic peoples was critical
    in diffusing Eastern culture and technology to
    the West, and European religions and beliefs to
    the East
  • The list includes Indo-Europeans, Semitic
    peoples, Hittites, Assyrians, Aryans, Xiongnu,
    Dorians, Huns, Germanic tribes, Turks and now the
    Mongols
  • After the collapse of the Classical Era, the Silk
    Roads and other major trans-Eurasian exchange
    systems fell into disuse, and the first great
    world system ceased to operate.
  • But a thousand years later, as a result of the
    Pax Mongolica, an intensive exchange of goods and
    ideas once again began to take place that created
    a new medieval world system - and this was to
    be the forerunner to the emergence of capitalism,
    globalization and the subsequent age of European
    hegemony
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