The Mongols
From their home on the steppes of Central Asia, the Mongols eventually ruled most of Eurasia
Mongol Conquests
Steppes are…
Mongolians were pastoralists
…and nomads didn’t “wander” followed seasonal patterns to find water and grass for animals lived in clans: groups with common ancestor
Lived in yurts or gers
Yurts are still used in Mongolia today
Known for skill on horseback
Genghis Khan Chingghis or Jenghiz named Temujin 1206 united Mongols given title Genghis Khan or Universal Ruler 1221 controlled Central Asia
army had 3 horses per soldier invented stirrup-- could stand, turn, shoot silk underwear under armor for protection 13th century saddle
Feared yet Respected organized army decimal units: 10 = platoon, 100 = company, 1000 = brigade employed clever strategies adopted weapons & technology used cruelty as weapon
There can be no doubt that even if for a thousand years to come no evil befalls the country, yet will it not be possible to completely repair the damage, and bring back the land to the state in which it was formerly. Hamd-Allah Mustawfi describing damage to Tigris and Euphrates Valley in The Geographical Part of the Nuzhat al-Qulub
The Four Khanates
Kublai Khan grandson of Genghis established Yuan Dynasty in 1279 moved capital to Beijing rather than ruling from the steppes Mongols lived apart from Chinese encouraged foreign trade tolerated Chinese culture
Kublai Khan welcomed many foreigners considered more trustworthy than Chinese spent 17 years in China told stories years later while imprisoned during war between Genoa and Venice Travels of Marco Polo Marco Polo
Failure to Conquer Japan 1274 forced Koreans to build massive fleet--largest invasion until WWII 1281 typhoon destroyed fleet Japanese praised kamikaze “Divine Wind”
Fall of Mongol Empire after Kublai Khan’s death resentment grew Chinese taxed to finance war floods cause famine, disease 1368 Ming overthrow Yuan only Golden Horde continues
Focus question Were the Mongols a regressive force or agents of cultural diffusion in world history? Regressive force to make worse Cultural diffusion Spread of culture Movement of ideas from one culture to another