Chapter 12: Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath 1200-1500
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Transcript Chapter 12: Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath 1200-1500
Chapter 12: Mongol Eurasia and
Its Aftermath
1200-1500
John Ermer
AP World History
Miami Beach Sr. High
Happening Now
Americas
1325: Aztecs found Tenochtitlan
1438-1533: Inca Empire
Europe
1215: Magna Carta signed in England
1337-1453: Hundred Years War
1454: Gutenberg Bible printed
Middle East
1258: Mongols attack Baghdad, end Abbassid Caliphate
1453: Ottoman Turks conquer Constantinople
Africa
1324-25: Mansa Musa’s pilgrimage to Mecca
1499: Vasco da Gama rounds Africa
Rise & Rule of The Mongols
Mongols: Turkic speaking pastoral nomads of Central Asia/Mongolia
Superb horsemen, herders, and hunters
Slave labor, tribute clans
Interfamily alliances + interfaith marriage= political federations
Self-sufficient with meat/milk, traded for iron
Khans spoke to and for God, shamanism
Mongol women give great respect and freedom relative to village women
1206-1227: Genghis Khan, Temüjin, becomes Mongol leader
Promotes religious tolerance, cultural diversity and exchange, and harsh
punishment for enemies
1206-1221: Empire stretches from China to Iran
1227-1241: Reign of Great Khan Ögödei
Established capital at Karakorum
Tanggut and Jin China destroyed, replaced with Mongol governors
1236-1241: Batu conquers Kievan Russia, Moscow, Poland, and Hungary
1265: Family unity breaks down when Khublai declares himself Khan
1271: Moves capital to Beijing, founds Yuan Empire in China
Other mongols establish Islam in Central Asia, maintain inter-Turkic relations
Genghis’s Family of
Khans
Genghis Khan
r. 1206-1227
Jagadai
Jochi
r. 1227-1242
Jagadai Khanate
Ögödei
Tolui
r. 1227-1241
Batu
r. 1224-1255
Güyük
Möngke
Golden Horde of
Russia
r. 1246-1248
r. 1248-1257
Khubilai
Hülegü
r. 1265-1294
r. 1256-1265
Yuan Emperor
Il-khan Emperor
Mongol Domains, 1300
Mongols & Islam
Islamic culture destroyed with Mongol invasion of Baghdad
Cultures difficult to reconcile
Il-kahn state founded by Hülegü in Persia
Shortly allied with Western European Crusader states in
Palestine, Lebanon
Convert to Islam in 1295
Golden Horde North Central Asia
Allied with Muslim Mamluk Turks, convert
Mongols adapt Muslim urbanism, tax system, science
Timur, commands Khanate of Jagadai, invades Middle East
and India
Responses in Western Eurasia
Russia
Golden Hoard rules from Sarai in south
Granted privileges to Orthodox Church
Russian language dominates
Russian princes = Mongol gov’t officials
Alexander Nevskii favored by Mongols
Novgorod & Moscow become trade centers
Power and population shifts north
Late 1400s, Ivan III, Prince of Moscow, is tsar
Anatolia and Eastern Europe
Independent Eastern European kingdoms
emerge (Lithuania, Serbia)
Ottoman Turks establish sultanates in Anatolia
Mehmet II conquers Constantinople, renamed
Istanbul
Mongols In China
Great Khan Ögödei heavily taxes China, Khubilai Khan continues
Yuan successes:
Secure transportation & communication
Eurasian cultural & population exchange
Transmission of information, ideas, and skills
Acceptance of Chinese religion and culture
Tibetan Buddhist lamas become influential
Reunified China, Jin capital of Beijing established as great city
Mongol Social Structure: Mongols, Central Asians, Middle Easterners,
Northern Chinese, Southern Chinese
Merchants enjoyed higher status than under traditional Chinese dynasties
Mongol infighting and Chinese farmer rebellion replaces Yuan Empire
with Ming Dynasty
Independent clans still in control of Mongolia welcome Yuan refugees,
new sense of Mongol unity established
Ming China
Buddhist Rebel Zhu Yuanzhang becomes emperor Hongwu
Reestablishes traditional Chinese culture
Some Mongol ideas linger (provinces, prof)
Establishes Ming capital in Nanjing
Espouses Confucian view of imperial power
Declares war on “barbarians”
Closes relations with Mid. East & Central Asia
Silver replaces paper money
Emperor Yongle (1403-1424) reintroduces Mongol ideas
Returns capital to Beijing, improves Forbidden City
Reopens relations with rest of Asia
Funds maritime exploration (Zheng He)
Ming China not as innovative as Song China
Return of civil exam system discourages merchant class growth
East Asia & The Mongols
Japan and Annam escape Mongol rule
Mongol threat forces centralization
Korea conquered, local traditions thrive
Under Mongols, heavy Yuan influence
After Mongols, Korea est. Yi kingdom and
trade, move capital to Seoul
Renew study of Confucian classics
Breakthrough in printing technology
Japan and Annam
Decentralized Japan inadequate against Mongols
Kamakura Shogunate centralizes, builds coastal
defenses and communication/trade infrastructure
Ashikaga Shogunate decentralize power to local
warlords, est. market towns, economy grows, Zen,
urbanization, tech and artistic advancement
Annam
After Mongol rule, Annam conquers Champa
United Annam is foundation of modern Vietnam