The Mongol Empire
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Transcript The Mongol Empire
The Turkish & Mongol
Empires
or
“How Stinky Barbaric Nomads
took over the World”
Introduction
Turkish & Mongol invasions perhaps the most important to
world history in the period 1000-1500
Extended up to the very periphery of Eurasia
Redefined the relationship of nomadic to "civilized" people
made definitions more difficult for historians
previously the civilizations had unified lands of the nomads
now, however, the nomadic groups - both Turk and Mongol
- unified "civilized" lands under their control
These invasions from steppe of central Asia were part of a long
pattern dating back to Attila
Saljuk Turks
Came into ME from Aral Sea
(970)
Tughril Beg defeated remnants
of Abbasid Empire -- becoming
"sultan" of Islamic empire
(1055)
pushed towards the West in the
middle east Constantinople
Defeated Byzantium in 1071 at
Manzikert
Created sultanate of Rum
w/Nicaea as capital
continued to fight with the
Crusaders for Jerusalem
"Indian" Turks
Spread from Aral Sea into India
Introduced militantly strong
Islam throughout India
used force as well as
education –
Hinduism seen as sinful
polytheistic and had
pictures of the gods
conflict also between caste
based Hindu society and
egalitarian Muslim society
Mahmud
Established basis for problems of
modern India and Pakistan
Hindu and Muslims tension
Indian Turks (cont.)
most famous of Turks in India
was Mahmud (997-1030) "the
image breaker“
Destroyed Hindu statues,
paintings
India helpless to Turkish
onslaught
only one warrior class
rest converted to Islam
or relied on karma,
dharma, and
reincarnation
Conquest extended south to
Delhi,
India Turkish sultanate
The Mongol World Empire:
China & The Yuan Dynasty (1279-1368)
Greatest empire in history of the world:
extended from Caspian Sea to Pacific Ocean;
North into Russia, Siberia, & Korea
South into Persia & Burma
Rise of the Mongol Empire
•Nomadic people
•families belong to clans;
•clans belonged to tribes
•within tribes chiefs elected from nobility
•tribes politically divided
•traded & warred among themselves & neighbors
Genghis Khan
•Genghis Khan:
-founder of the Mongol Empire
-able to unite all the tribes
-elected as Great Khan
Military
Mongol Archer
•extremely disciplined & well
organized
•possessed superior tactics
•very mobile
•used terror as a weapon
•allowed conquered people to join
military
•all these helped defeat larger armies
Chinese canon, 1368
Division of the Mongol Empire
Golden Horde
Great Khanate
Chagatai
Ikhanate
•Genghis divided empire among his four sons
•over generations they became independent = 4
Khanates
•Ikhanate (Persia) – absorbed Persia & E.Turkish
region
•Golden Horde (Russia – Cossacks)
•Chagatai (C. Russia)
•Great Khanate (China, Mongolia, Korea)
•maintained trade & communication w/China
Mongol Rule in China
•Mongols conquer Beijing (1227)
•Kublai, chosen as Great Khan in 1260
•grandson of Genghis
•Reunifies Mongol Empire
•moves capital to Beijing
•Expands Grand Canal
•1271 adopts Chinese dynastic name = Yuan
•conquers the southern Sung in 1279
Kublai Khan
Government & Society under Kublai Khan
adopts custom of hereditary
succession
rebuilds Beijing as walled city
govt. shifts towards Chinese forms of
govt. and taxation
Chinese citizens segregated from the
400,000 Mongols in China
military service reserved for
Mongols only
Walls surrounding Beijing
military officers most important
positions
civil administration highly centralized
Relied on non-Chinese to run
bureaucracy
Societal Divisions
Categories:
•level one = Mongols
-top military & civil posts
•level two = Persians,Turks, some Europeans
-filled high civil posts
•level three = northern Chinese
•level four = southern Chinese
Kublai Khan w/Mongol Warriors
Chinese officials directly controlled Chinese
Citizenry & the Mongols controlled Chinese
officials.
Marco Polo
1275-1292
•served Kublai Khan
•influenced future traders & explorers
•brought knowledge of China to Europe
•diffusion of Asian cultures, technology & ideas
Religion
Christianity spread from Persia to central Asia & China
churches built
papal missions sent from Rome
Tibetan & Chinese Buddhism expand
Islam flourished the most
permanently established in central & western Asia
mosques built
Mosque
Cathedral
Buddhist Temple
Decline of Yuan Dynasty
dynasty collapses in 1368
Shortest dynasty in Chinese history
Rebellion, esp. in S. China
Plague in S. China -- pop. & labour
Spread to C. Asia, ME & Europe through trade routes
“The Black Death” kills ¼ of pop. in W. Europe
Mongols fighting Japanese Samurai
Decline of Yuan Dynasty (cont.)
Mongol siege of
Baghdad
Mongol Khanates separated by religion, culture, & distance
govt. officials corrupt
economy
Warlords control respective regions
Mongol influence in China quickly disappeared
Legacy of Mongol Rule
Collapse of Mongol rule in Persia
leads to rise of Timur (Tamerlane) &
Timurid rule in Persia, Bactria & India
Diffusion of ideas, technology, culture
across two continents
Renewed European interest in
science, literature, medicine, math
Sparks the Renaissance & Age of
Exploration
The Black Death
Unified resistance of various groups
against Mongol invaders
Timur & the siege of Bhatnair