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The Mongols

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Title: The Mongols


1
The Mongols
2
The Mongols
  • Of all the pastoral peoples who took a turn on
    the stage of world history, the Mongols made the
    most stunning entry.
  • Their thirteenth-century breakout from Mongolia
    gave rise to the largest land-based empire in all
    of human history, stretching from the Pacific
    coast of Asia to Eastern Europe.

3
The Mongols
  • The Mongol Empire at its height

4
The Mongols
  • This empire would join the nomadic peoples of the
    inner Eurasian steppes with the settled
    agricultural civilizations of outer Eurasia more
    extensively and more intimately than ever before.
  • It also brought the major civilizations of
    EurasiaEurope, China, and the Islamic worldinto
    far more direct contact than in earlier times.

5
The Mongols
  • Both the enormous destructiveness of the process
    and the networks of exchange and communication
    that it created were the work of the Mongols,
    numbering only 700,000 1,000,000 people.
  • This would be another of historys unlikely
    twists because for all of its size and fearsome
    reputation, the Mongol Empire left a surprisingly
    small cultural imprint on the world it had
    briefly governed.

6
The Mongols
  • Unlike the Arabs, the Mongols left the world no
    new religion or civilization.
  • Where the Islamic community offered a common
    religious home for all convertsconquerors and
    conquered alikethe Mongols never tried to spread
    their own faith among subject peoples.

7
The Mongols
  • The Mongols offered the majority of those they
    conquered little more than the status of
    defeated, subordinate, and exploited people,
    although people with skills were put to work in
    ways useful to Mongol authorities.
  • Unlike the Turks, whose languages and culture
    flourish today in many places far from the Turkic
    homeland, Mongol culture remains confined largely
    to Mongolia.

8
The Mongols
  • Many Mongols became absorbed into the settled
    societies they conquered.
  • After the decline and disintegration of the
    Mongol Empire, the tide turned against the
    pastoralists of inner Eurasia who were
    increasingly swallowed up in the expanding
    Russian or Chinese empires.
  • Nonetheless, while it lasted and for a few
    centuries after, the Mongol Empire exercised an
    enormous impact throughout the entire Eurasian
    world.

9
The Mongols
  • The Mongols, like most of the peoples of central
    Asia, were nomadic pastoralists who kept herds of
    animalshorses, sheep, goats, cattle, and camels.
  • Their society was built by adapting to the
    ecological conditions of arid lands.
  • Central Asia does not receive enough rainfall to
    support large-scale agriculture, but grasses and
    shrubs flourish on the steppes.

10
The Mongols
  • The steppes where the Mongols came from are flat,
    grassy areas with few treessimilar to the
    northern plains of North America.
  • The Onon River in Mongolia.

11
The Mongols
  • The steppes of Eurasia form "the largest unified
    area of flatlands in the world," an area too dry
    for farming without irrigation.
  • Without farming, the Mongols had to rely heavily
    on the animals they kept they rode horses, used
    oxen and camels to transport things, drank milk
    and ate meat and dairy products.
  • They used animal bones for tools and animal poo
    as fuel for their fires.

12
The Mongols
  • They made shoes and clothes out of wool and
    animal skins and they also covered their homes
    with felt that they made from their sheep's wool.
  • They even made an alcoholic drink from fermenting
    mares milk (called kumiss).

13
The Mongols
  • Their herds lived on native grasses, and since
    these nomads moved their homes from place to
    place, their animals did not overgraze any area
    of land. (Consider parallels with traditional
    Native American societies of the plains form and
    portability of their dwellings, management of
    animals, their impact on the environment.)

14
The Mongols
  • Their traditional type of dwelling, practically
    unchanged from the time of Chinggis Khan, is
    called a ger but is also known by the Russian
    word yurt.
  • These structures are made of a wooden support
    that stands in a cylindrical form, then covered
    with a thick layer of felt, and have a hole in
    the top (with a felt flap to close it when
    necessary) to let out the smoke from the
    household fire.

15
The Mongols
16
The Mongols
  • Since nomadic peoples produced limited amounts of
    pottery, leather goods, iron weapons, and tools,
    they avidly sought opportunities to trade with
    settled peoples.
  • With their mobility and knowledge of the steppes,
    they were ideally suited to organize and lead the
    caravans that crossed central Asia and linked
    settled societies from China to the Mediterranean
    basin along the Silk Roads.

17
The Mongols
  • Nomadic society generated two social classes
    elites and commoners.
  • Leaders among the elites organized clans and
    tribes into alliances.
  • Normally, these elite leaders did little
    governing because clans and tribes looked after
    their own affairs and resented interference.

18
The Mongols
  • But during times of war, elite rulers wielded
    absolute authority and dealt swiftly with those
    who didnt follow their orders.
  • This nomadic nobility was a fluid class and
    even though elite status was passed onto heirs,
    it could easily be lost and elites could return
    to the status of commoners, tending their own
    herds and following new leaders.

19
The Mongols
  • Meanwhile, commoners could win recognition and
    become elites by outstanding conduct,
    particularly through courageous behavior during
    war.
  • Then, if they were clever diplomats, they could
    arrange alliances between clans and tribes and
    gain enough support to displace established
    leaders.

20
The Mongols
  • World historians focus attention on large-scale
    and long-term processes of change in explaining
    what happened in history, but to understand the
    rise of the Mongol Empire, most scholars are
    forced to look closely at the role of one
    individualTemujin (1162?-1227), later known as
    Chinggis (or Genghis) Khan.

21
The Mongols
  • The twelfth-century world he was born into saw
    the Mongols as an unstable and fractious
    collection of tribes and clans, much reduced from
    a somewhat earlier and more powerful position in
    the shifting nomadic alliances in what in now
    Mongolia.
  • Everyone was feuding, declared a leading Mongol
    shaman. Rather than sleep, they robbed each
    other of their possessionsthere was no respite,
    only battle. There was no affection, only mutual
    slaughter.

22
Chinggis Khan
  • The early life of Temujin (Turkic temuriron and
    jinsmithblacksmith) showed few signs of a
    prominent future (this association with a strong
    metal would later be shared with Josef Stalin.)
  • His father had been a minor chieftain of a noble
    clan, but he was murdered (poisoned) by a tribal
    rival before Temujin turned 10.
  • The family was deserted by other members of their
    clan/tribe and they became social outcasts.

23
Chinggis Khan
  • Temujins small family, led by a resourceful
    mother, was forced to live by hunting, fishing,
    and gathering wild roots instead of the mares
    milk and mutton that was the staple diet of a
    Mongol warrior.
  • Without their own livestock, his family had
    fallen to the lowest level of nomadic life.
  • Several times a young Temujin eluded enemies
    wanting to eliminate him as a potential rival.

24
Chinggis Khan
  • In these desperate circumstances, Temujins
    remarkable character came into play.
  • A rival once captured him as a teenager and
    imprisoned him in a wooden cage, but Temujin made
    a daring midnight escape and regained his
    freedom.
  • As Temujin grew, his personal magnetism and
    courage became well known and caught the
    attention of a Khan (leader) of a tribe that had
    been loyal to and allied with his father.

25
Chinggis Khan
  • That Khan (Toghril) along with 20,000 warriors
    helped the young Temujin reunite other tribes
    that had been aligned with his father.
  • Temujin mastered the art of steppe diplomacy,
    which called for displays of personal courage in
    battle, combined with intense loyalty to
    alliesas well as a willingness to betray allies
    or superiors to improve ones positionand the
    ability to entice unaffiliated tribes into
    cooperative relationships.

26
Chinggis Khan
  • His followers were men like himselfwarriors who
    lacked powerful connections because their clans
    had been defeated in battle.
  • His raids against his tribal enemies annihilated
    his opponents, and his inclination to rely on
    trusted friends rather than ties of kinship
    allowed him to build up an extremely loyal
    following of officers chosen on the basis of
    their ability rather than their lineage.

27
Chinggis Khan
  • His tribal alliances also received a boost from
    Chinese patrons, who were always eager to keep
    the nomads divided.

28
Chinggis Khan
  • But his rise to power (and keeping it) amid the
    complex tribal politics of Mongolia was never a
    sure thing.

29
Chinggis Khan
  • What contributed to his growing power base were
    the constantly shifting alliances and betrayals,
    a mounting string of military victories, the
    indecisiveness of his enemies, a reputation as a
    leader generous to his friends and ruthless to
    his enemies, and the incorporation of warriors
    from defeated tribes into his own forces.

30
Chinggis Khan
  • In 1206, at the age of 44, a Mongol tribal
    assembly (a kuriltai) recognized Temujin as
    Chinggis Khan (universal ruler), supreme leader
    of a now unified Mongol nation.
  • A remarkable achievement that wasnt noticed
    beyond the highland steppes of Mongolia.
  • That would soon change.

31
Chinggis Khan
  • The unification of the Mongol tribes raised an
    obvious question What was Chinggis Khan to do
    with the large and powerful army he had
    assembled?
  • Without a common task, the new (and fragile)
    unity of the Mongols would dissolve into quarrels
    and chaos and without external resources to
    reward his followers, he would be hard pressed to
    maintain his supreme position.

32
Chinggis Khan
  • Both issues pointed in a single
    directionexpansion, particularly towards China,
    long a source of great wealth for nomadic
    peoples.
  • In 1209, the first major attack on the settled
    agricultural societies south of Mongolia set in
    motion a half century of a Mongol world war, a
    series of military campaigns, massive killing,
    and empire building without precedent in world
    history.

33
Chinggis Khan
  • Khan attacked various Turkish peoples living in
    Tibet, northern China, Persia, and the central
    Asian steppes.
  • By 1215 the Mongols had captured the Jurchen
    capital (near modern Beijing), renaming it
    Khanbaliq (city of the khan) and this would be
    their capital in China.
  • By 1220, the Mongols controlled northern China.

34
Chinggis Khan
  • The early campaigns established Chinggis typical
    methods agents were sent ahead to demoralize and
    divide the garrison and inhabitants of an enemy
    city massacres were regularly used populations
    could be slaughtered despite a prompt surrender.
  • The Great Khan allowed no enemies to survive in
    his rear as he progressed onto the next campaign
    (even dogs were killed).

35
Chinggis Khan
  • His most famous credo was
    The greatest pleasure is to vanquish
    your enemies and chase them before you, to
    rob them of their wealth, and see those dear to
    them bathed in tears, to ride their horses
    and clasp to your bosom their wives and
    daughters.

36
Chinggis Khan
  • In the process, Chinggis, followed by his sons
    and grandsons (Ogedei, Batu, Mongke, and Kubilai)
    created an empire that contained China, Korea,
    Central Asia, Russia, much of the Islamic Middle
    East, and parts of Eastern Europe.

37
Chinggis Khan
  • A recent historian wrote In a flash, the Mongol
    warriors would defeat every army, capture every
    fort, and bring down the walls of every city they
    encountered. Christians, Muslims, Buddhists, and
    Hindus would soon kneel before the dusty boots of
    illiterate young Mongol horsemen.

38
The Mongols
  • Various setbacksthe Mongol withdrawal from
    Eastern Europe (1242), their defeat in Egypt
    (1260), the failure of their invasion of Japan
    (1274, 1281), and their difficulty penetrating
    the tropical jungles of South East Asiamarked
    the outer limits of the Mongol Empire.

39
The Mongols
  • How did a Mongol confederation, with a total
    population of less than 1 million people and few
    resources beyond their livestock, create an
    imperial structure of such staggering
    transcontinental dimensions?
  • According to one historian, Mongol armies were
    simply better led, better organized, and more
    disciplined than those of their opponents.

40
The Mongols
  • Each fresh victory brought new resources for
    making war and new threats or insecurities that
    seemed to require further expansion.
  • Like the Roman Empire, but far more rapidly, the
    Mongol empire grew of its own momentum without
    any grand scheme or blueprint for world conquest.

41
The Mongols
  • By the end of his life Chinggis Khan came to see
    his career in terms of a missionI have
    accomplished a great work, he declared, uniting
    the whole world in one empire...but it is not
    sufficient that I succeedall others must fail.
  • Thus the Mongol Empire acquired an ideology in
    the course of its construction.
  • But what made this great work possible?

42
The Mongols
  • The odds seemed overwhelming, for China alone
    outnumbered the Mongols more than 100 to 1 and
    possessed incomparably greater resources.
  • Nor did the Mongols initially have any
    technological superiority over their many
    adversaries.
  • The key to the Mongol success was in their army,
    which numbered between 100 125,000.

43
The Mongols
  • A quote from an Arab source They had the
    courage of lions, the patience of hounds, the
    prudence of cranes, the cunning of foxes, the
    long-sightedness of ravens, the wildness of
    wolves, the passion of fighting-cocks, the
    protectiveness of hens, the keenness of cats and
    the fury of wild boars.

44
The Mongols
  • It was also said that one of the defining
    features of Mongol warriors was their smell
  • Amir Khuzru (Persian poet) Their eyes were so
    narrow and piercing that they might have bored a
    hole in a brazen vessel, and their stench was
    more horrible than their color. . Their chests,
    in color half-black and half-white were covered
    with lice, which looked like sesame growing on a
    bad soil. Their bodies, indeed, were covered with
    these insects

45
The Mongols
  • Like other nomadic peoples, Mongol forces relied
    on outstanding equestrian skills.
  • It is said the Mongols learned how to ride even
    before they learned how to walk when they were
    2 years old.
  • They honed their skills by hunting and playing
    competitive games on horseback.

46
The Mongols
  • Mongol horsemen were among the most mobile of all
    pre-modern armies, sometimes able to travel 100
    km (60 miles) a day to surprise an enemy.
  • The Mongols also had physical advantages over
    their enemies

47
The Mongols
  • Because they lived on the high plains of
    Mongolia, their bodies would have more red blood
    cells to transport an equal amount of oxygen.
  • When they moved to the lower levels of Asia and
    Europe, this meant that their endurance and
    strength would be increased this is the same
    trick track and field athletes use today when
    they have their training camps in high elevations
    like Mexico City or Denver for several months.

48
The Mongols
  • They were known for having incredible eyesight
    it was said that they could distinguish a man
    from an animal from 18 miles away.
  • They had great visual memory a built-in map
    generator/GPS in their head.
  • They often did not have maps on paper, but could
    remember a place and the way to it after riding
    there once.

49
The Mongols
  • This was an essential survival skill in the
    steppes, because in most areas, there were no
    roads.

50
The Mongols
  • Each warrior was equipped with a bow which gave
    tactical flexibility during an attack  the
    English at Crecy and Poitiers (100 Years War)
    also won through the use overwhelming firepower
    against a numerically superior enemy (the
    French).
  • The Mongol bow 166lbs pull, 350 yards rangeThe
    English longbow 120lbs pull, 150-200 yards
    range.

51
The Mongols
  • Mongolian Bow and English Longbow

52
The Mongols
  • Mongol iron arrowheads

53
The Mongols
  • The Mongol army consisted of professional
    warriors no peasants, all warriors 10,000
    Mongols 10,000 fighters(European army 500
    knights and 9500 peasants).
  • All warriors were on horses (cavalry).
  • Average speed for the whole army 60 miles per
    day (4 to 5 times faster than any European army).
  • Each warrior had four or more horses and rode
    them in turns.

54
The Mongols
  • The Mongols fought differently
  • Retreat, other than in Europe and Japan, was not
    dishonorable but used as a tactical weapon.
  • They did everything they had to, to win. Chivalry
    and courtesy on the battlefield did not exist for
    them.
  • European knights and Japanese Samurai cherished
    the noble idea of individual combat against a
    worthy opponent.
  • This was not the way Mongol warriors fought.

55
The Mongols
  • In an effort to reduce divisive tribalism,
    Chinggis Khan reorganized the entire military
    structure of the Mongols into units of 10, 100,
    1000, and 10,000 warriors.
  • This created more efficient and effective command
    and control.
  • Conquered tribes were broken up and their members
    scattered among these new units.

56
The Mongols
  • A highly prestigious imperial guard was also
    recruited across tribal lines. From the imperial
    guard the field commanders were drawn.
  • How to chose a commander Chinggis Khan There
    is no man alive who is braver than Yessutai no
    march can tire him and he feels neither hunger
    nor thirst that is why he is unfit to command.
  • Because a commander has to care about his men and
    protect the weakest of them, which Yessutai
    apparently did not care about, he was not
    promoted and remained in the ranks.

57
The Mongols
  • Promotion in the army was due to proven
    capability, not birthright.
  • For example Toguchar, Chinggis Khans
    son-in-law, disobeyed orders and plundered
    villages when he was a general, so he was reduced
    to a simple soldier, where he remained until
    killed in action.

58
The Mongols
  • Discipline and loyalty to their leaders
    characterized Mongol military forces, and
    discipline was reinforced by the provision that
    should one or two warriors of a unit desert in
    battle, all were subject to the death penalty.
  • Loyalty was cemented by their leaders
    willingness to share the hardships of their men.

59
The Mongols
  • I eat the same food and am dressed in the same
    rags as my humble herdsmen, wrote Chinggis Khan.
    I am always in the forefront, and in battle I
    am never at the rear.
  • Such discipline and loyalty made possible the
    elaborate tactics of encirclement, retreat, and
    deception that proved decisive in many battles.

60
The Mongols
  • Whenever there was a great assembly (Kuriltai),
    the commanders discussed the military strategy
    for the next several years.
  • Everything was thoroughly planned in great
    detail, from logistics to who would lead the
    different armies.
  • The Mongols had the best intelligence and
    reconnaissance networks of spies and agents in
    the enemy's countries and cities reconnaissance
    forces surrounding the army no one ever
    surprised a Mongol army. 

61
The Mongols
  • The Mongols never attacked without a declaration
    of war
  • Whoever obeys us remains in possession of his
    land, but whoever resists is destroyed. We send
    you this order, so if you wish to keep your land,
    you must come to us in person and thence go on to
    him who is master of all the earth. If you dont,
    we know not what will happen, only God knows.  

62
The Mongols
  • The Mongols understood the psychological
    dimensions of warfare and used them to great
    advantage.
  • If an enemy surrendered without resistance, the
    Mongols usually spared their lives (and they
    especially valued artisans, craftsmen, and those
    with military skills).
  • Resistance however, was met with annihilation as
    they slaughtered those who tried to stand against
    them.

63
The Mongols
64
The Mongols
  • One of the many legends surrounding Chinggis Khan
    was that one Persian ruler offered his submission
    in a unique way he gave the Khan a pair of
    socks, which had his portrait painted on the
    soles, so that his master might walk on his face.

65
The Mongols
  • They did almost everything differently than their
    enemies
  • For example, in Europe and Persia, the
    campaigning season was summer, after the spring
    planting and before the harvest in autumn.
  • The Mongols had no fields to plow they carried
    their food with them (cattle, horses, goats)
    their campaigning season was winter.

66
The Mongols
  • For the Mongols, frozen soil was the best ground
    for fast movement on horseback.
  • Rivers were frozen and not an obstacle anymore
    (they fought some battles on frozen
    rivers/lakes).
  • They were used to harsh winters in Mongolia, so
    they were accustomed to, and prepared for those
    conditions.

67
The Mongols
  • Communications on the battlefield were done with
    black and white flags which ensured tactical
    control over the army at all times.

68
The Mongols
  • Communications in that form did not exist in
    European armies everybody fought for himself,
    and most of the time, there wasnt even a battle
    plan.
  • Mongol Battlefield Tactics
  • Light cavalry stormed forward and showered the
    enemy with arrows to harass and disorganize them.
  • Followed by two rows of heavy cavalry in armor
    with lances and swords.

69
The Mongols
70
The Mongols
  • They often used pincher maneuvers.
  • There was always an escape given to a surrounded
    enemy that led to routing, as those escaping
    were cut down quite easily because there was no
    unit cohesion anymore.
  • The Mongols were known to pursue their enemy for
    days, stretching dozens, even hundreds of miles.

71
The Mongols
  • Dummies, women and slaves were put on the spare
    horses, so that the strength of the Mongol army
    would appear larger.
  • Their favorite tactic was the fake retreat After
    this tactic became known to their enemies, they
    just retreated longer, sometimes for days.
  • At the Battle of Kalka River they retreated for 9
    days until the Russians were spread out so far,
    they could be cut down one by one very easily.

72
The Mongols
  • But they were not perfect
  • The only defeat in the European/Middle Eastern
    region came in 1260 at Ain Jalut in Palestine, at
    the exact same site David had defeated Goliath
    thousands of years before.
  • They were beaten by a Mamluk army from Egypt. The
    Mamluks (means literally slave) were slaves
    from Turkic tribes, sold to Egypt by the Mongols
    after they had been defeated in 1238.Mamluks
    120,000 menMongols 25,000 men

73
The Mongols
  • They used terror and cruelty as weapons,
    sometimes winning battles and sieges by
    reputation alone.
  • The poor were promised liberation by the Mongols.
  • The rich were promised greater riches and
    privileges.
  • Rumors were spread about deals that single
    leaders made with the Mongols to drive alliances
    apart.

74
The Mongols
  • The Mongols were not initially good at siege
    warfare until they captured Chinese engineers,
    who taught them how to do it (some 1,000 Chinese
    artillery crews took part in the Mongol invasion
    of Persia).

75
The Mongols
  • The siege weapons they most often used were the
    mangonel and the trebuchet (which could catapult
    huge rocks), giant crossbows mounted on stands,
    gunpowder propelled arrows and rockets.

76
The Mongols
  • The Mongols then became masters of siege warfare
    with the average time to take a city about a
    week.

77
The Mongols
  • They used captives from already conquered cities
    to fill moats, build ramparts and operate siege
    machines how many of them would get killed was
    of little importance, they were conquered and
    enslaved people who had been lucky to not be
    slaughtered right away when the Mongols took
    their city.

78
The Mongols
  • They would surround the besieged city with a
    wooden palisade, which gave them protection
    against the missiles from the city and against a
    possible relieving army from the rear.
  • The palisade also prevented messengers from
    leaving the city and new provisions from being
    brought in.

79
The Mongols
  • Rumors about the vast numbers of the Mongol army
    were spread to instill fear.
  • They put whistles on their arrows to terrorize
    their enemy, especially the horses.

80
The Mongols
  • They often used poison-tipped arrows (often with
    snake venom), which killed quickly and painfully.
  • In 1209 Chinggis Khan besieged a fortress in
    China. He built a dyke to flood the fortress, but
    his engineers flooded his own camp instead. The
    fortress surrendered anyway, because they figured
    that eventually the Mongols would get it right
    and by then they would be very, very angry

81
The Mongols
  • It apparently was not originally the intention of
    the Mongol Empire to invade the Central Asian
    kingdom of Khwarizm (eastern Iran).
  • According to a Persian historian, Chinggis Khan
    had originally sent the ruler of the Khwarezmid
    Empire a message seeking trade and greeted him as
    his neighbor  "I am master of the lands of the
    rising sun while you rule those of the setting
    sun. Let us conclude a firm treaty of friendship
    and peace."

82
The Mongols
  • The Khwariz king reluctantly agreed but the
    treaty lasted only a year.
  • The Great Khan was highly offended by the killing
    and mutilating of Mongol envoys and merchants at
    the city of Otrar (along the Silk Road in
    Kazakhstan).
  • Chinggis Khan responded by utterly destroying
    virtually every city in Khwarizm, and their
    soldiers were passed out in lots to Mongol troops
    for execution, while women and skilled craftsmen
    were enslaved.

83
The Mongols
  • Unskilled civilians were used as human shields
    for attacks on the next city or were used as
    human fill in the moats surrounding those cities.
  • In 1220, after the siege of Bukhara (Uzbekistan),
    they poured molten gold down the throat of the
    Governor.
  • Apparently he had killed Mongol merchants for
    their money, (under the pretext of spying).
  • The Mongols apparently thought, if he wants our
    gold, he shall have it...

84
The Mongols
  • During the siege of Bukhara, legend has it that
    Chinggis Khan announced inside the mosque, "I am
    the punishment of God. If you had not committed
    great sins, he would not have sent a punishment
    like me."

85
The Mongols
  • In 1221 at the city of Merv (Persia), they
    slaughtered an estimated 700,000 people. Only the
    useful, like engineers, doctors, artisans, were
    spared and enslaved. Not even dogs were left
    alive.
  • The reason revenge for the death of Toguchar, a
    son-in-law of Chinggis Khan, who was killed
    during the siege.

86
The Mongols
  • After the Battle of Kalka River in 1223 against
    the Russian principalities, they promised to let
    the Kiev detachment go for a ransom.
  • The men from Kiev agreed, but were captured
    instead. Most were slaughtered, the rest
    enslaved.
  • This was revenge for the killing of the Mongol
    ambassador in Kiev.

87
The Mongols
  • In 1237, the city of Ryazan (Russia) was
    conquered after a siege of five days.

88
The Mongols
  • Before the citizens were slaughtered (by impaling
    and flaying), they were forced to watch how the
    Mongols raped all young women, including nuns.
  • The Mongols assessed the extent of their
    victories by cutting off an ear from each dead
    enemy. After the battle of Liegnitz, Poland in
    1241, they collected nine large sacks of ears and
    sent them back to the great Khan as proof of the
    victory.

89
The Mongols
  • In 1258 they conquered Baghdad (the Abbasids).
  • They locked up the Caliph in a tower with all his
    gold and silver to punish him, because he had
    refused to spend his personal wealth on the
    defense of the city.
  • That insulted the professionalism of the Mongol
    commanders, who never would have held back
    anything to achieve victory.

90
The Mongols
  • The destruction of Baghdad by Hulegu in 1258.

91
The Mongols
  • Baghdad was looted for seven days during which
    the Caliph starved to death amongst his riches.
  • They then slaughtered about 800,000 people in
    Baghdad.
  • After that, Damascus surrendered immediately when
    the first Mongol patrol was in sight of the city.

92
The Mongols
  • In Russia and in Europe the Mongols were known as
    the Tatars or Tartars which comes from the
    Latin Tartarus Hell.
  • At first they were seen as heavenly punishment
    for the sins of the people. 
  • Then they just became known as demons from
    Hell.

93
The Mongols
  • In 1239, the Holy Roman Emperor, Frederick II,
    received a message from Khan Batu in which he
    demanded the surrender of the Holy Roman Empire
    and offered Frederick a position in the Mongol
    hierarchy.
  • Frederick II responded by attacking the Pope
    because it was rumored that the Pope actually
    encouraged the Mongols to attack his enemy,
    Frederick II.

94
The Mongols
  • In 1241, when the Mongols invaded Hungary, the
    Hungarian nobility would only fight if the King
    rewarded them with greater powers and more
    privileges.
  • They finally agreed to ride with the King to meet
    the Mongols, but their quarreling and bickering
    went on.
  • The resultthe Battle of Mohi ended with 65,000
    Hungarians dead.

95
The Mongols
  • On the same day as the Battle of Mohi in Hungary,
    the Battle of Liegnitz (Poland) was fought
    25,000 Polish troops, Teutonic Knights and
    Knights Templar were killed by the Mongols.

96
The Mongols
  • When the Mongols marched towards Cracow in
    Poland, a trumpeter sounded the alarm from the
    highest tower in the city and continued through
    the storming of the city, until a Mongol arrow
    struck him down.
  • To this day, every 24th of March, a trumpeter
    from the Cracow fire department sounds the alarm
    call from the cathedral tower he ends it
    abruptly at the exact time, when the original
    trumpeter was struck down by that Mongol arrow.

97
The Mongols
  • Yet the two strongest powers in Europe, The Holy
    Roman Emperor (Frederick II) and the Pope
    continued their war against each other despite of
    the invasion of Hungary, the battle of Liegnitz
    (Poland) and the threat to Western Europe.
  • The way to the heart of Western Europe was wide
    open, and nobody was there to stop the Mongol
    onslaught.

98
The Mongols
  • Europe was saved, not by its knights, but only by
    the death of the Great Khan Ogodei (Chinggis
    son) in 1242.
  • As per tradition, all Mongol commanders were
    called back to the Mongol capital of Karakorum to
    elect a new Khan and they took their armies with
    them. 

99
The Mongols
  • Several modern scholars believe they can explain
    Mongol savagery
  • Extremely conscious of their small numbers and
    fearful of rebellion, Chinggis often chose to
    annihilate a regions entire population if it
    appeared too troublesome to govern.

100
The Mongols
  • But not everything the Mongols did was brutal or
    savage (and some historians argue that they were
    no more brutal than several other conquerors in
    history).
  • For example, writing became an important tool for
    Chinggis Khan's empire.
  • The Mongols were illiterate until Chinggis Khan's
    reign, when he commanded a Naiman captive (part
    of todays Kazakhstan) to explain their written
    language to him.

101
The Mongols
  • A Mongol writing stone

102
The Mongols
  • A Mongol script (from the Naiman script that was
    based on the Uighur (wei-ger) language) was
    created.
  • With a newly established writing system, the
    Mongols were able to record a set of laws, the
    Yasa, that Chinggis Khan had declared.

103
The Mongols
  • The Yasa recorded the Mongol's cultural beliefs,
    rules of conduct, and a system of punishment,
    laying the foundation for Chinggis Khan's empire.
  • A court was then established to enforce the Yasa
    fairly.

104
The Mongols
  • By law, the following were forbidden
  • To cut the throat of an animal killed for food
    (like the Muslims) instead, the belly
    should be slit open and the
  • heart pulled out.
  • Urinating in running water or ashes (death
    penalty)
  • Washing in running water
  • Adultery, whether married or not (death penalty)
  • Cattle theft (death penalty)
  • As a merchant, bankruptcy for the third time
    (death)
  • Desertion (death penalty)
  • Theft (death penalty)

105
The Mongols
  • A man who chokes on food must be driven out of
    the camp and immediately killed.
  • Hunters who let an animal escape during a
    community hunt were ordered to be beaten with
    sticks and in some cases to be put to death.
  • Death to anyone who intentionally lies, or
    practices sorcery, or spies upon the behavior of
    others, or intervenes between the two parties in
    a quarrel to help the one against the other.

106
The Mongols
  • Death to anyone who finds a runaway slave or
    captive and does not return him to the person to
    whom he belongs.
  • Chinggis forbade anyone to wash their clothes
    until they were completely worn out.
  • He ordered them to present all their daughters to
    the Khan at the beginning of each year that he
    might choose some of them for himself and his
    children.

107
The Mongols
  • Scribes in Karakorum translated official decrees
    into the various languages of the empire, such as
    Persian, Uighur, Chinese, and Tibetian.
  • Chinggis Khan also established a messenger
    system, a medieval pony express, known as the
    yam.

108
The Mongols
  • Outposts were established about a days ride
    apart from each other where horses and riders
    waited to relay messages through the empire,
    greatly speeding up communications.
  • Not only were there rapid communications within
    the empire, these outposts fostered trade because
    merchants could follow these postal roads in
    safety.

109
The Mongols
  • The Silk Roadsthat off and on for centuries
    linked Europe, Africa, and the Far East in trade
    and cultural exchangehad been under the control
    of various local powers, became unsafe during
    times of conflict, and therefore, fell out of
    use.
  • Under Mongol protection, the Silk Roads
    flourished, and during the Pax Mongolica under
    Chinggis Khan's successors, people commonly
    traveled the full length of the Silk Roads,
    greatly increasing cultural exchange.

110
The Mongols
  • In this atmosphere, Europeans like Marco Polo
    traveled to the East and returned with tales of
    the Mongol empire.
  • Polo claimed the Mongols maintained 10,000
    outposts along with 200,000 horses available to
    authorized users.
  • Interested in commerce, Mongol rulers often
    offered 10 or more above a merchants asking
    price and allowed them free use of the relay
    stations for transporting their goods.

111
The Mongols
  • Unfortunately, the Silk Roads also allowed
    diseases to spread.
  • The bubonic plague traveled from somewhere in the
    Himalayas to Yunnan and Burma eastward to China
    and westward to Europe along the roads and sea
    lanes of the Mongol empire.

112
The Mongols
  • Cities were ideal hosts for rats, and outbreaks
    of the plague occurred from time to time.
  • However, the massive outbreak of the bubonic
    plague in Europe was indirectly caused by the
    deliberate actions of a Mongol military maneuver
    (and the first known account of biological
    warfare).

113
The Mongols
  • Under Janibeg Khan, the last Khan of the Golden
    Horde, the Mongols were fighting against the city
    of Caffa, located on the Black Sea in Crimea,
    when they witnessed an outbreak of the plague.
  • Just before fleeing the disease, the Mongol
    commander catapulted plague-ridden corpses over
    the walls of the city.
  • The disease was carried to European ports by boat
    and eventually became the Black Death that
    decimated medieval Europe.

114
The Mongols
115
The Mongols
  • In administering conquered regions, Mongols held
    the highest decision-making posts, but Chinese
    and Muslim officials held many advisory and
    lower-level positions in China and Persia.
  • In religious matters, the Mongols welcomed and
    supported many religious traditionsBuddhist,
    Christian, Muslim, Daoistas long as they didnt
    become the focus of political opposition.

116
The Mongols
  • Their policy of religious toleration allowed
    Muslims to seek converts among Mongol troops and
    gave Christians much more freedom than they
    enjoyed under Muslim rule.
  • One of Chinggis grandsons (Mongke) arranged a
    debate among representatives of several faiths
    and concluded Just as God gave us different
    fingers to the hand, so has He given different
    ways to men.

117
The Mongols
  • The Mongol moment in world history represented an
    enormous cultural encounter between nomadic
    pastoralists and the settled civilizations of
    Eurasia.
  • Differences among these civilizationsConfucian
    China, Muslim Persia, Christian Russiaensured
    considerable diversity as this encounter unfolded
    across thousands of miles.

118
The Mongols
  • China Long the primary target of nomadic
    steppe-dwelling peoples looking for agrarian
    wealth, China proved the most difficult and
    extended of the Mongols many conquests, lasting
    nearly 70 years (1209-1279).
  • The invasion began in northern China, which had
    been ruled for several centuries by various
    dynasties of nomadic origin, and was
    characterized by massive destruction and plunder.

119
The Mongols
  • Southern China, under control of the native Song
    dynasty was different, for the Mongols were far
    less violent and more concerned with
    accommodating the local population.
  • Landowners were guaranteed their estates in
    exchange for their support or at least their
    neutrality.

120
The Mongols
  • By whatever methods, the outcome was the
    unification of a divided China, a treasured ideal
    among the educated Chinese.
  • The achievement persuaded many of them that the
    Mongols had indeed been granted the Mandate of
    Heaven, and despite their foreign origins, they
    were legitimate rulers.

121
The Mongols
  • Having acquired China, one consideration of the
    Great Khan Ogodei (in the 1230s) was to
    exterminate everyone in northern China and turn
    the country into pastureland for Mongol herds.

122
The Mongols
  • That suggestion was rejected in favor of
    extracting as much wealth as possible from the
    countrys culturally advanced civilization.
  • This meant accommodating and absorbing some
    Chinese culture and ways of governing since the
    Mongols had no experience with the operation of a
    complex agrarian society.

123
The Mongols
  • That accommodation took on many forms the
    Mongols made use of Chinese administrative
    practices, techniques of taxation, and their
    postal system.
  • They gave themselves a Chinese dynastic title,
    the Yuan, meaning Great beginnings.
  • They transferred their capital from Karakorum
    (Mongolia) to what is now Beijing, building a
    wholly new capital city known as Khanbalik (the
    city of the Khan).

124
The Mongols
  • The Mongols had rooted themselves solidly on the
    soil of the worlds most sophisticated
    civilization, well removed from their homeland on
    the steppes.
  • Khubilai Khan, a grandson of Ghinggis and Chinas
    Mongol ruler from 1271-1294, even ordered a set
    of Chinese-style ancestral tablets to honor his
    ancestors and posthumously gave them Chinese
    names.

125
The Mongols
  • Many of Khubilais policies evoked the values of
    a benevolent Chinese emperor as he improved
    roads, built canals, lowered some taxes,
    patronized scholars and artists, limited the
    death penalty and torture, and prohibited Mongols
    from grazing their animals on peasants farmland.

126
The Mongols
  • When Marco Polo arrived in China in 1275, the
    splendor and wealth of the country overwhelmed
    him.

127
The Mongols
  • He described Khubilai Khan as the mightiest man,
    whether in respect of subjects or of territory or
    of treasure, who is in the world today or who
    ever has been, from Adam our first parent down to
    the present moment.

128
The Mongols
  • The Mongols used traditional Confucian rituals,
    supported the building of some Daoist temples,
    and were attracted to the Tibetan form of
    Buddhism, all of which gave them increased
    political support.
  • Despite these accommodations, Mongol rule was
    still harsh, exploitative, and foreign.

129
The Mongols
  • Marco Polo observed the hostility between the
    Mongols and their Chinese subjects
  • The Cathayans (Chinese) detest the Grand Khans
    rule because he set over them governors who were
    Tartars (Mongols), or still more frequently
    Saracens (Muslims), and these they would not
    endure, for they were treated by them just like
    slaves.

130
The Mongols
  • The Mongols did not become Chinese, nor did they
    accommodate every aspect of Chinese culture.
  • Deep inside their capital they established the
    Forbidden-City, where the royal family and court
    could continue to experience something of steppe
    life.
  • Animals roamed freely in large open areas,
    planted with steppe grass.

131
The Mongols
  • Many of the Mongol elite preferred to live, eat,
    sleep, and give birth in their traditional felt
    tents (gers/yurts) which sprung up everywhere.

132
The Mongols
  • In administering the country, the Mongols largely
    ignored the traditional Chinese examination
    system and relied heavily on foreigners,
    particularly Muslims from Central Asia and the
    Middle East.
  • Few Mongols learned Chinese, and Mongol law
    discriminated against the Chinese, reserving for
    them the most severe punishments.

133
The Mongols
  • In social life, Mongol law forbade intermarriage
    and prohibited Chinese scholars from learning the
    Mongol script.
  • Mongol women never adopted footbinding and
    scandalized the Chinese by mixing freely with men
    at official gatherings and riding to the hunt
    with their husbands.
  • Plus, the Mongols honored and supported merchants
    and artisans far more than Confucian bureaucrats
    had been inclined to do.

134
The Mongols
  • However you look at Mongol rule in China (as the
    Yuan dynasty), it was brief, lasting little more
    than a century.
  • By the mid-fourteenth century, intense
    factionalism among the Mongols, rapidly rising
    prices, epidemics of the plague, and growing
    peasant rebellions combined to force the Mongols
    out of China.

135
The Mongols
  • By 1368, rebel forces had triumphed, and
    thousands of Mongols returned to their homeland
    in the steppes.
  • For several centuries thereafter, they remained a
    periodic threat to China, but during the Ming
    dynasty that followed, the memory of their often
    brutal and alien rule stimulated a renewed
    commitment to Confucian values and practices and
    an effort to wipe out all traces of the Mongols
    impact.

136
The Mongols
  • Persia The second great civilization conquered
    by the Mongols was that of an Islamic Persia.
  • There the Mongol takeover was far more abrupt
    than the extended process of conquest in China.
  • The first invasion (1219-1221) was led by
    Chinggis Khan himself, followed thirty years
    later by a second assault (1251-1258) led by his
    grandson Hulegu (brother of Khubilai).

137
The Mongols
  • Hulegu became the first il-khan (subordinate
    khan) of Persia.

138
The Mongols
  • More destructive than the conquest of Song
    dynasty China, the Mongol offensive against
    Persia and Iraq had no precedent in its history,
    even though Persia had been repeatedly attacked,
    from the invasions of Alexander the Great to that
    of the Arabs.
  • The most recent incursion was from Turkic
    peoples, but they had been Muslims (recently
    converted), small in number, and only wanting
    acceptance within the Islamic world.

139
The Mongols
  • The Mongols were infidels in Muslim eyes, and
    their stunning victories were a profound shock to
    people accustomed to seeing history as the
    progressive expansion of Islamic rule.
  • Mongol victories brought ferocity and slaughter
    that simply had no parallel in the Persian
    experience.

140
The Mongols
  • The sacking of Baghdad in 1258, which put an end
    to the Abbasid caliphate, was accompanied by the
    massacre of more than 200,000 people, according
    to Hulegu himself.

141
The Mongols
  • Beyond this human catastrophe was the damage to
    Persian and Iraqi agriculture and their peasant
    farmers.
  • Heavy taxes, sometimes collected 20-30 times a
    year and often under torture or whipping, pushed
    large numbers of peasants off their land.
  • The nomadic Mongols, with their immense herds of
    sheep and goats, turned much agricultural land
    into pasture and sometimes into desert.

142
The Mongols
  • Some sectors of the Persian economy fared pretty
    wellwine production increased because the
    Mongols were fond of alcohol, and the Persian
    silk industry benefited from close contact with a
    Mongol-ruled China.
  • But generally, Mongol rule in Persia represented
    disaster on a grand and unparalleled scale.

143
The Mongols
  • The Mongols in Persia were themselves transformed
    far more than their counterparts in China.
  • They made extensive use of the sophisticated
    Persian bureaucracy, leaving the greater part of
    government operations in Persian hands.
  • During the reign of Ghazan (1295-1304), the
    Mongols made efforts to repair the damage caused
    by earlier policies of ruthless exploitation.

144
The Mongols
  • Ghazan had cities rebuilt and agricultural areas
    restored.
  • More importantly, many Mongols followed Ghazans
    lead (in 1295) and converted to Islam.

145
The Mongols
  • No such widespread conversion to the culture of
    the conquered happened in China or in Christian
    Russia.
  • Members of the court and Mongol elites learned at
    least some Persian, unlike most of their
    counterparts in China.
  • A number of Mongols also became farmers,
    abandoning their nomadic ways, and marrying local
    women.

146
The Mongols
  • When the Mongol dynasty of Hulegus descendents
    collapsed in the 1330s for lack of a suitable
    heir, the Mongols were not driven out of Persia,
    as they would be in China.
  • Rather they simply disappeared, through
    assimilation into Persian society.
  • From the Persian point of view, the barbarians
    had been civilized.

147
The Mongols
  • Russia When the Mongol military machine rolled
    over Russia between 1223 and 1240, it encountered
    a relatively new civilization located on the far
    eastern fringe of Christendom.
  • Whatever political unity the Kievan Rus had
    enjoyed was now gone, and various independent
    princes were unable to unite even in the face of
    the Mongol onslaught.

148
The Mongols
  • Even though the Kievan Rus had interacted
    extensively with nomadic people of the steppes
    north of the Black Sea, nothing had prepared them
    for the Mongols.
  • The devastation wrought by the Mongol assault
    matched or exceeded anything experienced by the
    Persians or the Chinese.

149
The Mongols
  • City after city fell to Mongol forces, which were
    now armed with catapults and battering rams
    adopted from Chinese or Muslim sources.

150
The Mongols
  • The slaughter was described by Russian
    chroniclers, They likewise killed the Prince and
    Princess, and men, and women, and children,
    monks, nuns, and priests, some by fire, some by
    the sword, and violated nuns, priests wives,
    good women and girls in the presence of their
    mothers and sisters.
  • Kiev was so thoroughly destroyed that the
    countryside for miles around was littered with
    human bones.

151
The Mongols
  • From the survivors and the cities that
    surrendered early, skilled craftsmen were
    deported to other Mongol lands or sold into
    slavery.
  • Several Russian crafts were so depleted of their
    workers/artisans that it took centuries before
    they recovered.

152
The Mongols
  • Even though the ferocity of initial conquest was
    similar to that of Persia or China, Russias
    incorporation into the Mongol Empire was very
    different.
  • To the Mongols, it was the Kipchak Khanate, named
    after the Kipchak Turkic-speaking people north of
    the Black and Caspian seas, among whom the
    Mongols had settled.

153
The Mongols
  • To the Russians, it was the Khanate of the
    Golden Horde.
  • Golden because yellow was the imperial color of
    the khan and his clan.
  • The name is believed to come from an ancient
    Chinese system that assigned colors to the points
    of the compass black was north, red was south,
    blue was east, white was west. Yellow,
    representing the center, became the imperial
    color.
  • Horde comes from the Mongolian word ordu,
    meaning camp.

154
The Mongols
  • The Mongols conquered Russia, but they didnt
    occupy it as they had in China or Persia.
  • Since the Mongols didnt set up any garrisoned
    cities or permanently stationed administrators or
    Mongol settlements, the Russian experience with
    Mongol rule was quite different.

155
The Mongols
  • From the Mongol point of view, Russia had little
    to offer.
  • Its society and economy were not nearly as
    developed as Chinas or Persias and it wasnt
    located on any major international trade routes.
  • It simply wasnt worth the expense of occupying
    since they could easily dominate and exploit
    Russia from the steppes.

156
The Mongols
  • And the Mongols certainly exploited the Russians.
  • Russian princes (appointed by the khan) had to
    send substantial amounts of tribute to the Mongol
    capital at Sarai (located on the lower Volga
    River).

157
The Mongols
  • Mongol taxes were a heavy burden and occasional
    border raids sent thousands of Russian peasants
    into slavery.
  • But the Mongol impact was very unevensome
    Russian princes benefited considerably under the
    Mongols because they could manipulate their role
    as tax collectors to grow wealthy.

158
The Mongols
  • The Russian Orthodox Church also flourished under
    the Mongol policy of religious toleration, and it
    was exempted from most taxes.
  • Nobles who participated in Mongol raids got a
    share of the loot.
  • Some cities, like Kiev, resisted the Mongols and
    were devastated while others collaborated and
    were left undamaged.

159
The Mongols
  • Moscow in particular emerged as the primary
    collector of tribute for the Mongols, and its
    princes parlayed that position into a leading
    role as the nucleus of a renewed Russian state
    when Mongol domination receded in the fifteenth
    century.

160
The Mongols
  • Since the Mongols didnt practice direct rule,
    they were less influenced by or assimilated into
    Russian culture than their counterparts in China
    or Persia.
  • The Mongols in China turned themselves into a
    Chinese dynasty, with the khan as a Chinese
    emperor.
  • Some learned calligraphy, and a few came to
    appreciate Chinese poetry.

161
The Mongols
  • In Persia, the Mongols had converted to Islam,
    with many settling down as farmers.
  • Not so in Russia where the Mongols of the Golden
    Horde were still spending their days in the
    saddle and their nights in tents.
  • Even though they remained culturally separate
    from Russia, eventually the Mongols assimilated
    to the culture and Islamic faith of the Kipchak
    people of the steppes, and in the process, lost
    their identity and became Kipchaks.

162
The Mongols
  • Despite their domination from a distance, many
    historians believe their impact was greater on
    Russia than on China or Persia.
  • Russian princes, who were more or less left alone
    if they paid their tribute, adopted Mongol styles
    of clothing, weaponry, diplomatic rituals, court
    practices, taxation system, and military
    conscription.

163
The Mongols
  • Several Russian historians, trying to explain
    their countrys economic backwardness and
    political autocracy in modern times, have held
    the Mongols responsible for both conditionsbut
    most Western historians believe this to be an
    oversimplification and exaggeration of reality.

164
The Mongols
  • Divisions among the Mongols and the growing
    strength of some Russian noble families (centered
    in Moscow) enabled the Russians to break the
    Mongols hold by the end of the fifteenth century
    (by 1480 under Ivan the Great).
  • With the earlier demise of Mongol rule in China
    and Persia, and now Russia, the Mongols retreated
    from their brief, but spectacular incursion into
    the civilization of outer Eurasia.

165
The Mongols
  • Nonetheless, they continued to periodically
    threaten these civilizations for several
    centuries, until their homelands were absorbed
    into the expanding Russian and Chinese empires.
  • The Mongol moment in world history was over.
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