Transcript Mongols

Chapter 17:
Turks & Mongols
Periodization:
Regional & Transregional
Interactions
600 CE – 1450 CE
Turks & Mongols
• Both groups were nomads
• Roots go back to hunter-gatherers
• This chapter represents interrelations
between settled and nomadic peoples.
Nomadic Society
• Domesticated animals, but not farmers
– Lack of rain in central Asia doesn’t support
large-scale agriculture
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Migratory patterns to follow pastureland
Turks lived in Yurts
Rudimentary artisan achievements
Reliance on trade for manufactured goods
Nomads in Turkmenistan
Nomadic Society
• Two social classes: nobles & commoners
• Governance basically clan-based
• Charismatic individuals become nobles,
occasionally assert authority
• Unusually fluid status for nobility
– Hereditary, but could be lost through
incompetence
– Advancement for meritorious non-nobles
Nomadic Religion
• Early religion revolved around shamans
– Supernatural powers
– Communicated w/gods & nature spirits
• By sixth century adopted Buddhism,
Nestorian Christianity, Islam, Manichaeism
• Conversion to Islam in tenth century due
to Abbasid influence
• Turks responsible for spread of Islam into
Anatolia and India.
Military Organization
• Large confederations under a khan
• Authority extended through tribal elders
• Exceptionally strong cavalries
– Mobility
– Speed
Turkish Empires and Their
Neighbors, ca. 1210 C.E.
Saljuq Turks
• Eighth to tenth centuries, Turkish peoples
on border of Abbasid empire
• Eventually came to dominate Abbasid
caliphs
• 1055, Saljuq leader Tughril Beg
recognized as sultan
• 1071, Saljuq Turks defeat Byzantine army
at Manzikert, take emperor captive
• Ottoman Turks conquer Constantinople in
1453
Ghaznavid Turks
• Mahmud of Ghazni, Afghanistan, invades
northern India
• At first for plunder, later to rule
• Northern India completely dominated by
thirteenth century
Mongols
“The Mongols made no technological
breakthroughs, founded no new religions,
wrote few books or dramas”
Why are they historically significant?
The Mongols and Eurasian Empire
• Built the largest empire
in history stretching
from Poland to China
• 13.8 million square
miles
• 100 million people
Chinggis/Genghis Khan
Who were the Mongols?
• From the steppes of
eastern central Asia
• Nomadic peoples
• United under the
leadership of Temujin
a.k.a Chinggis Khan
Inner Eurasia
Steppe
Outer Eurasia
From Temujin to “Universal Ruler”
• Born 1167, Orphaned at 10
• “Mastered the art of steppe
diplomacy”
– Personal courage, loyalty
• United Mongol tribes into a
single confederation
• 1206 made Chinggis Khan
Chinese depiction of Chinggis
Khan
Political & Military Organization
• Formed military
units that broke
down tribal loyalties
• Awesome archers
• Large, quickly
moving armies
• Effectively used
psychological
warfare
The wisdom of Chinggis Khan:
“Man’s greatest joy is in victory: to
conquer one’s enemies, to pursue
them, to deprive them of their
possessions, to make their beloved
weep, to ride on their horses, and to
embrace their wives and daughters…”
Mongol Rule
• Nomadic invasions and migrations tested
the military and administrative strengths of
settled societies.
• When Mongols collapsed a government,
they often adapted the existing
administration structures to their purposes.
Chronology of the Mongol Empire
• 1206-1227
Reign of Chinggis Khan
• 1211-1234
Conquest of northern China
• 1219-1221
Conquest of Persia
• 1237-1241
Conquest of Russia
• 1258
Capture of Baghdad
• 1264-1279
Conquest of southern China
The Mongol Empire at its height – 1320s
Strong Equestrians and Archers
• The Mongols were oriented
around extreme mobility. They
carried their houses with them,
drank their own horse's blood to
stay alive, and could travel up to
62 miles per day.
• They had an elaborate prioritymail-system which allowed
orders to be transmitted rapidly
across Eurasia.
• Mongol archers were very deadly
and accurate
– Their arrows could kill enemies
at 200 meters (656 feet)
Shortly after Chinggis Khan’s death, his empire split
into four Khanates
China: the Yuan Dynasty
1279-1368
• Most famous ruler:
Khubilai Khan
• Government administered
by Mongols and nonChinese advisors
• Allowed religious freedom
but dismantled Confucian
exam system
• Prohibited Chinese from
learning the Mongol
language.
Khubilai Khan
Other Mongol Rule
• Golden Horde
– Didn’t occupy Russia
– hegemony in Russia until mid-fifteenth century
• Persian Ilkhanate
– Massacred over 200,000
– poor administrators
– Over time assimilated into the culture
• Except in their own homeland, they were
out of power in about 90 years
Societal Advances
• While Mongol warfare was awesome, let’s
not get completely carried away with that.
• They were responsible for increased
interaction among peoples of different
societies, which resulted in Eurasian lands
being more directly connected than before.
“Pax Mongolia?”
• Under the Mongols,
there was
unprecedented longdistance trade
• Mongols encouraged
the exchange of
people, technology,
and information across
their empire
• Weatherford: the
Mongols were
“civilization’s unrivaled
cultural carriers…”
Marco Polo en route to China
How did Japan resist Mongol invasion?
• The Mongols
attempted to invade
Japan twice
[1274 and 1281]
• Twice they were
repelled by typhoons
• “Kamikaze” or
“divine wind”
Inspiration for WWII “kamikaze”
Tamerlane the Conqueror
• Collapse of Mongol states left power
vacuum
• Chinggis Khan was model
• weakened the Golden Horde, sacked
Delhi, and launched campaigns in
southwest Asia and Anatolia
• By 1370 extended authority throughout
Chaghatai khanate
Tamerlane’s Empire, ca. 1405 C.E.