Chapter 14 - The Last Great Nomadic Challenges: From Chinggis Khan to Timur
Mongols ended/interrupted many great postclassical empires
Extended world network – foundation for interaction on global scale
Forged mightiest war machine
Four khanates – sons divided
Ruled for 150 years
Last time nomadic peoples dominated sedentary peoples
Paradox of rule – fierce fighters vs. tolerant/peaceful leaders
difficult to organize before Chinggis Khan
divisions/rivalries
Khan – astute political strategist/brilliant military commander
Nomadic world – horse culture
Lived on herds – meat, milk, traded hides for grain/vegetables
Tough little ponies
Children ride from early age
Could even sleep/eat on horse
Animal power/seasonal migrations
Movable shelters
Political organization
Like Bedouins – kin/clan based – combined in confederations when needed
Men dominated but women could influence tribal meetings/home
Leadership qualities – courage, alliance forging ability
Born Temujin to tribal leader, but father poisoned
Imprisoned by rival clan, but escapes
Makes alliance with another clan
Reputation as warrior/military commander attracted other clan chiefs
1206 at kuriltai meeting – named khagan – extreme ruler
Natural warriors
trained from youth to ride/hunt
tough, mobile, accustomed to death
variety of weapons – lances, hatchets, maces
Short bow the best – 400 yard range vs. 250 European
Chinggis Khan’s leadership
organization, discipline, unity
directed fighting spirit toward conquest
divided groups into tumens – think centurions of Rome
Messenger force – tightly bandages – ride all day/night
Military discipline – killed if flee
Generosity fto brave foes
Utilized excellent maps
New weapons – flaming arrows, gunpowder, siege weapons
Willing to adopt from conquered groups
Ruled over ½ million Mongols
Greatest pleasure making war – campaigns
fortified cities – willing to adopt weapons of other nations
developed siege weapons
rams, catapults, exploding balls
bamboo rockets
threatened terrifying retribution – surrender or else
slaughtered/sold townspeople
buildings turned to rubble
forced to pay tribute
Defeated Turkik ruler to the west – Muhammad Shah II
Leader sent back envoys with heads shaved
Mongols destroyed with authority
Fight, cavalry runs away, followed by other army, heavy cavalry moves in
Battle tactic
Defeated Muhammad Shah II and brought in tens of thousands of horsemen
Astute and tolerant rulers
Open to new ideas
Wanted diverse peoples to live together in peace
Interest in arts and learning of conquered people
New capital at Karakorum – wise and clever visited as envoys
Confucian scholars on how to rule China
Muslims – engineers and trade
Daoist holy men – elixir for immortality
All religions tolerated
Mongol script created – mostly illiterate people
Effects
Peace to much of Asia
Towns – handicraft production, scholarship, free expression
Secure trade routes
Force for major economic/social development
180,000 warriors to conquer China
But…got sick and died in 1227
empire divided among 3 sons and Batu grandsono
Last bit of anger – carried back Khan’s body
Hunted/killed every animal/human in sight
Mongol successor Ogedei – third son – named grand khan
Not best warrior, but best diplomat
Introduction
Golden Horde/Tartars (people from hell) – golden tent of early khans
Assault on Russia side campaign
Main goals
fine tune war machine
get some money from booty
Russia divided into small kingdoms – don’t unite
Only successful winter invasion
Good for horse’s footing
Access over frozen rivers to enemies
All slaughtered or led into slavery
Russian in Bondage
2 ½ centuries of Russia in bondage
Effects
Peasantry have to give up crops
Some flee to protection of ruling class – become serfs
Some Russian towns make profits
Increased trade
Moscow – trade, tribute collector
Rulers made money and annexed other towns
Tribute collectors
Battle of Kulikova – overthrew Golden Horde
Impact – turning point in Russia history
Moscow grew
Orthodox church intensifies control
changes in Russia’s military organization
princes realize need to centralize control
Reduce limitations put on power by nobility, clergy, merch
Russia’s isolation from Christian lands
Benefit – Russia protected from invasion from Europe
Negative – Cut off from key transformations in w. Europe
Mongol Incursions and the Retreat from Europe
W. Europe thought Mongols were Prestor John
Mythical Christian monarch cut off who would one day return
Mongols wanted to pillage Europe, but…
Death of khagan Ogedei – forced leader Batu to retreat
Compete for leadership
Richer lands to plunder in Middle East
The Mongol Assault on the Islamic Heartland
1258 – capture/destruction of Baghdad
800,000 killed
Abbasid caliph
Effects
ended dynasty that had ruled since 8th century
left faithful without central authority
devastated focal points/trading centers of Islamic civilization
Eventually defeated by the Mamluk
Enslaved by Mongols – later defeated them
With cooperation with Christians
Introduction
Administered very strictly
Mongols retained distinct culture
Opened China to influences from Persian lands/contacts with Europe
Kubliai Khan
Assumed title of great khan/Yuan
Changed name of regime to Yuan – Yuan Dynasty
Denied Chinese influence
distinction between Mongol/Chinese
forbade Chinese scholars from learning Mongol script
forbidden to marry ethnic Chinese
women from nomadic families accepted into harem
Mongol religious ceremonies retained
traditional tent encampment set up in capital
Did not embrace civil service exams
worked with Chinese on some issues
Surrounded self with Chinese advisors – Confucian, Buddhist, Daoist
Capital at Tatu – Beijing
Introduced rituals and classic music into court
New social structure
Mongols
Nomadic/Muslim allies
North Chinese
Ethnic Chinese/peoples from South
Gender Roles and the Convergence of Mongol and Chinese Culture
Women
Refused to adopt footbinding
Women retained property rights
Destroyed vision of women as dainty, to be protected
Rode to hunt
Kubilai’s daughter said had to beat wrestling
Chabi – wife
promoted Buddhist interests
reduced harsh treatment of Song captured
didn’t convert nearby farmland to pastureland
Mongol Tolerance and Foreign Cultural Influence
Curiosity/cosmopolitan tastes – opened China up
Brought scholars, artists, artisans
Muslims second social class
Supervised building of Chinese-style imperial city
Persian astronomers corrected Chinse calendars
Doctors added 36 volumes of Muslim medicine
Welcomed travelers
Polo family from Venice – Marco Polo
Marco Polo’s travel log created extreme interest in Asia
Inspired European efforts in navigation
Social Policies and Scholar-Gentry
Completely altered social hierarchy
Prevented scholar-gentry from taking positions – got rid of test
Bolstered position of artisans
Merchants also prospered
Mongols created war fleets/navies
Cities/sedentary lifestyles flourished – ironic
Open to different ideas
Traditional poetry/essay writing suffers
popular entertainment – dramas flourish
The Romance of the West Chamber
Actors no longer “mean people”
Help for peasants
Doesn’t turn cropland into pasture land
Reduces taxes
Plan to establish elementary education – never goes through
The Fall of the House of Yuan
Mongol aura of invincibility falters
Lost to military lords of Japan
Song loyalists raised revolts in South
Frustrated/unsuccessful expeditions to Java/Vietnam
Softening of the ruling class
Stop taking care of day to day work
Allowed corrupt Chinese/Muslims to run finances
Scholar-gentry encouraged revolts
Banditry/piracy increases – can’t guarantee safety
Famine hit many regions
Religious Sects – White Lotus Society
Magical powers to overthrow Mongols
Man from poor peasant family – Ju Yuanzhang starts Ming dynasty
Aftershock: The Brief Ride of Timur
Timur-I Lang – Timur the Lame
Highly cultured person
Ruthless conqueror – atrocities – pyramid of skulls – tens thousands
Spared artisans/scientists to help build capital
Upon death, empire falls apart
Last great challenge from nomads
Lasting changes
new ways of making war
gunpowder
Facilitated trade
unprecedented trade of foods, tools, ideas
brought great wealth to traders – think Venice
Created urge for overseas expansion
Greatest impact – plagues
Fleas on livestock
Rats on ships that nibbled grain
Economic/social impact – 50% of some regions
Forced adjustments/change in economic/social roles to deal with
Other exchanges
Europeans adapt products and technologies
Explosive powder/printing
After many wanted to maintain contacts
But…China grew more wary of outsiders
But…land-based travel became more difficult
Led to the need to focus on improving sea routes/transportation
Mongols ended/interrupted many great postclassical empires
Extended world network – foundation for interaction on global scale
Forged mightiest war machine
Four khanates – sons divided
Ruled for 150 years
Last time nomadic peoples dominated sedentary peoples
Paradox of rule – fierce fighters vs. tolerant/peaceful leaders
difficult to organize before Chinggis Khan
divisions/rivalries
Khan – astute political strategist/brilliant military commander
Nomadic world – horse culture
Lived on herds – meat, milk, traded hides for grain/vegetables
Tough little ponies
Children ride from early age
Could even sleep/eat on horse
Animal power/seasonal migrations
Movable shelters
Political organization
Like Bedouins – kin/clan based – combined in confederations when needed
Men dominated but women could influence tribal meetings/home
Leadership qualities – courage, alliance forging ability
Born Temujin to tribal leader, but father poisoned
Imprisoned by rival clan, but escapes
Makes alliance with another clan
Reputation as warrior/military commander attracted other clan chiefs
1206 at kuriltai meeting – named khagan – extreme ruler
Natural warriors
trained from youth to ride/hunt
tough, mobile, accustomed to death
variety of weapons – lances, hatchets, maces
Short bow the best – 400 yard range vs. 250 European
Chinggis Khan’s leadership
organization, discipline, unity
directed fighting spirit toward conquest
divided groups into tumens – think centurions of Rome
Messenger force – tightly bandages – ride all day/night
Military discipline – killed if flee
Generosity fto brave foes
Utilized excellent maps
New weapons – flaming arrows, gunpowder, siege weapons
Willing to adopt from conquered groups
Ruled over ½ million Mongols
Greatest pleasure making war – campaigns
fortified cities – willing to adopt weapons of other nations
developed siege weapons
rams, catapults, exploding balls
bamboo rockets
threatened terrifying retribution – surrender or else
slaughtered/sold townspeople
buildings turned to rubble
forced to pay tribute
Defeated Turkik ruler to the west – Muhammad Shah II
Leader sent back envoys with heads shaved
Mongols destroyed with authority
Fight, cavalry runs away, followed by other army, heavy cavalry moves in
Battle tactic
Defeated Muhammad Shah II and brought in tens of thousands of horsemen
Astute and tolerant rulers
Open to new ideas
Wanted diverse peoples to live together in peace
Interest in arts and learning of conquered people
New capital at Karakorum – wise and clever visited as envoys
Confucian scholars on how to rule China
Muslims – engineers and trade
Daoist holy men – elixir for immortality
All religions tolerated
Mongol script created – mostly illiterate people
Effects
Peace to much of Asia
Towns – handicraft production, scholarship, free expression
Secure trade routes
Force for major economic/social development
180,000 warriors to conquer China
But…got sick and died in 1227
empire divided among 3 sons and Batu grandsono
Last bit of anger – carried back Khan’s body
Hunted/killed every animal/human in sight
Mongol successor Ogedei – third son – named grand khan
Not best warrior, but best diplomat
Introduction
Golden Horde/Tartars (people from hell) – golden tent of early khans
Assault on Russia side campaign
Main goals
fine tune war machine
get some money from booty
Russia divided into small kingdoms – don’t unite
Only successful winter invasion
Good for horse’s footing
Access over frozen rivers to enemies
All slaughtered or led into slavery
Russian in Bondage
2 ½ centuries of Russia in bondage
Effects
Peasantry have to give up crops
Some flee to protection of ruling class – become serfs
Some Russian towns make profits
Increased trade
Moscow – trade, tribute collector
Rulers made money and annexed other towns
Tribute collectors
Battle of Kulikova – overthrew Golden Horde
Impact – turning point in Russia history
Moscow grew
Orthodox church intensifies control
changes in Russia’s military organization
princes realize need to centralize control
Reduce limitations put on power by nobility, clergy, merch
Russia’s isolation from Christian lands
Benefit – Russia protected from invasion from Europe
Negative – Cut off from key transformations in w. Europe
Mongol Incursions and the Retreat from Europe
W. Europe thought Mongols were Prestor John
Mythical Christian monarch cut off who would one day return
Mongols wanted to pillage Europe, but…
Death of khagan Ogedei – forced leader Batu to retreat
Compete for leadership
Richer lands to plunder in Middle East
The Mongol Assault on the Islamic Heartland
1258 – capture/destruction of Baghdad
800,000 killed
Abbasid caliph
Effects
ended dynasty that had ruled since 8th century
left faithful without central authority
devastated focal points/trading centers of Islamic civilization
Eventually defeated by the Mamluk
Enslaved by Mongols – later defeated them
With cooperation with Christians
Introduction
Administered very strictly
Mongols retained distinct culture
Opened China to influences from Persian lands/contacts with Europe
Kubliai Khan
Assumed title of great khan/Yuan
Changed name of regime to Yuan – Yuan Dynasty
Denied Chinese influence
distinction between Mongol/Chinese
forbade Chinese scholars from learning Mongol script
forbidden to marry ethnic Chinese
women from nomadic families accepted into harem
Mongol religious ceremonies retained
traditional tent encampment set up in capital
Did not embrace civil service exams
worked with Chinese on some issues
Surrounded self with Chinese advisors – Confucian, Buddhist, Daoist
Capital at Tatu – Beijing
Introduced rituals and classic music into court
New social structure
Mongols
Nomadic/Muslim allies
North Chinese
Ethnic Chinese/peoples from South
Gender Roles and the Convergence of Mongol and Chinese Culture
Women
Refused to adopt footbinding
Women retained property rights
Destroyed vision of women as dainty, to be protected
Rode to hunt
Kubilai’s daughter said had to beat wrestling
Chabi – wife
promoted Buddhist interests
reduced harsh treatment of Song captured
didn’t convert nearby farmland to pastureland
Mongol Tolerance and Foreign Cultural Influence
Curiosity/cosmopolitan tastes – opened China up
Brought scholars, artists, artisans
Muslims second social class
Supervised building of Chinese-style imperial city
Persian astronomers corrected Chinse calendars
Doctors added 36 volumes of Muslim medicine
Welcomed travelers
Polo family from Venice – Marco Polo
Marco Polo’s travel log created extreme interest in Asia
Inspired European efforts in navigation
Social Policies and Scholar-Gentry
Completely altered social hierarchy
Prevented scholar-gentry from taking positions – got rid of test
Bolstered position of artisans
Merchants also prospered
Mongols created war fleets/navies
Cities/sedentary lifestyles flourished – ironic
Open to different ideas
Traditional poetry/essay writing suffers
popular entertainment – dramas flourish
The Romance of the West Chamber
Actors no longer “mean people”
Help for peasants
Doesn’t turn cropland into pasture land
Reduces taxes
Plan to establish elementary education – never goes through
The Fall of the House of Yuan
Mongol aura of invincibility falters
Lost to military lords of Japan
Song loyalists raised revolts in South
Frustrated/unsuccessful expeditions to Java/Vietnam
Softening of the ruling class
Stop taking care of day to day work
Allowed corrupt Chinese/Muslims to run finances
Scholar-gentry encouraged revolts
Banditry/piracy increases – can’t guarantee safety
Famine hit many regions
Religious Sects – White Lotus Society
Magical powers to overthrow Mongols
Man from poor peasant family – Ju Yuanzhang starts Ming dynasty
Aftershock: The Brief Ride of Timur
Timur-I Lang – Timur the Lame
Highly cultured person
Ruthless conqueror – atrocities – pyramid of skulls – tens thousands
Spared artisans/scientists to help build capital
Upon death, empire falls apart
Last great challenge from nomads
Lasting changes
new ways of making war
gunpowder
Facilitated trade
unprecedented trade of foods, tools, ideas
brought great wealth to traders – think Venice
Created urge for overseas expansion
Greatest impact – plagues
Fleas on livestock
Rats on ships that nibbled grain
Economic/social impact – 50% of some regions
Forced adjustments/change in economic/social roles to deal with
Other exchanges
Europeans adapt products and technologies
Explosive powder/printing
After many wanted to maintain contacts
But…China grew more wary of outsiders
But…land-based travel became more difficult
Led to the need to focus on improving sea routes/transportation