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The Mongols

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What was to become the Mongol Empire resulted from the rise of Genghis Khan and ... The Mongol Empire was united under YASSA a series of Mongol laws that directed ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Mongols


1
The Mongols
2
The Eastern Hemisphere Before the Mongol Invasions
3
  • What was to become the Mongol Empire resulted
    from the rise of Genghis Khan and the unification
    of the Mongol and Turkic people.
  • Genghis Khan was born Temujin and later given the
    title KHAN or ruler
  • Born about 1162 C.E., Temujin rose from a
    position of isolation to one of leadership among
    the Mongol tribes.

4
  • After consolidation power among the Mongol tribes
    Temujin now known as Genghis Khan turned
    his attention toward conquering his southern
    neighbors the Tanguts Western Xia (Xi Xia)
    Dynasty and the Jin Dynasty of the Manchurian
    Chinese.

5
  • Genghis Khan believed that the Xi Xia would not
    be able to count on the protection of the larger
    Jin Dynasty for support if attacked.
  • The Mongols attacked Xi Xia and the Jin Dynasty
    did fail to support them the Xi Xia fell to the
    Mongols in 1209.
  • The Mongols then turned on the Jin Dynasty and
    forced the emperor to abandon his capital of
    Yanjing (now Beijing).
  • 1215 the Mongols controlled the northern half
    of the lands of the Jin Dynasty

6
Mongol Movement West
  • Kuchlug had been Khan of the Naiman until
    defeated by Genghis Khan and brought into the
    Mongol nation.
  • Kuchlug left the Mongols and moved west where he
    defeated the khan of Kara Khitai and established
    himself as khan.
  • Genghis Khan decided to move against his one time
    vassal and the Kara Khitai.
  • As the Mongols were tired form years of fighting
    in China, Genghis Khan sent only a small force
    led by his general Jebe, known as The Arrow
  • 1218 the Mongols had defeated the Kara Khitai
    Khanate and set their eyes farther west at the
    lucrative lands of the Khwarezmia.

7
Kara Khitai Khanate (look in the upper right)
8
Mongol attack on the Khwarezmian Empire
  • In 1218, Genghis Khan sent ambassadors and a 500
    man caravan to establish relations with the shah
    of the Muslim empire of Khwarezmia.
  • Rather than treat the Mongols as equals, the
    caravan was slaughtered at the city of Otrar.
  • Genghis Khan sent special ambassadors to the shah
    in order to explain the situation the shah had
    all but one of the ambassadors beheaded.
  • 200,000 Mongols marched on the Khwarezmian Empire

9
  • The city of Otrar was taken and the governor who
    had attacked the initial caravan was executed by
    having molten silver poured into his eyes and
    ears.
  • Mongol numbers, brutality and internal
    Khwarezmian problems all led to the Mongol
    conquest of the empire in 1220.

10
  • After defeating the Khwarezmia, Genghis Khan
    divided his forces into two large armies
  • Genghis Khan moved his forces into Afghanistan
    and northern India eventually returning to
    Mongolia
  • The other Mongol forces moved into Armenia,
    Azerbaijan, Georgia and defeated the Kievian
    Russians.
  • The Mongols had established an empire from Europe
    to the Pacific from the Indian Ocean to
    Siberia. Conquered territories paid taxes and
    tribute to the Mongols.

11
  • 1226 Genghis Khan began to move once again
    against the Xi Xia and the Jin who during the
    Mongol move west had allied in an attempt to
    overthrow Mongol control as overlords.
  • The Xi Xia and the northern Jin again came into
    line as Mongol vassals.
  • 1227 Genghis Khan died and the Mongol empire
    was eventually divided among his sons and
    grandsons.
  • The Mongol Empire was united under YASSA a
    series of Mongol laws that directed personal,
    religious, and political behavior.

12
Mongol Empire at Genghis Khans death 1227 this
does not include Mongol tributaries
13
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14
Ogedei Khan
  • EMPIRE OF THE GREAT KHAN
  • The third son of Genghis Khan, Ogedei continued
    the expansion of the Mongol Empire as he
    inherited the largest part of his fathers
    empire. He was recognized by his brothers and
    nephews as the Great Khan even as they may have
    rule over parts of the empire.
  • He began the wars against the Jin and Song
    Dynasties in China wars that eventually brought
    all of China under the control of the Mongols.
  • While he was the Great Khan, attacks as far west
    as Poland and Hungary were made as well as
    power consolidation in Persia.
  • When news of his 1241 death reached Mongol
    warriors nearing Vienna they stopped the
    advancement and returned to Mongolia

15
The Golden Horde
  • After the death of Genghis Khan, his lands in
    south eastern Russia and Kazakhstan were given to
    the sons of his eldest son, who had recently
    died.
  • Batu was given the lands known as the Blue
    Horde
  • Orda was given the lands known as the White
    Horde
  • The lands of the Russian steppe were collectively
    called the Golden Horde in 1378 when the Blue and
    White Hordes were ruled by the same khan

16
The Golden Horde Principality of Moscow in
light yellow
17
  • 1235 Batu moved his forces west attacking the
    Volga Bulgarians, the Ukrainian steppes, the
    Russians, and defeated the Poles and Hungarians
    at the Battles of Legnica and Muhi before
    returning to Mongolia after the 1241 death of the
    Great khan Ogedei in order to settle succession
    claims
  • The lands known as the Golden Horde were
    ethnically a mixture of Turkish and Mongol
    peoples over time the Mongols became the
    warrior upper class while Bulgars, Tatars, etc
    became the majority of the population. The
    culture became more Turkish than Mongol over
    time. Europeans and Russians often referred to
    the populace of the Horde as Tatars.

18
  • The khan of the Golden Horde was selected from
    descendants of Batu by a ruling council.
  • Golden Horde ministers were known as viziers.
  • The Golden Horde made tributary states of
    Russia, Armenia, Georgia, the Crimean Greeks, and
    the Crimean Goths.
  • There is a strong possibility that the Horde and
    Russians allied themselves against the expansion
    of Lithuania and the Teutonic Knights.

19
The death of the Golden Horde
  • The power of the Golden Horde was diminished by
    internal divisions, attacks from Lithuania, the
    warrior Tamerlane/Timur (see Ottoman Empire
    PowerPoint), the devastation of the Black death,
    and the growth of the tributary states.
  • By the 1440s, the Golden Horde was divided into
    separate khanates
  • Qasin Khanate, Khanate of Kaza, khanate of
    Astrakhan, Kazakh Khanate, Uzbek Khanate, and the
    Khanate of Crimea

20
  • The khans had evaluated the rulers of Moscow to
    the level of princes in order to divide the
    Russians (between Kiev and Moscow) for easier
    subjugation.
  • By 1480, the Muscovite Russians were stronger
    than any of the divided khanates and established
    independence from the Horde.
  • The Russians began a centuries long process of
    conquering the khanates and absorbing them into
    the Russian Empire.
  • The Crimean Khanate was the last influential
    remnant of the Horde, as it became a vassal of
    the Ottoman Empire in 1475 and received
    protection from the empire.
  • 1783 Catherine the Greats forces defeated and
    annexed the Crimean Khanate.

21
Kublai Khan
  • 1215-1294
  • Grandson of Genghis Khan succession battle
    between him and a brother led to the end of a
    united Mongol Empire
  • Kublai established control of the Chinese lands
    of the Mongol Empire and established the YUAN
    DYNASTY.

22
Yuan Dynasty 1271-1368
  • Kublai Khan claimed rights over Mongol
    territories far west and used the title khan
    but his descendants did not press such claims and
    used the title Emperor of China
  • Perhaps initially fearful of loosing China, in
    the early days of the Yuan Dynasty, the Mongols
    plundered widely but recognized the money found
    through trade and encouraged the use of the Silk
    Road and the transfer of Chinese technology west.
  • It was during his reign that the Italian Marco
    Polo visited China.

23
  • Attempts by the Mongol Yuan to integrate with the
    Han Chinese proved to be ineffective.
  • Weak Yuan emperors and a belief by other Mongols
    that the Yuan had become Chinese (something the
    Han Chinese disputed) led to the downfall of the
    dynasty. The dynasty was eventually forced from
    its capital (Beijing) by the Ming Dynasty.
  • Remnants of the Yuan moved north and established
    a weak Northern Yuan kingdom eventually
    controlled by the Manchu.

24
  • Impact of the Mongol Yuan on China
  • Development of drama, novels and the written
    vernacular
  • Re-establishment of Confucian government policies
    as a way to unite China
  • Religious toleration
  • Advances in science and the continued development
    of the Grand Canal
  • Transfer of information and trade with the west

25
Mongols/Moghul (in Persian)/Mughal in India
  • Babur 1483-1531 a descendant of the warrior
    Tamerlane/Timur paternally and Genghis Khan
    maternally.
  • Babur represented cultural diffusion at its best
    his tribe was Mongol, he embraced Turkic and
    Persian culture and was a Muslim.
  • Baburs conquest of India established the Mughal
    dynasty.

26
Mughal India
  • From Babur to the last Mughal emperor who was
    exiled after the 1857 Indian Mutiny against the
    British (although the emperors rule was reduced
    to merely the area around the city of Delhi)
    the Mughals brought Islamic and Persian
    influences to India.

27
  • During the rule of Akbar, he attempted to unite
    India through a religion that blended Islam,
    Zoroastrianism, Jainism and Christianity known
    as Din-i-llahi or Faith of God. This was
    rejected by Islamic clerics.
  • The Shah/Emperor Jahan is best known for building
    the Taj Mahal the supreme symbol of Mughal
    architecture which blended Persian/Islamic
    influences with traditional Indian.

28
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