Genghis Khan and Mongol Eurasian Integration

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Genghis Khan and Mongol Eurasian Integration

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Genghis Khan and Mongol Eurasian Integration. DO NOW: AP M.C. QUESTION. Which of the following is an accurate characterization of both the Incan and Yuan dynasties? Both civilizations developed strict social class hierarchies, in which upward mobility was difficult - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Genghis Khan and Mongol Eurasian Integration

Page 1: Genghis  Khan  and Mongol Eurasian Integration

Genghis Khan and Mongol

Eurasian Integration

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DO NOW: AP M.C. QUESTION

Which of the following is an accurate characterization of both the Incan and Yuan dynasties?a) Both civilizations developed strict social class

hierarchies, in which upward mobility was difficult

b) Peasant uprisings were responsible for the establishment of both civilizations

c) Both the Yuan and the Inca depended on trade as their primary economic activity

d) Both civilizations flourished under control of outside invaders.

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DO NOW: AP M.C. QUESTION

The Mongol Empire was divided into four Khanates, which governed all of the following lands except

a) Russiab) Persiac) Japand) Ukriane

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QUICK WRITE:

What would you argue are the two strongest impacts or most lasting legacies of Mongol rule?

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Nomadic Peoples

Nomadic economy and societyOrganized into clans with related languagesCentral Asia’s steppes: good for grazing, little rain, few riversNomads and their animals; few settlements

Nomads drove their herds in migratory cyclesLived mostly on animal productsAlso produced limited amounts of millet, pottery, leather goods, iron

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Nomadic Peoples and Their Animals

SheepGoatsHorses

Mare’s milk

Flock survival

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Nomadic Peoples and Their Housing and Clothing

Gers/YurtsRobes - dei

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Caravan Trade Interaction

Nomads and settled peoples sought trade, were prominent on caravan routes

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Nomadic Class System

Fluidity of classes in nomadic society

Two social classes; nobles and commoners

Autonomous clans and tribes

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Religion

ShamansBuddhismNestorian ChristianityBy the tenth century … Islam

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Religion of Genghis Khan

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Military Organization

Khan – “RULER”Organized vast confederation of individual tribes for expansionOutstanding cavalry forcesFormidable military power

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The Mongol Empires

Genghis Khan and the making of the Mongol Empire

Genghis Khan unified Mongol tribes through alliances and conquestsWhy was unification necessary?

Tribal group v. Mongol identityKhan’s personal missionTrade disruptionEcology – 1180-1220

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Mongol Political Organization

Organized new military units and broke up tribal affiliations

Units based on ten…100…1000…Leaders had close relationship with Genghis

Chose high officials based on talent and loyaltyEstablished capital at Karakorum

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Mongol Strategy

HorsemanshipArchersMobilityPsychological warfareFeigned withdrawal

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Mongol Siege Warfare:

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Mongol Siege Warfare:

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Mongol Conquest of Northern China

Genghis Khan, Mongols raided the Jurchen in north China beginning in 1211Controlled north China by 1220South China was still ruled by Song dynasty

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Mongol Conquest of Persia

Genghis Khan tried to open trade and diplomatic relations with Saljuq leader Khwarazm shah, the ruler of Persia in 1218Upon being rejected, Genghis Khan led force to pursue KhwarazmMongol forces destroyed Persian cities

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Death of Genghis Khan

Died in 1227 having laid foundation for a mighty empire

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Mongol Division After Genghis Heirs Divide into Four Regional Empires….

Kubilai Khan-China

Genghis Khan’s grandson

Consolidated Mongol rule in China

Promoted Buddhism, supported the Daoists, Muslims, and Christians

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Conquest of Southern China

Khubilai extended Mongol rule to all of ChinaSong capital at Hangzhou fell in 1276Yuan Dynasty founded in 1279Unsuccessful conquests of Vietnam, Burma, Java, and Japan

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The Golden Horde

Group of Mongols overran Russia between 1237 and 1241Jochi and later Batu will rule…Batu – r.1224-1255Further overran Poland, Hungary and eastern Germany, 1241 – 1242Maintained hegemony in Russia until the mid-fifteenth century

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The Ilkhanate of Persia

Khubilai’s brother, Hulegu captured Baghdad in 1258Mongol rule in Persia

Persians served as ministers, governors, and local officialsMongols cared only about taxes and orderIlkan Ghazan converted to Islam in 1295Massacres of Jews and Christians followed

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Mongol Rule in China

1206 Temujin chosen Genghis Khan of the Mongols1227 Death of Genghis KhanMongols conquer northern China in 12341265 Khubilai becomes last Great Khan – rules till death in 12941271 founding of the Yuan Empire1276 - 1279 Mongol conquest of the Southern Song1368 Ming Empire founded

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Mongols in China

1265 Khubilai becomes last Great Khan – rules till death in 1294

By 1279 the Mongols are in control of China

Yuan Dynasty

Short conquest – 1368 the Ming Dynasty is founded

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Mongol Khanates

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Diplomatic Missions

The four Mongol empires maintained close diplomatic communications

Khanate of ChagataiKhanate of the Golden HordeKhanate of the Great KhanIlkanate of the Great Khan

Established diplomatic relations with Korea, Vietnam, India, Europe

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Mongol Rule in China

Four ClassesMongolsCentral Asians and the Middle EasternersNorthern ChineseSouthern Chinese

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Mongol Rule in China

Outlawed intermarriage between Mongols and Chinese

Forbade Chinese from learning the Mongol language

Brought foreign administrators into China and put them in charge

Tolerated all cultural and religious traditions in China

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Mongol Ruling Elite

Became enchanted with the Lamaist (Vajrayana) Buddhism of Tibet

Universal leader concept

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The Mongols and Eurasian Integration

The Mongols and tradeMongols worked to secure trade routes and ensure safety of merchants

Elaborate courier network with relay stations

Maintained good order for traveling merchants, ambassadors, and missionaries

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ResettlementMongols needed skilled artisans and educated individuals from other places

Often resettled them in different locations to provide services

Uigher Turks served as clerks, secretaries, and administrators

Arab and Persian Muslims also served Mongols far from their homelands

Skilled artisans were often sent to Karakorum; became permanent residents

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Decline of the Mongols in Persia and ChinaHad been established by Hulegu by 1260Ghazan – declared himself a Muslim in 1295Decline of the Il-kanate state

In Persia, excessive spending and overexploitation led to reduced revenues

Failure of the Il-khan’s paper money

Factional struggle plagued the Mongol leadership

The last ruler died without an heir; the Il-khanate collapsed - 1349

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Decline of the Yuan Dynasty

Seen as outsidersTraditional Chinese & outside religionsRebellions among farmers Paper money issued by the Mongol rulers lost valuePower struggles, assassinations, and civil war weakened Mongols after 1320s

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Bubonic PlagueIn southwest China in 1330s

Spread through Asia and Europe

Depopulation and labor shortage undermined the Mongol regime

By 1368 the Chinese drove the Mongols back to the steppes

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Surviving Mongol Khanates

The Khanate of Chaghati continued in central Asia

Later –Timur / Tamerlane

The Golden Horde survived until the mid-sixteenth century

Batu KhanSarai – near Volga River

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Checking for Understanding:

Why is it argued by historians that the Mongols changed the world, or helped to make the world ‘modern’?

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RECOVERY IN CHINAThe Ming DynastyZhu Yuanzhang (Hongwu) overthrew Mongol rule and established the Ming dynasty in 1368

Ming centralization of government revived Chinese traditions

Reestablished Confucian educational and civil service systemsEmperor ruled China directly without the aid of chief ministers

Mandarins and eunuchs maintained absolute authority of emperors

Mandarins represented central government to local authoritiesEunuchs could not build family fortunes

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The Ming Dynasty

Map

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Ming Dynasty Promoted Economic Recovery

Repaired irrigation systemsAgricultural productivity soaredPromoted manufacture of porcelain, silk, and cotton textilesTrade within Asia flourished with increased production

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Cultural Revival

Actively promoted neo-Confucianism

Yongle – encyclopedia – massive anthology of cultural traditions

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The Chinese Reconnaissance

Zheng He’s expeditionsMing emperors permitted foreigners to trade in Quanzhou and GuangzhouRefurbished navy and sent seven ships into Indian OceanPurposes of expedition?Largest marine crafts in the world…

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The Treasure Ships

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Chinese Naval Power

Visited southeast Asia, India, Ceylon, Arabia, and east AfricaZheng He’s voyages were diplomatic-exchange of gifts and envoysAlso military – used force to impress foreign powers – ex. coastal piratesVoyages enhanced Chinese reputation in the Indian Ocean basin

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End of Voyages

1433New emperor Confucian ministers mistrusted foreign alliancesResources redirected to agriculture and defense of northern bordersTechnology of building ships was forgotten, charts destroyed

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Zheng He

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Forbidden City

183 acres32 feet tall wall1406 construction begins14 years200,000 men75 buildings, 9,999 rooms

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Map of the Forbidden City

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Hall of Supreme Harmony

Major Structure

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Hall of Earthly Peace

Residence of Empress

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Hall of Protective Harmony

Banquet Hall

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The Ming Emperor and Empress

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From the Air….