Chapter 11: Pastoral Peoples on the Global Stage: The
Mongol Moment, 1200–1500 |
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I. |
Looking Back and
Around: The Long History of Pastoral Nomads |
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A. |
The World of
Pastoral Societies |
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1. |
Small populations on large
amounts of land |
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2. |
High levels of social and
gender equality |
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3. |
Mobile but in contact with
settled agriculturalists |
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4. |
Tribal alliances and military
power of horsemen |
|
B. |
Before the
Mongols: Pastoralists in History |
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1. |
Modun of the Xiongnu (r. 210–174 B.C.E.) |
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2. |
Bedouin Arabs and the rise of
Islam |
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3. |
Turkic nomads versus
China,
Persia,
and
Byzantium |
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4. |
Berbers and the Almoravid Empire |
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II. |
Breakout: The
Mongol Empire |
|
A. |
From Temujin to Chinggis Khan: The
Rise of the Mongol Empire |
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|
1. |
Desperate and poor childhood |
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|
2. |
Generous to friends, ruthless
to enemies |
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|
3. |
Supreme Leader of a Great
Mongol Nation, 1206 |
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4. |
Started five decades of
expansionist wars, 1209 |
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B. |
Explaining the
Mongol Moment |
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|
1. |
No plan or blueprint |
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|
2. |
Weak enemies and a strong
army |
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3. |
Discipline, loyalty, and charisma
… and loot! |
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4. |
Incorporation of useful
conquered people |
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5. |
Ruthless and terrifying |
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6. |
Strong administration and
systematic taxation |
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7. |
Favorable conditions for
merchants |
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8. |
Religious toleration |
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III. |
Encountering
the Mongols: Comparing Three Cases |
|
A. |
China and the
Mongols |
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|
1. |
70 years of conquests,
1209–1279 |
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2. |
Yuan Dynasty and Kublai Khan
(r. 1271–1294) |
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3. |
A foreign and exploitative
occupation |
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4. |
Collapse of Mongol rule and
rise of the Ming Dynasty |
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B. |
Persia and the Mongols |
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|
1. |
Chinggis Kahn (1219–1221) and Helugu (1251–1258) |
|
|
2. |
Damage to
agriculture |
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|
3. |
Persian
civilization of barbarian Mongols |
|
C. |
Russia and the
Mongols |
|
|
1. |
Brutal invasion of a
disunited Kievan Rus (1237–1240) |
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|
2. |
Khanate of the Golden Horde |
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3. |
Exploitation without occupation |
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4. |
Resistance and collaboration |
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5. |
Rise of
Moscow and expansion of the church |
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IV. |
The Mongol
Empire as a Eurasian Network |
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A. |
Toward a World
Economy |
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|
1. |
Not producers or traders but
promoters of commerce |
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2. |
Security on the Silk Roads |
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|
3. |
Connected to the larger world
system |
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B. |
Diplomacy on a
Eurasian Scale |
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|
1. |
European envoys sent east |
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|
2. |
European discovery of the
outside world |
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3. |
Mongol linkage of
China
and
Persia |
|
C. |
Cultural Exchange
in the Mongol Realm |
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|
1. |
Forced population transfers and
voluntary migrations |
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2. |
Technology transfer and the
spread of crops |
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3. |
Europe
gained the most |
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D. |
The Plague: An
Afro-Eurasian Pandemic |
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|
1. |
The Black Death |
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|
2. |
China,
1331, Europe, 1347, and
East Africa, 1409 |
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|
3. |
The end of the world? |
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4. |
Social changes in
Europe |
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5. |
Demise of the Mongol Empire |