 
Traditions and Encounters, 4th Edition (Bentley)Chapter 18:
NOMADIC EMPIRES AND EURASION INTEGRATIONChapter Outline- Turkish migrations and imperial expansion
- Nomadic economy and society
- Turkish peoples were nomadic herders; organized into clans with related languages
- Central Asia's steppes: good for grazing, little rain, few rivers
- Nomads and their animals; few settlements
- Nomads drove their herds in migratory cycles
- Lived mostly on animal products
- Also produced limited amounts of millet, pottery, leather goods, iron
- Nomads and settled peoples sought trade, were prominent on caravan routes
- Fluidity of classes in nomadic society
- Two social classes: nobles and commoners
- Autonomous clans and tribes
- Religions: shamans, Buddhism, Nestorian Christianity; by tenth century, Islam
- Military organization
- Khan ("ruler") organized vast confederation of individual tribes for expansion
- Outstanding cavalry forces, formidable military power
- Turkish empires in Persia, Anatolia, and India
- Saljuq Turks and the Abbasid empire
- Lived on borders of the Abbasid realm, mid-eighth to mid-tenth centuries
- Moved further in and served in Abbasid armies thereafter
- Overshadowed the Abbasid caliphs by the mid-eleventh century
- Extended Turkish rule to Syria, Palestine, and other parts of the realm
- Saljuq Turks and the Byzantine empire
- Migrated in large numbers to Anatolia, early eleventh century
- Defeated Byzantine army at Manzikert in 1071
- Transformed Anatolia into an Islamic society
- Ghaznavid Turks dominated northern India through sultanate of Delhi
- The Mongol empires
- Chinggis Khan and the making of the Mongol empire
- Chinggis Khan ("universal ruler") unified Mongol tribes through alliance and conquests
- Mongol political organization
- Organized new military units and broke up tribal affiliations
- Chose high officials based on talent and loyalty
- Established capital at Karakorum
- Mongol strategy: horsemanship, archers, mobility, psychological warfare
- Mongol conquest of northern China
- Chinggis Khan, Mongols raided the Jurchen in north China beginning in 1211
- Controlled north China by 1220
- South China was still ruled by the Song dynasty
- Mongol conquest of Persia
- Chinggis Khan tried to open trade and diplomatic relations with Saljuq leader Khwarazm shah, the ruler of Persia, 1218
- Upon being rejected, Chinggis Khan led force to pursue the Khwarazm
- Mongol forces destroyed Persian cities and qanat
- Chinggis died in 1227, laid foundation for a mighty empire
- The Mongol empires after Chinggis Khan
- Division of the Mongol empires: heirs divide into four regional empires
- Khubilai Khan
- Chinggis Khan's grandson, consolidated Mongol rule in China
- Promoted Buddhism, supported Daoists, Muslims, and Christians
- Conquest of southern China
- Khubilai extended Mongol rule to all of China
- Song capital at Hangzhou fell in 1276, Yuan Dynasty founded in 1279
- Unsuccessful conquests of Vietnam, Burma, Java, and Japan
- The Golden Horde
- Group of Mongols overran Russia between 1237 and 1241
- Further overran Poland, Hungary, and eastern Germany, 1241-1242
- Maintained hegemony in Russia until the mid-fifteenth century
- The ilkhanate of Persia: Khubilai's brother, Hülegü, captured Baghdad in 1258
- Mongol rule in Persia
- Persians served as ministers, governors, and local officials
- Mongols only cared about taxes and order
- Ilkhan Ghazan converted to Islam, 1295; massacres of Christians and Jews followed
- 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
- Dismissed Confucian scholars; dismantled civil service examination
- Tolerated all cultural and religious traditions in China
- Mongol ruling elite became enchanted with the Lamaist Buddhism of Tibet
- The Mongols and Eurasian integration
- The Mongols and trade
- Mongols 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
- Diplomatic missions
- The four Mongol empires maintained close diplomatic communications
- Established diplomatic relations with Korea, Vietnam, India, Europe
- Resettlement
- Mongols needed skilled artisans and educated individuals from other places
- Often resettled them in different locations to provide services
- Uighur 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
- Decline of the Mongols in Persia and China
- Collapse of the ilkhanate
- In Persia, excessive spending and overexploitation led to reduced revenues
- Failure of the ilkhan's paper money
- Factional struggle plagued the Mongol leadership
- The last ruler died without an heir; the ilkhanate collapsed
- Decline of the Yuan dynasty
- Paper money issued by the Mongol rulers lost value
- Power struggles, assassinations, and civil war weakened Mongols after 1320s
- Bubonic plague in 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
- Surviving Mongol khanates
- The khanate of Chaghatai continued in central Asia
- The Golden Horde survived until the mid-sixteenth century
- After the Mongols
- Tamerlane the Whirlwind (1336-1404) built central Asian empire
- The lame conqueror, Timur was self-made; rose to power in 1360s; established capital in Samarkand
- Tamerlane's conquests
- First conquered Persia and Afghanistan
- Next attacked the Golden Horde
- At the end of the fourteenth century, invaded northern India
- Ruled the empire through tribal leaders who relied on existing bureaucrats to collect taxes
- Tamerlane's heirs struggled and divided empire into four regions
- The foundation of the Ottoman empire
- Osman
- Large numbers of nomadic Turks migrated to Persia and Anatolia
- Osman, a charismatic leader, carved out a small state in northwest Anatolia
- Claimed independence from the Saljuq sultan in 1299
- Ottoman conquests in the Balkans in 1350s
- Sultan Mehmed II sacked Constantinople in 1453, renamed it Istanbul
- Absorbed the remainder of the Byzantine empire
- During the sixteenth century, extended to southwest Asia, southeast Europe, and north Africa
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