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World history
Genghis Khan and the Mongol Empire
An overview of how the Mongol Empire, founded by Genghis Khan in 1206, eventually becomes the largest contiguous empire in world history before splitting formally into the Yuan Dynasty, Golden Horde, Chagatai Khanate and Ilkhanate.
Want to join the conversation?
- Why is the area of the Yuan dynasty of Kublai Khan smaller than the extent of the Mongol empire in 1227 or 1294?(8 votes)
- The Yuan dynasty was just one of four main parts of the Mongol Empire, along with the Ilkhanate, the Golden Horde, and the Chagatai Khanate. It was essentially just China, except with a Mongol-run government.(8 votes)
- How did Genghis Khan die? How is this important? How many countries did the mongols capture?(3 votes)
- What was the societal structure of the mongols? Did they have slaves?(3 votes)
- Yes, the Mongols had slaves. Throughout their conquests, they captured many slaves. They especially enslaved skilled men, women, and children and sold them throughout Eurasia. Russia and especially Moscow was subject to repeated enslavement by the Mongols.(4 votes)
- In which school year do we learn this.. what grade level?(1 vote)
- These history courses are not "graded" (set to a grade level). Your school, home school or school district might not even offer world history, so you could go all the way through and not get any of it. Enjoy what is here, at the level you can grasp it. If you're not old enough now, come back later. You'll profit from the experience.(3 votes)
- So...if the mongols conquered song china , and some settled there, does that mean some people who say they are Chinese, have Mongolian ancesters?(2 votes)
- how did Chinggis Khan trick the Chinese into coming out into the open so that they could be attacked?(2 votes)
- Why did three of the Khanates convert to Islam? Muslims were not particularly the majority at that time yet. They were a minority ruling over a majority in the lands of two of the Khanates especially the golden Horde that was vastly non Muslims.(2 votes)
- Perhaps the Muslim religion better served the spiritual needs of the people who led those societies.(1 vote)
- What present-day cities approximate the north, south, east and west boundaries of the empire that was conquered by the Mongols?(1 vote)
- Were all khanates rule by one kahn?(1 vote)
- How long did the Mongol empire last?(1 vote)
- for like 162 years(1 vote)
Video transcript
- [Instructor] It is the year 1200 and the world is about to
change in dramatic fashion. Let's just give ourselves
a little bit of context of what the world looks like. The kings of western Europe
are caught up in the Crusades. In the year 1200, the third
Crusade has just ended and is mildly successful, but Jerusalem is still in
control of the Muslims. The Byzantine Empire, what's
left of the true Roman Empire, is on the decline, losing more and more
territory to the Turks. In the Middle East and Persia, you have the golden age of Islam. The Abbasid Caliphate is still around, although it is now have been fragmented into many different Muslim empires. Modern-day north India,
Pakistan, and Afghanistan is under control of the Ghurid Sultanate, with the rest of India being divided amongst various Hindu kingdoms. In the east, in other videos,
we study the Song Dynasty, which is one of the really high points of Chinese civilization, although they're suspicious
of their northern neighbors. But in the midst of all of this, it ends up being a nomadic people that we really haven't talked a lot about in our survey of world history
that become the main catalyst for change over the next
several hundred years. And that is the Mongols. So let's move forward to the year 1206. In the late twelfth and
early thirteenth centuries, you have a leader by the name
of Temujin arise in Mongolia and he's able to unite
the various nomadic tribes and declares in 1206 a Mongol Empire you see here in this yellow color. He is eventually called
Genghis, or Genghis Khan, the great Khan, the great
ruler, or the universal ruler. Now, even though the Mongols
were not a focus point of world history up until this point, they did have several
very significant things going for them at this point in history. As nomadic tribes of herders,
they were excellent horsemen and they were also excellent
archers, capable of shooting an arrow in any direction
while riding a horse. So as a military, they
were incredibly nimble, they were incredibly fast,
they were incredibly brutal, but they were also incredibly adaptable. As they conquered more and more people, they learned from them and
by the time of Genghis Khan's death in 1227, they had
conquered much of northern Asia. And the Mongols will continue on. Within half a century
of Genghis Khan's death, they will have conquered
not just northern Asia. When they capture Baghdad, many historians consider this the end of
the Islamic golden age. As much pressure as the western Europeans were putting on the Turks
during the Crusades, it was actually the Mongol threat that was much more significant. Before fragmenting, it is the largest contiguous
empire in world history. I use the word contiguous
because the British Empire actually covers more land, as we'll see, a few hundred years later. But the Mongolian Empire, all
of the land was connected, it was contiguous. But as you can see from this
drawing, they begin to fragment into what's referred to
as multiple Khanates, that become more and more independent in the second half of
the thirteenth century. As we get into the fourteenth century, we can see that it is now fragmented into multiple, still
very significant empires. In the east, you have
Kublai Khan's Yuan Dynasty, controlling modern-day Mongolia and China, reemphasizing the importance of Buddhism until they eventually get
reconquered by the Ming Dynasty. In central Asia, you have
the Chagatai Khanate. In northwest Asia and eastern Europe, getting as far as Poland,
you have the Golden Horde. And in Persia and the Caucasus,
you have the Ilkhanate, which you can view as
a subordinate Khanate, but is now independent. The Khanates in the west
eventually convert to Islam. Super important to understand because many of the empires
that we are about to study in Asia and the Middle East
have roots in the Mongolian Empire and roots in what
Genghis Khan started in 1206.