Nomadic Empires & Eurasian Integration

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Ch. 17
NOMADIC EMPIRES & EURASIAN
INTEGRATION
I. TURKISH MIGRATIONS & IMPERIAL
EXPANSION
Economy and Society of Nomadic Pastoralism
 Nomadic Pastoralists and their animals
- Herds of animals
- adapted to ecological conditions
-followed migratory cycles that took account of
seasons and local climate
- climate limited development of human
society
- produced limited pottery, leather goods, iron
weapons, and tools
TURKISH MIGRATIONS & IMPERIAL EXPANSION
Nomadic and Settled Peoples
- traded w/settled peoples
- agriculture and manufactured goods
- linked societies from China to
Mediterranean Basin
 Nomadic Society
- two social classes: nobles & commoners
- nobles: charismatic leaders, clans & tribes
into alliances, fluid class
-commoners: gain recognition and move up

I. TURKISH MIGRATIONS & IMPERIAL
EXPANSION
Gender Relations
- adult males dominated
- women: tended to animals, excellent horse
riders & archers
 Nomadic Religion
- Turkish religion revolved around shamanreligious specialist (supernatural powers)
-6th century many Turks converted to
Buddhism, Christianity, or Manicheism

I. TURKISH MIGRATIONS & IMPERIAL
EXPANSION
Turkish Conversion to Islam
- 10th century large scale conversion; esp.
Turks
 Military Organization
- Khans (rulers), indirectly through leaders
of allied tribes
- superior equestrian skills
- these skills helped to attack settle
communities of wealth

I. TURKISH MIGRATIONS & IMPERIAL
EXPANSION
Turkish Empires in Persia, Anatolia and India
 Saljuq Turks and the Abbasid Empire
- entered the above reasons for different
reasons at different times
- opportunities for trade
- along borders of Abbasid realm at times
served in Abbasid army
- 11th c. overpower caliphs, who become
figureheads
I. TURKISH MIGRATIONS & IMPERIAL
EXPANSION

Saljuq Turks and the Byzantine Empire
- migrating in Anatolia 11th c.
- peasants viewed them as liberators
- displaced Byzantine authorities, set up
own political and social institutions
- discriminated against the Byzantine
Empire
- welcomed converts to Islam
I. TURKISH MIGRATIONS & IMPERIAL
EXPANSION

Ghaznavid Turks and the Sultanate of Delhi
- led raids in lucrative sites of N. India
- goal at first was to plunder later more
interested in permanent rule
- foe of Buddhism and Hinduism,
destroyed many sacred temples, shrines,
monastaries
- encouraged conversion to Islam
II. THE MONGOL EMPIRE
Chinngis Khan and the making of the Mongol Empire
 Chinggis Khan’s Rise to Power
- Unifier of the Mongols originally named Temujin
- alliance w/Mongol clan leader, steppe
diplomacy (loyalty but betrayal through
advancement)
- brought all Mongol tribes into a single
confederation
- 1206 became known as Chinggis Khan (universal
ruler)
II. THE MONGOL EMPIRE
Mongol Political Organization
- mistrusted Mongol tribal organization
- had military pledge allegiance to him alone,
no tribal affiliation
- most important part of the empire was
the army
 Mongol Army
- relied on equestrian skills and archery
- after united all Mongols turned his attention
to Central Asian conquests

II. THE MONGOL EMPIRE


Mongol Conquest of N. China
- extended Mongol rule to Northern China,
dominance by 1220
Mongol Conquest of Persia
- ruled by Saljuqs known as the Khwarazm shah
- despised Mongols ordered them to assassinate
Chinggis Khan, unsuccessful
- Chinggis retaliated and took control of his army
and his realm
- destroyed qanat irrigation system
- no establish central gov’t, assigned overlords for
administration.
II. THE MONGOL EMPIRE
The Mongol Empire after Chinggis Khan
 Khubilai Khan
- after Chinggis death there was a power
struggle, divided empire into 4 regional
realms amongst grandsons.
- Consolidated China
- ruthless attacks against enemies,
improved welfare of subjects, tolerant of
religions
II. THE MONGOL EMPIRE
Mongol Conquest of Southern China
- Kubilai in 1279 est. Yuan Dynasty till 1368
- attempted several invasions in SE Asia but
was unsuccessful
 The Golden Horde
-1237-1241
-maintained a large army
-extracted tribute from Russian cities and
agricultural production, did not find the land
appealing

II. THE MONGOL EMPIRE

The llkhanate of Persia
-Khubilai’s brother Hulegu defeated
Abbasid empire and started the Mongol’s
ilkhanate in Persia.
- needed to become governors as well as
conquerors
- difficult adjustment as administrators
- could not maintain land lost most of it
w/in a century.
II. THE MONGOL EMPIRE

Mongol Rule in Persia
- Mongols in China frowned upon their
subjects, they were mere cultivators
- outlawed marriages, forbade them from
learning the Mongol languages, resisted
assimilation to Chinese cultures, dismantled
Confucian educational end exam system.
- did not do their own administrations but
rather brought in others to administer
- tolerated religious and cultural traditions
II. THE MONGOL EMPIRE

Mongols and Buddhism
- Most Mongols followed native shamans
- Others followed Lamaist Buddhism similar
to their original beliefs
- Lamaist- made room for magic & supernatural, recognized Mongols as legitimate
rulers, and Mongol khans as incarnations
of the Buddha
II. THE MONGOL EMPIRE
Mongols and Eurasian Integration
 The Mongols and Trade
- linked lands more directly
- maintained a good courier network relaying news,
information, & gov’t orders
- encouragement of travel and communication
facilitated trade, diplomatic travel, missionary efforts
and people to new lands
- safe trade routes allowed for more merchants to
travel allowing for more commercial investment
-creating a safe direct link between China and Europe
for the first time
II. THE MONGOL EMPIRE
Diplomatic Missions
- diplomatic communication was essential,
security of roads and travelers benefitted
ambassadors as well as merchants.
 Missionary Effects
- highways for missionaries as well as
merchants (Islam, Lamaist Buddhism,
Nestorian Christians, Roman Catholics)

II. THE MONGOL EMPIRE

Resettlement
- moving people into new lands
- often recruited specialized workers from
their allies and placed them in areas among
the empire where they were needed.
- Uigher Turks often used for their intellect
- often conquered people who were
specialized were integrated into the empire
- this promoted Eurasian integration and
exchanges of peoples from different societies
II. THE MONGOL EMPIRE
Decline of the Mongols in Persia and China
 Collapse of the Ilkhanate
- Persiaexcessive spending of treasury,
overexploitation of peasantryreduced
revenue
- Paper money attemptdrive metals to
gov’tunsuccessfulmerchants closed
shops
-Gov’t struggles when last Mongol ruler died
the Ilkhanate essentially did too.
II. THE MONGOL EMPIRE


Decline of the Yuan Dynasty
- did not have reserves to back up paper
moneypopulation lost confidence prices rises to
reflect diminished value
- internal fighting (power struggles, assassinations, civil
wars)
Bubonic Plague
-facilitating trade and communication unknowingly
spread the disease
- SW ChinaChina & C. AsiaSW Asia & Europe
- depopulation in China and labor shortages weakened
the Mongol regime
II. THE MONGOL EMPIRE

Surviving Mongol Khanates
- Despite their collapse in Persia and China
Mongols did not completely disappear
- Khanate in Chaghatai prevailed in C. Asia
-Threat in NW borders of China
- Khanates of the Golden Horde continued
to be successful near lands N of the Black
and Caspian Sea.
-Mongol near Russia cont’d to be a threat
until Josef Stalin forcibly moved them
III. AFTER THE MONGOLS
Tamerlane the Whirlwind
 The Lame Conqueror
- the end of the Mongols created a political
vacuum.
-Ming took over China
- Turkish Timur aka Tamerlame took over
Persia
- Modeled himself after Chinggis Khan, steppe
politics
III. AFTER THE MONGOLS

Tamerlane’s Conquest
- Places invaded and used for taxes
include: Persia, Afghanistan, Golden Horde,
India, attempts in Asia & Anatolia, tried for
China but died before it could be accomplished
in 1405
- Like others he was a conqueror not a ruler,
no real administration, only tribal leaders were
allies, relied on overlords in his conquered
territories
III. AFTER THE MONGOLS
Tamerlane’s heirs
- no organization meant conflicts between
sons and grandsons.
-territory divided into four parts
The Foundation of the Ottoman Empire
 Osman
-after the Mongols collapsed nomadic people moved into
territories of Anatolia.
- Series of campaigns of conquest emerged one of its leaders
was Osman
-1299 he declares independence from the Saljuq sultans and
begins to create his own state
- His followers begin to be called Ottomans

III. AFTER THE MONGOLS
Ottoman Conquests
- Places of Ottoman spread and conquest
include: Dardanelles at Gallipoli on the Balkan
peninsula and into the Byzantine Empire
 The Capture of Constantinople
- captured by Sultan Mehmed II, aka “Mehmed
the Conqueror”
- changed name to Istanbul, absorbed rest of
Byzantine empire including Greece and the
Balkan region as far as SW Asia, SE Europe,
Egypt, and N Africa.

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