Chapter 18 Nomadic Empires and Eurasian Integration Nomadic
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Chapter 18 Nomadic Empires and Eurasian Integration
Nomadic Environment & Economy �Not enough rain for large-scale agriculture �Humans can’t survive on grasses and shrubs �Drove herds and flocks where there is grass �Followed migratory cycles �Lived in tents (yurts) �Dense populations only at oases �Some craft production �Had to trade �Led caravan routes across central Asia
Nomadic Society �Nobles and Commoners �Clans and tribes looked after their own affairs �During wartime, nobles had absolute authority �Social classes were fluid; there was movement up and down
Nomadic Religion �Shamans �Attracted to religions they encountered through trade �Buddhism, Nestorian Christianity, Manichaeism �Many converted to Islam in the 10 th century and their migration spread Islam
Nomadic Military Organization �Khan=ruler �Massive military power due to cavalry �Great mobility, well-organized �Able to conquer others easily
Turkish Empires (Persia) �Mid-eighth to mid-ninth centuries, lived on borders of the Abbasid realm �By mid-tenth century, Saljuq Turks in Abbasid army and living in realm �By mid-eleventh century, Saljuqs overshadowed Abbasid caliphs; Tughril Beg was sultan; caliphs were figureheads and power was held by Turkish sultans
Turkish Empires (Anatolia) �Turks began migrating there by 11 th century �Battle of Manzikert victory allowed Turks to take over most of Anatolia �Many people converted to Islam
Turkish Empires (India) �Mahmud of Ghazni led Ghaznavid Turks of Afghanistan into northern India �First they came to plunder, but then they took political power �Mahmud of Ghazni was a zealous foe of Hinduism and Buddhism �By 13 th century, the Sultanate of Delhi controlled all of northern India
Chinggis Khan and the Making of the Mongol Empire �High steppe lands of eastern central Asia �Kin groups organized into families, clans, and tribes; difficult to organize into a large-scale, united society �Temujin: unifier, father forged alliances but was poisoned by rivals, poverty and capture, worked alliances with “diplomacy”, in 1206 became Chinggis Khan.
�Broke up tribes and forced men to join new military units not based on tribal affiliation �Officials chosen by merit and loyalty �Capital and palace at Karakorum (Har Horin) �Mongol population only about 1 million, army only about 125, 000 at most �Equestrian skills, bows and arrows, fast traveling, slaughtered those who resisted
�In 1211, Mongols invaded northern China under the Jurchen (Song Dynasty) �In 1219, Mongols conquered Afghanistan and Persia after shah refused to open trade relations, destroyed cities, massacred people �Chinggis Khan ruled through his military but didn’t set up an administration to control the conquered land
Mongol Empires after Chinggis Khan �Realm divided into four regional empires after his death �The Great Khans of China: Khubilai worked to improve welfare of subjects, promoted Buddhism and other religions, built roads, extended Mongol rule to all of China, Yuan dynasty 1279 -1368, did not extend rule any farther, did not allow intermarriage of Mongols and Chinese, ended Confucian examination system, some Mongols adopted Lamaist Buddhism
�The Golden Horde of Russia: did not occupy Russia but demanded tribute from them until the mid-15 th century when the princes of Moscow refused �The Ilkhanate of Persia: Hulegu (Khubilai’s brother) toppled the Abbasid empire, Mongols allowed Persians to run government except for the highest positions, adopted Persian culture especially Islam
�The Khanate of Chaghatai in central Asia: ruled by son of Chinggis Khan, thrived until the 18 th century
Mongols and Eurasian Integration �Courier network �Volume of trade through central Asia increased, as merchants could travel safely across the entire Eurasian landmass �Diplomatic embassies �Missionaries sent out by Islam (Sufis), Lamaist Buddhism, Nestorian Christianity and Roman Catholic Church �Moved skilled artisans, craftsmen and educated people around in their realm; took censuses
Decline of Mongols in Persia and China �In Persia: excessive spending, overexploitation of the peasants, failed attempt to introduce paper money, fighting amongst Mongol leadership, no heir, rule ended after 1335 �In China: inflation, infighting, bubonic plague, rebellion of the Chinese, by 1368 the Mongols fled
Tamerlane the Whirlwind �Tamerlane: Turkish conqueror, Timur the lame, modeled himself after Chinggis Khan, first extended authority throughout khanate of Chagatai, then Persia and Afghanistan, then Caucasus Mountains and India, conqueror not an administrator, died in 1405 �His empire turned into the Mughal, Safavid and Ottoman empires.
Foundation of Ottoman Empire �Osman: created a small state in north-west Anatolia and declared independence in 1299 �Followers were Ottomans �By the 1380 s the Ottomans had a strong foothold on the Balkan Peninsula �In 1453, they captured the Byzantine capital of Constantinople and made it their capital called Istanbul
- Chapter 17 nomadic empires and eurasian integration
- Nomadic empires and eurasian integration
- Chapter 18 nomadic empires and eurasian integration
- Chapter 17 nomadic empires and eurasian integration
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