chapter 12 mongol eurasia and its aftermath, 1200-1500

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Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500 AP World History

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Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500. AP World History. I. The Rise of the Mongols, 1200-1600. A. Nomadism in Central and Inner Asia Mongols were strongly hierarchical. Mongols had complex federations tied to together by marriage alliances. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

Chapter 12

Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath,1200-1500

AP World History

Page 2: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

I. The Rise of the Mongols, 1200-1600

A. Nomadism in Central and Inner Asia• Mongols were strongly hierarchical.

• Mongols had complex federations tied to together by marriage alliances.

• Their seasonal movements brought them into contact with all types of religions.

– They accepted religious pluralism.

• Mongol khans were thought to represent the Sky God.

Page 3: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

Mongol empire – Largest land empire ever created (from Korea to Poland)

Page 4: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

B. The Mongol Conquests, 1215-1283• Genghis Khan conquered Northern China.

• The khanates of the Golden Horde, Jagadai, and the Il-Khans all swore allegiance to Genghis.

• When Kublai Khan took over, the Jagadai Khan refused to accept him.

• Kublai established the Yuan empire and in 1279 he conquered the Southern Song.

• The Mongols were able to conquer a vast amount of territory because of their superior horsemanship, better bows, technique of following a volley of arrows with a cavalry charge, using non-Mongol soldiers, reputation for slaughtering those who would not surrender, and their ability to take advantage of rivalries among their enemies.

Page 5: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

Genghis Khan – Founder of the Mongol empire.

Page 6: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

Kublai Khan (Grandson of Genghis) finished the conquest of China, created the Yuan dynasty, claimed the title of Great

Khan, assumed supremacy over the other Mongol khanates.

Page 7: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

Mongols fighting the Russians at the Battle of the Kalka River. Ended Kievan Russia rule of modern day Russia.

Page 8: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

After the death of Genghis, the empire splits into the four different Khanates –

Great Khan, Golden Khan, Il-Khan, Jagadai

Page 9: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

Most Mongols were expert horse archers. Asian bow was superior –

could shoot 1/3 farther than their enemies’ bows.

Page 10: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

Mongols carried 5 dozen arrows into battle and rarely used them all.

Page 11: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

Mongols fighting the Teutonic Knights in modern-day Poland. Ogodei dies and the Mongols return to China to elect a new Khan.

http://www.historynet.com/mongol-invasions-battle-of-liegnitz.htm

Page 12: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

C. Overland Trade and Plague• Mongol conquests opened overland trade routes

and brought commercial integration of Eurasia.

• Disease including the bubonic plague spread among the world.

Page 13: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

Route of Marco Polo along the reopened Silk Road. He stimulated the European desire to explore the east.

Page 14: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

Illustration of the spread of the Bubonic Plague which originated in southwestern China.

Mongols and flea infested rats carried it along trade routes.

Page 15: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

II. The Mongols and Islam, 1260-1500

A. Mongol Rivalry• In the 1260s the Il-Khan Mongols murdered the

Abbasid Caliph because of religious differences.

• Batu Khan of the Golden Horde in Russia, converted to Islam and vowed to attack the Il-Khan region.

• Europeans attempted to help the non-Muslim Il-Khans repel the Golden Horde Mongols, but the Il-Khan ruler Ghazan became a Muslim in 1295.

Page 16: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

B. Islam and the State• The goal of the Il-Khan state was to collect as much tax

revenue as possible.

• The tax farming system was able to deliver large taxes, but over taxation led to inflation and a severe economic crisis.

• Attempts to solve this crisis involved using paper money, but depression lasted until 1349 when the Golden Horde destroyed the Il-Khan empire.

• As the Golden Horde and the Il-Khan empires declined in the 14th century, Timur built the Jagadai Khanate and his descendents, the Timurids, ruled the Middle East for several generations.

Page 17: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

The Jagadai Khanate rose in the 14th century with the decline of the Golden Horde and the Il-Khan.

(modern day Iran, Iraq and Afghanistan)

Page 18: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

Timur built the Jagadai Khanate. Ethnically he was a Turk.

Page 19: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

Timur’s Jagadai Khanate (1365 - 1405)

Page 20: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

C. Culture and Science in Islamic Eurasia• Juvaini wrote the first comprehensive work of the rise of

the Mongols under Genghis Khan.

• Rashid al-Din published a history of the world.

• Muslims under Mongol leadership made great strides in astronomy, calendar making, and the predication of eclipses.

• Devised decimal fractions, calculated the value of pi, and had a significant effect on the development of European science and mathematics.

Page 21: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

III. Regional Responses in Western Eurasia

A. Russia and Rule from Afar• The Golden Horde used Russian princes to tax the

people and kept the Orthodox Church in place.

• Moscow emerged as the new center of the Russian civilization.

• Structure of government did not change under Mongol rule.

• In 1480 Ivan III, the prince of Moscow, ended Mongol rule and adopted the title of Tsar.

Page 22: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

Prince Alexander Nevskii of Novogorod allied with the Mongols because Russia would be destroyed if he resisted, essentially

saving Russia. (right - example of Russian man at arms)

Page 23: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

Ivan IV “the Terrible”

Page 24: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

B. New States in Eastern Europe and Anatolia

• Europe was divided and the states of Hungary and Poland faced Mongol attacks alone.

• Mongol armies drove to the outskirts of Vienna, but withdrew in 1241 because they needed to elect a successor to the deceased Khan Ogodei.

• Europeans then initiated a variety of diplomatic and trade overtures toward the Mongols.

Page 25: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

• Mongol invasions and the bubonic plague caused Europeans to question their religious beliefs.

• After Mongol power began to wane in the 13th and 14th centuries, strong centralized states such as Lithuania and the Balkan Kingdoms began to assert their control over their neighbors.

• Anatolia functioned as a route by which Islamic culture spread to Europe.

• The Ottomans were kept in check by the Timurids, but expanded eastward and conquered Constantinople in 1453.

Page 26: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

Ottoman Turks under Mehmet II on his way to conquer the Byzantine empire. (notice the 2-ton cannon)

Page 27: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

IV. Mongol Domination in China, 1271-1368

A. The Yuan Empire, 1279-1368• Kublai Khan practiced Chinese traditions of

government.

• Made innovations of tax farming, Western Asian Muslims as officials, legally defined status groups, status of merchants and doctors was elevated, and Confucians lowered.

• China’s cities and ports prospered, trade recovered, and merchants flourished.

• Chinese population dropped as much as 40%, probably because of the spread of disease, warfare, infanticide, and the flooding of the Yellow River.

Page 28: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

Mongols unified the Tanggut, Jin, and Song empires into the Yuan dynasty. (unified China as we know it)

Page 29: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

Example of early weaponry using of gunpowder.

Page 30: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

B. Cultural and Scientific Exchange• China imported Il-Khan science and technology.

• Il-Khans imported Chinese scholars and texts.

• Iranian astronomical knowledge, algebra, trigonometry, Islamic and Persian medical texts, seeds, and formulas were brought to China.

Page 31: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

C. The Fall of the Yuan Empire• Chinese leader Zhu Yuanzhang overthrew the

Mongols and established the Ming Empire.

• The Mongols still held Central Eurasia and were able to disrupt overland trade to threaten the Ming

Page 32: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

Ming dynasty began after the Yuan fell and the Mongols were expelled.

Page 33: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

V. The Early Ming Empire,1368-1500

A. Ming China on a Mongol Foundation• Zhu Yuanzhang made great efforts to reject the

culture of the Mongols, close off trade relations with Central Asia and the Middle East and reestablish Confucian ideology.

• The Ming still used hereditary professional categories, the Mongol calendar, and Beijing as the capital.

• Mongols continued to serve in the army.

Page 34: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

• The Muslim eunuch admiral Zheng He launched a series of expeditions to Southeast Asia and the Indian Ocean to reestablish trade links and bring these areas under Chinese control or influence.

• However, no real trade relations were established and the voyages were non-profitable.

• The voyages were made more for the Yongle Emperor to prove his worth.

• The Zheng He voyages were the last time that the state sponsored such voyages.

» Did he reach America?????????????

Page 35: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

Comparison of ships from Zheng He and Columbus.

Name of Chinese design -

Page 36: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

Zheng He’s voyages.

Page 37: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

B. Technology and Population• Chinese lost the knowledge to make high-quality bronze

and steel.

– Korea and Japan moved ahead of Ming China in technological innovation.

• However, the Ming period was a time of great wealth, consumerism, and cultural brilliance.

• The novels, Water Margin and Romance of the Three Kingdoms, porcelain making, furniture, lacquered screens, and silk all contributed to this cultural brilliance.

Page 38: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

VI. Centralization and Militarism in East Asia, 1200-1500

A. Korea from the Mongols to the Yi, 1231-1500• The Korean King of Koryo joined the Mongols by marriage in

1258.

• Koryo collapsed when the Yuan dynasty fell apart and it was replaced by the Korean Yi dynasty.

• The Yi dynasty reestablished local identity and restored the status of Confucian scholarship while maintaining Mongol administrative practices and institutions.

• The Yi had technological innovations of moveable copper frames, meteorological science, local calendar, use of fertilizer, engineering of reservoirs, ships with canon, gunpowder arrow launchers, and armored ships.

Page 39: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

Gunpowder arrow launcher of the Korean Yi dynasty.

Page 40: Chapter 12 Mongol Eurasia and Its Aftermath, 1200-1500

B. Political Transformation in Japan; 1274-1500

• Two Mongol invasions of Japan failed because of the Kamikaze winds and strong defensive preparations.

• The Kamakura shogunate was destroyed in a civil war and the Ashikaga shogunate was established in 1338

• Black ink paintings and gardens, and the tea ceremony were adopted by the Yoshimasa shogunate and they were influenced by Zen Buddhism.

• The Onin War of 1477 showed that the shogunate had no real power and the provincial lords fought each other for power.

http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/300531/Japan/23150/The-Muromachi-or-Ashikaga-period-1338-1573?anchor=ref319372