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The Terrible Terrible Mongols
An obscure pastoral and tribal people who lived in what is now Outer Mongolia – the Mongols had been gradually united towards the end of the 12th century. One of their leaders, Timuchin, so impressed them with his military abilities that in 1206, at the age of 42, they named him Genghis Khan or ‘Universal Ruler’.
Under his leadership, the Mongols exploded out of the Steppe and terrorised much of Asia. Reasons for their westerly march are unclear; it may have occurred due to changes in the climate that forced them to seek out new pastures for their animals, or it could have been as simple as having more time and energy to focus on adventures other than internecine warfare now that they were unified.
Their success is perhaps slightly easier to understand. Up against them was a divided China, no single leader to rally the armies of central Asia, a declining Abbasid Caliphate and a series of fragmented city-states that would eventually become Russia. In essence, the world was open for the taking. With the help of their lightning mobility, their spectacular horsemanship, and the discipline of their military machine, the Mongols were hugely successful. By the time of Kublai Khan, half a century or so later, they had managed to bring almost the entire Asian landmass under their control.
Genghis Khan died in 1227 around the age of 65. Under the rule of his descendants, the Mongols occupied all of northern China and overran much of Kievan Rus, destroying most of the major cities, in the process. They then overcame the Seljuk Turks before heading westwards into Poland and Hungary.
As the Mongols were crossing the Danube and approaching Vienna in December 1241, they quite mysteriously retreated. To the Europeans this was a miracle, but the Mongol withdrawal did not come about as a result of divine intervention. Rather they retreated in response to the death of Genghis Khan’s son, Ogedei, who had taken over from Genghis Khan upon his death. It was required of Mongol nobles that they return home in the case of the death of their ruler to confirm their leader’s successor. Following a short reign by one of Ogedei’s sons in 1251, the position of Great Khan went to Mongke, another of Genghis Khan’s grandsons. Mongke continued the invasion of China while simultaneously sending his brother, Hulegu, westwards to bring the Abbasid Caliphate into submission.
In 1258, Hulegu rode into Baghdad, until then dominated by the Seljuk Turks, and unleashed his hordes on the city. According to some estimates, up to 800,000 Muslims were massacred, including the last reigning Abbasid caliph – albeit one of vastly reduced power – who was rolled up in a carpet and trampled to death by horses. In an orgy of destruction, all the intellectual and literary treasures accumulated by the Muslims throughout the centuries were burnt or thrown into the river Tigris. The time of Iraq as a centre of power and culture was finally over and Cairo would now become the centre of the Islamic world until Christian Constantinople fell to the Turks in 1453.
Miraculously, the West was once again saved from assured destruction, this time by the death of the Great Khan Mongke, who died invading a Chinese province in 1259. Hulegu was forced to retreat home to take part in the leadership struggle and what remained of his forces in the west was decisively beaten by the Mamluks.
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