The Mongol Empire: Genghis Khan, his heirs and the founding of modern China

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The Mongol Empire: Genghis Khan, his heirs and the founding of modern China Page 40

by John Man

moves west 154, 160–1, 163–70

  observatory 328–9

  rules Persia 168, 193, 196, 292, 294

  creates Il-Khanate 167

  seeks further expansion 188

  Hungarians, trapped/destroyed at Tokaj 142–3

  Hungary

  Genghis considers 94

  grass corridor to 160–1

  invaded 141

  Huntington, Samuel, on China and Mongolia 356–7

  Hushahu (Jin commander)

  coup against Wei 60–1

  loses Young Badger’s Mouth 59, 60

  I Ching (Book of Changes) 194

  Ibaqa, Genghis’s wife 129

  ibn-Sina (Avicenna) 79–80

  Ikhtiyar al-Din, Beijing architect 200

  Iki

  Korean fleet occupies 265

  Kublai’s force takes 239

  Il-Khanate 167

  Ili River 245

  imperial rituals, Kublai and 202–7

  Imperial Pavilion of Great Peace, Xanadu 180–3

  Inalchuk 76

  kills Genghis’s traders 69–70

  India, Mughal era 298

  Invasion Scrolls (Suenaga’s) 239–40

  iron factory, Avraga 48

  Islam, impact 65

  umma concept 323–4

  Islamic civilization 77–80

  Islamic empire, divisions 77–80

  Ismail al-Din, trebuchet engineer 225–7

  Ismailis 161–2

  Issyk Kul 66

  Jakha Gambu, Sorkaktani’s father 54, 129

  Jalal ad-Din (Muhammad’s son) 87, 89

  Jamukha (Temujin’s friend) 19

  as false leader 36, 37–42

  battles with 37–8

  Börte on 33

  death 42

  flees to Merkits 42

  flees to Naimans 40

  helps rescue Börte 32–3

  on Genghis forces 41

  Japan

  Cultural Grasslands Programme, and Avraga 48

  invades China 341–4

  and Genghis relics 342

  Kublai invades 236–42, 262–70

  envoys 237, 239, 241, 263–4

  fleets lost 241, 264–70

  small boats attack 241, 265, 267

  Three Rivers Project 307–8

  Java 279

  Jebe (Jirko), Temujin’s general 38, 41

  at Yehuling 60

  invades Manchuria 59–60

  pursues Muhammad 82

  raids towards Europe 89–94

  sent to eliminate Kuchlug 66–7

  Jelme, Temujin’s general 38, 41

  Jia Sidao (Song commander) 191–2, 226, 228, 229

  Jiang Hun 348

  Jin 3n

  and Beijing 198

  and Tatars 36–7

  emperor

  buys off Genghis; retreats to Kaifeng 62–4

  Kabul khan and 12–13

  invasion 106–7, 114

  Genghis invades 58–9, 60–4

  defeat plans 114

  capitulates 106

  Jurchen people and 51, 58, 66

  refuse to help Tanguts 54

  regions 51

  treaty with Xia 102–3

  unresolved conflict 102

  Yelu Chucai reorganizes 131–3

  Jingim (Zhenjin; Kublai’s son) 150

  Ahmad’s feud with 272, 275

  dies 278

  Jochi (Genghis’s 1st son) 71, 130

  and Gurganj capture 83

  in northern Khwarezm 77

  inheritance 291

  raids towards Europe 89–94

  John of Plano Carpini 151

  on Sorkaktani 129

  on Yuan burials 301

  Jorigt (friend) 107–10, 345, 346

  Julian, Hungarian friar 139

  Jurchen people 49

  in Jin regions 51, 58, 66

  in Song regions 172

  Juvaini, Ata-Malik 122

  on Kököchü 56, 57n

  on Genghis at Bukhara 80–2

  on Genghis’s burial 304

  on Karakorum khuriltai assembly 151

  on Kuchlug 66, 67

  on Muhammad 68–70

  on Tolui at Merv 84–6

  Kabul khan (Genghis’s great-grandfather) 12–13, 16, 51

  Kadan, in Albania 143

  Kaicheng 189

  Genghis’s temporary HQ 115, 116

  Kublai’s HQ 115–16

  Mönkhe’s HQ 189

  Kaifeng

  Jin defences prevail 64

  Jin emperor at 62–4

  siege/surrender 114, 133

  Kaiping, becomes Xanadu 179

  Kalka River 93

  battle 138

  Kamakura government, and Mongol invasion 263–7

  Kamala (Temur’s brother) 302–3

  temple 303, 305, 307, 308, 312, 313–14, 318

  kamikaze (divine wind) 262–3

  Karakorum (‘Black Boulder’), new capital 47, 130, 134

  khuriltai assembly 151

  Kublai starves out 194–5

  Kashgar 67

  Katula, fought Jin 51

  Kazakhstan, southern 66, 68

  Khaidu acquires 248

  part of Batu’s realm 291

  Ked-bukha (Naiman general) 168, 170

  Kerait (Christian Turk) people

  Temujin and 24–5

  Yisugei and 16–17

  Khadan 194

  Khaidu (Ogedei’s grandson)

  Kublai and 244–9

  and Barakh 247–8

  consolidates 248–9, 278

  defeated; dies 279

  supports Ariq 247

  Khalkha river 39

  Khara Khitai (Black Cathay) 51, 66

  Khara Khot (Black City/Etsina) 53, 104

  Khasar (Temujin’s brother) 19, 41

  Genghis and 56–7

  overruns Manchuria 64

  Khentii Khan, as Burkhan Khaldun 25, 303–9, 311–18

  Khentii mountains 4, 11, 41, 302

  Kublai’s secret burial 280–1

  possible Genghis burial place 124

  Kherlen river 3, 11, 25, 41, 63, 124, 130, 190, 280, 302, 307, 311, 315

  meeting confirms Ogedei as heir 122

  Khilok river, Temujin’s army crosses 32–3

  Khitans (Manchurian)

  submit to Genghis 62–3

  flee west from Jin 66

  Khoagchin (servant) 25

  Khojend 67

  Khotan imam 66

  Khwarezm region 67–8

  conquest 75–88

  Jochi in northern 77

  shah of 63

  Kiev, taken 139–40

  Kököchü (Teb Tengri) shaman

  Genghis and 56–8

  and Khasar 56–7

  and Temüge 57

  Korans, trampled 80

  Korea

  gifts to Genghis 64

  fleet 264–70

  Kublai and 237

  movable metal type invented 331

  to be taken 155

  weakened by Kublai’s first Japan adventure 263

  Köten (Ogedei’s son), and Tibet 209

  Köten (Polovotsian khan) 92

  Kozlov, Petr 53

  Krakow, taken 140

  Kravitz, Maury, and Almsgiver’s Wall 309–10

  Krk (Veglia), Bela IV hiding at 143

  Kublai (Temujin’s general) 41

  Kublai Khan

  acquires farmland power base 171

  and Ahmad 272–5, 277

  and Beijing 198–207

  and Haiyun 149–50

  and Japan 236–42, 262–70

  envoys killed 241, 263–4

  envoys rejected 237, 239

  fleets lost 241, 264–70

  and Khaidu 244–9, 279

  and Korea 237

  and Mönkhe 185–7

  and Song China invasion 189–93

  and Tibet 210–17

  as administrator 250–61

  and Daoist prob
lem 186–7

  and Phags-pa 210–15

  and State Script 213–15, 216i

  and Tang imperial rituals 202–7

  and theatre 259–61

  Chinese advisors 149–50, 178–9

  fair to peasants 171

  howdah 205, 206i, 207

  spring hunt 204–7

  at Xanadu (Shang-du) 179–85

  need for capital city 178–9

  Cane Palace pleasure dome 184–5

  assault on Yunnan 174–7

  attacks Khaidu; reclaims Manchuria 279

  becoming Buddhist 186–7

  death 280

  funeral/secret burial 280–1

  declares himself emperor 193

  and modern China 4–5

  occupies Karakorum 195

  receives Xingzhou 148–9

  seeks further expansion 188

  logistic limits 243–4

  Song China conquest 218–35

  successors, unpopular/weak 287, 288

  Kuchlug (Tayang’s son) 41–2

  Jebe sent to eliminate 66–7

  seizes power in Khara Khitai 66

  Kunming Lake 61

  Kutula (Kabul’s son) 13

  Kutulun (Khaidu’s daughter) 245–6

  Kyrgyzstan 66

  Khaidu acquires 248

  Kyushu, Mongols invade 239–41

  Mongol fleets defeated 241, 264–70

  Kyushu and Okinawa Society for Underwater Archaeology 268

  Kyzyl Kum Desert 67, 77

  Laozi (Lao-tsu) 97, 186, 187

  Lattimore, Owen 118, 299–300

  on Lord’s Enclosure 340–1

  leadership qualities, Secret History on 14

  legal system, Kublai’s China 257–9

  Li Bocheng 110

  Li Chihch’ang, on Changchun’s journey 98

  Li Dewang (Western Xia ruler)

  treaty with Jin 102–3

  dies 105

  Li Tan’s rebellion 195, 218

  Li Xian (Western Xia emperor) 105, 106, 115–17

  Li Xiufu, Song counsellor 234–5

  Liao (Khitan) empire 72

  Liao River 59

  Liaodong Peninsula 64

  Liegnitz, Henry the Pious defeated 140–1

  Ligdan Khan 346

  Lingwu, Tangut defeat 105

  Liu Bingzhong (administrator/architect)

  and Xanadu 150, 179

  and Beijing 199–200

  Liu Ming, palace-tent architect 47

  Liu Wen, Genghis and 97

  Liu Zheng (Kublai’s admiral) 220, 222

  Liuke (Khitan leader) 64

  Liupan Mountains 106, 189

  Genghis dies at 106–13, 114

  Yu Jun on 113–14

  Locke, John, on Genghis 96

  Lü Wenhuan 226, 228

  Lublin, taken 140

  Lung Gang (Dragon Ridge), site for Xanadu 179

  Ma (Hui guide) 108–9

  Mahakala (deity) 211–12

  Mamluks

  defeat Mongols 168–70

  take Acre 296

  Manchu dynasty 244, 291

  Manchuria

  Japan invades 341

  Jebe invades 59–60, 64

  Kublai reclaims 279

  Yisugei raids Tatars 17

  Mandate of Heaven concept 29–30

  mangonels 223

  Mao Zedong, and Genghis relics 343

  marble palace, Xanadu 180–1

  Marco Polo, Travels

  accounts 30, 53, 98, 122, 180, 182, 184, 201, 203, 205, 212, 226, 245, 248, 255, 257, 271–2, 275, 301–2

  and search for western passage to China 333–6

  marine archaeologists, on Kublai’s fleet 267–70

  marmots, and Black Death 329

  Martins, Fernao 334, 335

  merchants, Kublai’s China 256–7

  Merkit people 16

  raiders kidnap Börte 25–6

  Temujin attacks 32–3

  Merv 67

  conquest 83, 84

  Islamic civilization 79, 83–4

  military hardware, at Xiangyang 220–6

  Ming dynasty

  and Beijing 199

  rise 289–90

  Ming-an, defects to Genghis 59

  Mongol Empire

  c.1150, map 8–9

  1294, maps 158–9, 284–5

  at death of Genghis, map 126–7

  Mongolian script introduced 44

  legal code 44

  extent 286

  multiculturalism 324–9

  Mongol women, self-reliance 128

  Mongolia 2, 3n

  countryside, herders’ life 11–12

  Japan invades 341–4

  modern China and 5, 356

  modern

  Genghis as symbol 355

  prosperity 354–5

  pre-Genghis 11–12

  Mongolian women, self-reliance 12

  Mongols

  and Black Death 329–30

  and Japan 236–42, 262–70

  and Tengri concept 27–31

  and theatre 259–60

  as elite of China 251

  estimates of western massacres 83, 85–7

  forget roots 287, 288

  Mönkhe (Sorkaktani’s son) 135, 138

  and Kublai 185–7

  to conquer Song 154–5

  and Kublai’s capital 178

  and Tibet 209

  death 168, 190

  Khan 122, 123, 153–4

  seeks further expansion 188

  Song China invasion 189–90

  imperial strategy 171

  Morgan, David, on Mongols 293

  Moscow, taken 139

  Moses, Larry, ‘The Quarrelling Sons . . .’ 14

  Mozai, Torao, finds Kublai’s fleet 267–8

  Mstislav Mstislavich 92

  Mstislav Romanovich of Kiev 93

  Mughal era, India 298

  Muhammad (shah of Khwarezm)

  Genghis and 67, 73, 75–6, 82

  kills Genghis’s envoys 69–70

  seizes Samarkand 68

  Mujir al-Mulk 84

  Mukae, Kuniichi, finds bronze seal 268

  Mukhali 61, 64, 71, 149

  multiculturalism, Mongol 324–9

  Murakami, Yasuyuki, and Avraga 47–8

  Muslim merchants, on Jin defences 58

  Muslim officials, defect to Mongols 76

  Nablus, exterminated 168

  Nachug, on Genghis relics 348, 350

  Naimans, Genghis defeats 40–2

  Naku (Boorchu’s father) 24

  Nambui (Kublai’s last wife) 278, 279

  Nanjing, surrender 229

  naphtha bombs 62, 75, 82–3, 165, 248

  Narathihipate, King of Burma 278

  Nasir al-Din Tusi 328

  Nestorians, Persia 294

  converted Turks 16–17

  Nevsky, Alexander 293

  New Year’s Day festival 203–5

  Nicholas IV Pope, and Arghun’s crusade 295

  Nicholas of Cusa 334

  Ningxia province 50

  Nishapur 67

  Nizaris 162

  Nomukhan (Kublai’s 4th son) 249

  Novgorod, Mongols retire from 139

  Office for the Stimulation of Agriculture 252

  Ogedei (Genghis’s 3rd son) 13, 209

  agreed as heir 71, 122, 130

  and Genghis mausoleum 338

  and Gurganj capture 83

  and Kaifeng siege 133

  descendants 244

  designates Shiremun as heir 150

  dies of drink 144, 146, 147

  palace-tent 47

  reorganizes empire 130–3

  western conquests 138–45

  Old Man of the Mountain 163

  Ongirad clan 18, 24

  Ongirat women 207

  Ongut people 58

  Onon River 16, 43

  ordos (palace-tents), and ‘hordes’ 47

  Ordos City 64,
337

  Genghis Khan Mausoleum 303, 338–53

  muster 175

  territory 52–3

  Otrar 68–9, 76–7

  archaeology 69, 76–7

  ovoos (shrines) 28, 182, 307, 312, 313, 314, 315, 340

  Oyu Tolgoi copper-and-gold mine 355, 357

  Pacification Bureau, Tibet 213

  palace-tents (ordos), Avraga 46–8

  Palestine, Mamluks confront Mongols 169–70

  Pamirs 67

  paper money, Kublai’s China 256–7

  Paris, Matthew, on Tatars 139

  Pearl Document 211

  peasant-farmers, Kublai’s protection 252–3

  penal code, Kublai’s China 257–9

  Peng Daya, Song ambassador 132

  on Temujin’s grave 301

  Persia

  Hulegu rules 292

  Il-Khanate 243–4, 246, 247, 294–7

  Pest, taken 143

  Petech, Luciano, on Tibet 208

  petroleum flamethrowers 55, 62, 75

  Phags-pa (Buddhist priest) 186–7, 210–15

  State Script 213–15, 216i, 331

  Philip the Fair, King of France, and Arghun’s crusade 295

  plague/famine 287

  Poland, invaded 140

  political manifesto, Secret History as 14–15

  Polovtsians

  defeated in Chechnya 91, 92–3

  in Hungary 141

  Prester John myth 17n, 90

  printing/publishing

  Song 173–4

  Tangut 53

  with movable type, Mongols ignore 330–3

  Qing Shui, Genghis taken ill 106, 113

  Quanzhen (‘Complete Perfection’) sect 97

  Quanzhou export centre 255–6

  fleet, recycled river boats 265, 269–70

  Qutuz, sultan of Egypt, defeats Mongols 169–70

  Rachewiltz, Igor de 25n, 46n, 116, 131n, 133, 212, 299

  and Khentii Khan 311–12

  on Secret History of the Mongols 13n

  on Turks 27

  Rashid al-Din, Collected Chronicles 30, 114, 122, 129, 148, 167, 183, 191, 195–6, 219, 246, 247, 274, 275, 302, 327–8

  life 327–8

  on Burkhan-Qaldun 302–3

  on Genghis and Heaven 30

  Rashid al-Din Sinan 163

  Red Circle Day 21–2

  Red Turban rebels 288–9

  religious diversity, Genghis legalizes 96

  Renxiao 53–4

  Riazan, taken 139

  Rinchen, Professor Byambin, on Genghis’s tomb 299

  Robert the Englishman 91, 144

  Rossabi, Morris, on Khaidu 246

  Rukn ad-Din, Mönkhe and 162–3

  Ruo Shui (Etsin) river 53

  Russia, southern

  Mongols overrun 138–40

  part of Batu’s realm 291, 293

  Subedei and Jebe advance into 92–4

  force, chases Mongols & is caught 92–3

  Russians, and Genghis 800th anniversary 347

  Rusudan, Queen of Georgia 90

  Rusudan, Queen of Georgia 90

  Sagang Sechen, dirge 123

  Sainjirgal, Genghis researcher 348–50

  Mongolian Worship 350

  Samarkand 67, 68

 

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