I INTRODUCTION
Genghis Khan (1167?-1227), Mongol conqueror and founder of the Mongol Empire, which
spanned the continent of Asia by the time of his death. Originally named
Temujin, he was born on the banks of the Onon River, near the present-day
border between northern Mongolia and southeastern Russia. Native folklore is
the only source for details about his ancestry, birth, and early life, and thus
the facts are intermingled with purely legendary material. His line of descent
is traced back, through many generations, to the mythical union of a gray wolf
and a white doe. The newborn infant is said to have held in his hand a large
clot of blood, thus presaging the future career of the world conqueror.
II RISE TO SUPREMACY IN MONGOLIA
Genghis Khan's father, Yesugei, was a local chieftain and nephew of the
former khan (ruler) of the Mongol tribe. The Mongols had long played the
leading role in eastern Mongolia but had lost their supremacy and sunk into
comparative insignificance after their defeat in 1161 by a rival tribe, the
Tatar, in alliance with the Jin (Chin) rulers of North China. (The name Tatar,
or Tartar, was later used by Europeans to refer to the Mongol invaders of
Europe in general.) Yesugei named his son Temujin after a Tatar chieftain whom
he had taken prisoner at the time of the child's birth. When Temujin was nine
years old his father took him on a journey into the extreme east of Mongolia to
find him a bride among his mother's people, the Konkirat. Temujin was betrothed
to ten-year old Borte, daughter of the chieftain, and left, according to
custom, to be brought up in the tent of his future father-in-law. Yesugei was
traveling home when he fell in with a party of Tatars who invited him to share
in their feast. However, they then recognized their old enemy and poisoned his
food. Yesugei survived only long enough to reach his own encampment and send
one of his men to fetch Temujin home again to succeed him as chieftain.
After his death, Yesugei's wife and young children were deserted by his
followers under the influence of the Taichi'ut, a clan whose leaders aspired to
take the dead chieftain's place. The widow attempted to rally the tribe to her
but was unsuccessful. Soon the family was left to fend for itself. When Temujin
had grown into a young man, his encampment was attacked by the Taichi'ut. He
escaped into the forest but was finally captured. The Taichi'ut spared his life
but kept him as a prisoner with a wooden collar around his neck. One night,
when the group was feasting on the banks of the Onon, Temujin eluded his
captors and hid, almost completely submerged in the river. He was detected by a
member of the party, who, however, befriended him and persuaded the Taichi'ut
to hold up the search for their prisoner until daylight. In the meantime,
Temujin made his way to the tent of his benefactor, who concealed him from a
search party and then provided him with the means of escape.
Shortly afterward, Temujin visited the Konkirat to claim his bride,
Borte. As a dowry, he was given a black sable coat, which was to prove the
foundation of his fortune. He decided to present it to Toghril, later known as
Ong-Khan, the powerful ruler of the Kereit, a tribe in central Mongolia.
Toghril, who had been an ally of Temujin's father, took the young man under his
protection and promised his support, which Temujin was soon to need. The
Merkit, a tribe in the north, raided his encampment and carried off his wife.
Temujin appealed for help to Toghril and to Jamuka, a young Mongol chieftain,
and together the three were able to defeat the Merkit and rescue Borte. For a
time, Jamuka and Temujin remained firm friends, setting up camp and herding
their animals side by side, but then they became estranged. This break mirrored
the larger political landscape of the time, in which loyalties and alliances
shifted constantly. It was at this juncture that the Mongol leaders declared
themselves for Temujin and acclaimed him as their ruler with the title of
Chingiz-Khan (Genghis Khan), which translates roughly as "universal
monarch."
From then on he began to play a major role in the intertribal wars, but
still as the protégé of Toghril rather than his equal. In 1198 the two rulers
took part, as allies of the Jin, in a successful campaign against the Tatar.
Toghril was rewarded for his share in the victory with the Chinese title of
wang ("prince"), and thereafter he was known as Ong-Khan
("Ong" is a corruption of wang). They remained allies and on several
occasions between 1200 and 1202 defeated a coalition of tribes headed by
Genghis Khan's former friend Jamuka. In 1202 Genghis Khan conducted a final
campaign against the Tatar, which resulted in the total extermination of that
people. His relations with Ong-Khan had been steadily deteriorating, however,
and in 1203 they fought. After an indecisive battle Genghis Khan withdrew into
the extreme northeast of Mongolia, then, recovering his strength, returned to
the attack and inflicted an overwhelming defeat on his adversary later that
year.
Genghis Khan was now master of eastern and central Mongolia. In 1206,
with the death of his old rival, Jamuka, he was at last in undisputed
possession of Mongolia. In the spring of 1206, at an assembly of the Mongol
princes held near the sources of the Onon, he was proclaimed Great Khan. The
powerful ruler proceeded to organize the military forces of his empire.
III WARS OF CONQUEST
Genghis Khan was now in a position to embark upon foreign conquests.
Hostilities with China commenced in the spring of 1211, and by the end of that
year the Mongols had overrun northern China. By the beginning of 1214 all China
north of the Huang He (Yellow River) was in the Mongols’ hands, and they were
closing in on the Jin capital at Beijing. Peace was purchased by the Chinese
emperor at the price of an immense dowry for a Jin princess as Genghis Khan's
bride, and the invaders began to withdraw northward. However, fighting broke
out again almost at once. Beijing was besieged and sacked in the summer of
1215.
Although the war was not yet over—indeed the conquest of North China was
not completed till 1234—Genghis Khan now decided to relinquish personal command
of operations, and in the spring of 1216 returned to Mongolia in order to give
his attention to events in Central Asia. Genghis Khan’s western territory
abutted the state of Khwarizm, a vast but poorly organized empire, ruled by
Sultan Muhammad, covering the present-day countries of Turkmenistan,
Uzbekistan, and Tajikistan, as well as Afghanistan and most of Iran. War
between the two empires became inevitable when Genghis Khan's ambassadors were
murdered at Otrar on the Syr Darya River. Setting out from Mongolia in the
spring of 1219, Genghis Khan passed the summer of that year on the Irtysh River
and by autumn had arrived before Otrar. He left a force to besiege and
ultimately capture the town and, continuing west at the head of the main army,
attacked Bukhoro (Bukhara) in February 1220. The city, deserted by its
garrison, surrendered after only a few days' siege. The Mongols then advanced
on Samarqand, which likewise offered little resistance and was captured the
same year. Genghis Khan dispatched his two best generals in pursuit of Sultan
Muhammad, who had fled to the west. The sultan finally sought refuge on an
island in the Caspian Sea but was found and killed there. The generals,
continuing their westward sweep, crossed Caucasia and defeated an army of
Russians and Kipchak Turks in the Crimea before turning back to rejoin Genghis
in Central Asia. In the autumn of 1220, Genghis Khan captured Termiz on the
Oxus River (present-day Amu Darya) and in the early part of the winter was
active in the upper reaches of that river in what is today Tajikistan. At the
beginning of 1221 he crossed the Oxus into northern Afghanistan and captured
the ancient city of Balkh. Soon after the fall of Samarqand he had dispatched
his elder sons north into Khwarizm to lay siege to Muhammad's capital. He now
sent his youngest son into eastern Persia to sack and destroy the great and
populous cities of Merv (now Mary, Turkmenistan) and Nishapur (now Neyshâbûr,
Iran).
In the meantime, Sultan Jalal al-Din, the son of Sultan Muhammad, had
made his way into central Afghanistan and inflicted a defeat on a Mongol force
at Parvan, north of Kâbul. Genghis Khan, rejoined by his sons, advanced south
in the autumn of 1221 and defeated this new adversary on the banks of the Indus
River. With Jalal al-Din's defeat the campaign in the west was virtually
brought to its conclusion, and Genghis Khan proceeded by easy stages on the
long journey back to Mongolia. In the autumn of 1226 he was again at war, with
the Chinese Tangut tribal confederation, but he did not live to witness the
successful outcome of this, his last campaign. He died in August 1227, in his
summer quarters in the district of Qingshui south of the Liupan Shan (Liupan
Mountains) in Gansu, China.
IV LEGACY
Genghis Khan had many wives and concubines, but it was Borte, his first
and chief wife, who gave birth to his four most famous sons: Jochi, Jagatai,
Ogadai, and Tolui. Jochi’s son Batu founded the Golden Horde, a powerful Mongol
state in Russia and Eastern Europe. Jagatai gave his name to a state that he
founded in Central Asia. Ogadai was designated by Genghis Khan to succeed him,
and he ruled Mongolia and northern China. Tolui was the father of Mangu Khan,
ruler of the unified Mongol Empire from 1251 to 1259; Kublai Khan, who founded
the Yuan dynasty in China; and Hulagu, who founded the il-Khanid dynasty of Persia.
Genghis Khan knew no language but Mongolian, and it has been said that
to the end of his days he remained at heart a robber chieftain. No mere bandit,
however, could have conceived or undertaken the great campaigns against China
and Western Asia, and in fact, though he spoke no foreign language, Genghis
Khan was not without knowledge of the civilized nations beyond the borders of
Mongolia. Already at the beginning of his career he counted among his followers
certain Muslim merchants from Central Asia, and later he could rely also upon
the counsel of Chinese advisers.
It was, however, mainly on native foundations that his empire was built.
The legal code which he instituted, known as the Great Yasa, was based upon
Mongol customary law. The instrument of his victories, the superbly efficient
Mongol army, seems to have owed nothing to foreign models. It was developed and
perfected in intertribal wars before it was turned, with irresistible effect,
against the nations of Asia and Eastern Europe. It is, in fact, as a military
genius that Genghis Khan lives in history.
As such he was the equal of Alexander the Great or Napoleon I, and
neither of the latter two achieved such vast or such enduring conquests.
Genghis’ son ruled over an empire that stretched from Ukraine to Korea. His
grandsons founded dynasties in China, Persia, and Russia, and his descendants
ruled in Central Asia for centuries.[1]
[1]"Genghis
Khan," Microsoft® Encarta® Encyclopedia 2000. © 1993-1999 Microsoft
Corporation. All rights reserved.