Genghis Khan PDF
Genghis Khan PDF
Genghis Khan PDF
Khan
Mongol
leader
Genghis
Khan
(1162-‐1227)
rose
from
humble
beginnings
to
establish
the
largest
land
empire
in
history.
After
uniting
the
nomadic
tribes
of
the
Mongolian
plateau,
he
conquered
huge
chunks
of
central
Asia
and
China.
His
descendents
expanded
the
empire
even
further,
advancing
to
such
far-‐off
places
as
Poland,
Vietnam,
Syria
and
Korea.
At
their
peak,
the
Mongols
controlled
between
11
and
12
million
contiguous
square
miles,
an
area
about
the
size
of
Africa.
Many
people
were
slaughtered
in
the
course
of
Genghis
Khan’s
invasions,
but
he
also
granted
religious
freedom
to
his
subjects,
abolished
torture,
encouraged
trade
and
created
the
first
international
postal
system.
Genghis
Khan
died
in
1227
during
a
military
campaign
against
the
Chinese
kingdom
of
Xi
Xia.
His
final
resting
place
remains
unknown.
Temujin,
later
Genghis
Khan,
was
born
around
1162
near
the
border
between
modern
Mongolia
and
Siberia.
Legend
holds
that
he
came
into
the
world
clutching
a
blood
clot
in
his
right
hand.
His
mother
had
been
kidnapped
by
his
father
and
forced
into
marriage.
At
that
time,
dozens
of
nomadic
tribes
on
the
central
Asian
steppe
were
constantly
fighting
and
stealing
from
each
other,
and
life
for
Temujin
was
violent
and
unpredictable.
Before
he
turned
10,
his
father
was
poisoned
to
death
by
an
enemy
clan.
Temujin’s
own
clan
then
deserted
him,
his
mother
and
his
six
siblings
in
order
to
avoid
having
to
feed
them.
Mongol
leader
Genghis
Khan
never
allowed
anyone
to
paint
his
portrait,
sculpt
his
image
or
engrave
his
likeness
on
a
coin.
The
first
images
of
him
appeared
after
his
death.
Shortly
thereafter,
Temujin
killed
his
older
half-‐brother
and
took
over
as
head
of
the
poverty-‐stricken
household.
At
one
point,
he
was
captured
and
enslaved
by
the
clan
that
had
abandoned
him,
but
he
was
eventually
able
to
escape.
In
1178
Temujin
married
Borte,
with
whom
he
would
have
four
sons
and
an
unknown
number
of
daughters.
He
launched
a
daring
rescue
of
Borte
after
she
too
was
kidnapped,
and
he
soon
began
making
alliances,
building
a
reputation
as
a
warrior
and
attracting
a
growing
number
of
followers.
Most
of
what
we
know
about
Genghis
Khan’s
childhood
comes
from
“The
Secret
History
of
the
Mongols,”
the
oldest
known
work
of
Mongolian
history
and
literature,
which
was
written
soon
after
his
death.
Going
against
custom,
Temujin
put
competent
allies
rather
than
relatives
in
key
positions
and
executed
the
leaders
of
enemy
tribes
while
incorporating
the
remaining
members
into
his
clan.
He
ordered
that
all
looting
wait
until
after
a
complete
victory
had
been
won,
and
he
organized
his
warriors
into
units
of
10
without
regard
to
kin.
Though
Temujin
was
an
animist,
his
followers
included
Christians,
Muslims
and
Buddhists.
By
1205
he
had
vanquished
all
rivals,
including
his
former
best
friend
Jamuka.
The
following
year,
he
called
a
meeting
of
representatives
from
every
part
of
the
territory
and
established
a
nation
1
similar
in
size
to
modern
Mongolia.
He
was
also
proclaimed
Chinggis
Khan,
which
roughly
translates
to
“Universal
Ruler,”
a
name
that
became
known
in
the
West
as
Genghis
Khan.
Having
united
the
steppe
tribes,
Genghis
Khan
ruled
over
some
1
million
people.
In
order
to
suppress
the
traditional
causes
of
tribal
warfare,
he
abolished
inherited
aristocratic
titles.
He
also
forbade
the
selling
and
kidnapping
of
women,
banned
the
enslavement
of
any
Mongol
and
made
livestock
theft
punishable
by
death.
Moreover,
Genghis
Khan
ordered
the
adoption
of
a
writing
system,
conducted
a
regular
census,
granted
diplomatic
immunity
to
foreign
ambassadors
and
allowed
freedom
of
religion
well
before
that
idea
caught
on
elsewhere.
Genghis
Khan’s
first
campaign
outside
of
Mongolia
took
place
against
the
Xi
Xia
kingdom
of
northwestern
China.
After
a
series
of
raids,
the
Mongols
launched
a
major
initiative
in
1209
that
brought
them
to
the
doorstep
of
Yinchuan,
the
Xi
Xia
capital.
Unlike
other
armies,
the
Mongols
traveled
with
no
supply
train
other
than
a
large
reserve
of
horses.
The
army
consisted
almost
entirely
of
cavalrymen,
who
were
expert
riders
and
deadly
with
a
bow
and
arrows.
At
Yinchuan,
the
Mongols
deployed
a
false
withdrawal—one
of
their
signature
tactics—and
then
initiated
a
siege.
Though
their
attempt
to
flood
the
city
failed,
the
Xi
Xia
ruler
submitted
and
presented
tribute.
The
Mongols
next
attacked
the
Jin
Dynasty
of
northern
China,
whose
ruler
had
made
the
mistake
of
demanding
Genghis
Khan’s
submission.
From
1211
to
1214,
the
outnumbered
Mongols
ravaged
the
countryside
and
sent
refugees
pouring
into
the
cities.
Food
shortages
became
a
problem,
and
the
Jin
army
ended
up
killing
tens
of
thousands
of
its
own
peasants.
In
1214
the
Mongols
besieged
the
capital
of
Zhongdu
(now
Beijing),
and
the
Jin
ruler
agreed
to
hand
over
large
amounts
of
silk,
silver,
gold
and
horses.
When
the
Jin
ruler
subsequently
moved
his
court
south
to
the
city
of
Kaifeng,
Genghis
Khan
took
this
as
a
breach
of
their
agreement
and,
with
the
help
of
Jin
deserters,
sacked
Zhongdu
to
the
ground.
In
1219
Genghis
Khan
went
to
war
against
the
Khwarezm
Empire
in
present-‐day
Turkmenistan,
Uzbekistan,
Afghanistan
and
Iran.
The
sultan
there
had
agreed
to
a
trade
treaty,
but
when
the
first
caravan
arrived
its
goods
were
stolen
and
its
merchants
were
killed.
The
sultan
then
murdered
some
of
Genghis
Khan’s
ambassadors.
Despite
once
again
being
outnumbered,
the
Mongol
horde
swept
through
one
Khwarezm
city
after
another,
including
Bukhara,
Samarkand
and
Urgench.
Skilled
workers
such
as
carpenters
and
jewelers
were
usually
saved,
while
aristocrats
and
resisting
soldiers
were
killed.
Unskilled
workers,
meanwhile,
were
often
used
as
human
shields
during
the
next
assault.
No
one
knows
with
any
certainty
how
many
people
died
during
Genghis
Khan’s
wars,
in
part
because
the
Mongols
propagated
their
vicious
image
as
a
way
of
spreading
terror.
When
Genghis
Khan
returned
to
Mongolia
in
1225,
he
controlled
a
huge
swath
of
territory
from
the
Sea
of
Japan
to
the
Caspian
Sea.
Nevertheless,
he
didn’t
rest
for
long
before
turning
his
attention
back
to
the
Xi
Xia
kingdom,
which
had
refused
to
contribute
troops
to
the
Khwarezm
invasion.
In
early
1227
a
horse
2
threw
Genghis
Khan
to
the
ground,
causing
internal
injuries.
He
pressed
on
with
the
campaign,
but
his
health
never
recovered.
He
died
on
August
18,
1227,
just
before
the
Xi
Xia
were
crushed.
Genghis
Khan
conquered
more
than
twice
as
much
land
as
any
other
person
in
history,
bringing
Eastern
and
Western
civilizations
into
contact
in
the
process.
His
descendants,
including
Ogodei
and
Khubilai,
were
also
prolific
conquerors,
taking
control
of
Eastern
Europe,
the
Middle
East
and
the
rest
of
China,
among
other
places.
The
Mongols
even
invaded
Japan
and
Java
before
their
empire
broke
apart
in
the
14th
century.
Genghis
Khan’s
last
ruling
descendant
was
finally
deposed
in
1920.
3