the mongols and world history

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The Mongols and World History The Formation and Dissolution of Nomadic Empires

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The Mongols and World History. The Formation and Dissolution of Nomadic Empires. Age of Cross-Cultural Interaction (1000 – 1500 CE). Nomadic Empires Sub-Saharan Africa Western Europe in the High Middle Ages The Americas and Oceania Cross-Cultural Interactions c.1500. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Mongols and World History

The Mongols and World HistoryThe Formation and Dissolution of Nomadic Empires

Page 2: The Mongols and World History

Age of Cross-Cultural Interaction(1000 – 1500 CE)

•Nomadic Empires•Sub-Saharan Africa•Western Europe in the High Middle Ages•The Americas and Oceania•Cross-Cultural Interactions c.1500

Page 3: The Mongols and World History

•Formation of Nomadic Empire ▫Features of nomadic life▫Chinggis Khan (1206-1227)▫Maintenance and division of Mongolian

Empire(s)

•Marco Polo and Kublai Khan▫Route and Experiences▫Influence on western conceptions of “the east”

Page 4: The Mongols and World History

Key Points•The Mongolian rise to power depended on a

confluence of political, economic, and regional factors

•The united Mongolian empire under Chinggis Khan fragmented on his death into 4 successor states

•Marco Polo’s journeys demonstrate growing (commercial and cultural) interaction by 1300

Page 5: The Mongols and World History

I. Formation of Nomadic Empires

Page 6: The Mongols and World History
Page 7: The Mongols and World History

Temujin / Chinggis Khan (c.1160 – 1227)

Page 8: The Mongols and World History
Page 9: The Mongols and World History

“Mongol” – award-winning film by Sergei Bodrove (subtitled) Mongol (2007: Chinggis' wife stolen)

Mongol (2007-brothers divided) Mongol (2007- Mongols united))

Page 10: The Mongols and World History

Mongolian military: cavalry, archery, gunpowder, siege equipment, support systems

Page 11: The Mongols and World History

Chinggis Khan establishes Mongolian script and law code

Page 12: The Mongols and World History

  Heaven has appointed me to rule all the nations, for hitherto there has been no order upon the steppes. --Genghis Khan

Page 13: The Mongols and World History

Key factors that led c.125,000 warriors to build the largest land empire in history

•Military prowess

•Adaptation of local societies/talents

•Timing: fragmentation of postclassical states

Page 14: The Mongols and World History

Area controlled by Chinggis Khan (1227)

Page 15: The Mongols and World History

The Mongolian Empires:Yuan, Chagatai, Il-Khanate, Golden Horde

Page 16: The Mongols and World History

Mongolian Empires at greatest extent (c.1294)

Page 17: The Mongols and World History

Mongolian Empire, 1204

Page 18: The Mongols and World History

Mongolian Empire, 1218

Page 19: The Mongols and World History

Mongolian Empire, 1227

Page 20: The Mongols and World History

Mongolian Empire, 1246

Page 21: The Mongols and World History

Mongolian Empires, 1286

Page 22: The Mongols and World History

II. Marco Polo (1254 – 1324)

Page 23: The Mongols and World History

Venice and Trade c.1000 - 1500

Page 24: The Mongols and World History
Page 25: The Mongols and World History

Kublai Khan (1215 – 1294)

Page 26: The Mongols and World History

Marco Polo’s travels (c.1271 – 1295)

Page 27: The Mongols and World History

The Travels of Marco Polo

Page 28: The Mongols and World History

Marco Polo’s travels (c.1271 – 1295)

Page 29: The Mongols and World History

Contrasting Responses to Contact:West (European/Asian) and East Asian