MongoliaHistorical Setting
Archer and hunting dog
MODERN MONGOLIA--the Mongolian People's Republic--comprises only
about half of the vast Inner Asian region known throughout
history as Mongolia. Furthermore, it is only a fraction of the
great Mongol Empire of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries
that stretched from Korea to Hungary and encompassed nearly all
of Asia except the Indian subcontinent and parts of Southeast
Asia. Because the Mongol Empire was so vast--the largest
contiguous land empire in the history of the world--the Mongols
were written about in many languages by numerous chroniclers of
divergent conquered societies, who provided a wide range of
perspectives, myths, and legends. In addition, because many
foreign accounts are about the Mongol invasions and were written
by the conquered, the Mongols often are described in unfavorable
terms, as bloodthirsty barbarians who kept their subjects under a
harsh yoke. Mongol sources emphasize the demigod-like military
genius of Chinggis Khan, providing a perspective in the opposite
extreme. The term Mongol itself is often a misnomer. Although the
leaders and core forces of the conquerors of Eurasia were ethnic
Mongols, most of the main army was made up of Uralo-Altaic
people, many of them Turkic. Militarily, the Mongols were stopped
only by the Mamluks of Egypt and by the Japanese, or by their own
volition, as happened in Europe. In their increasingly
sophisticated administrative systems, they employed Chinese,
Iranians, Russians, and others. Mongolia and its people thus have
had a significant and lasting impact on the historical
development of major nations, such as China and Russia, and,
periodically, they have influenced the entire Eurasian continent.
Until the twentieth century, most of the peoples who
inhabited Mongolia were nomads, and even in the 1980s a
substantial proportion of the rural population was essentially
nomadic. Originally there were many warlike nomadic tribes living
in Mongolia, and apparently most of these belonged to one or the
other of two racially distinct and linguistically very different
groupings. One of these groupings, the Yuezhi, was related
linguistically to the ancient nomadic Scythian peoples--who
inhabited the steppes north and northeast of the Black Sea and
the region east of the Aral Sea--and was therefore Indo-European.
The other grouping was the Xiongnu, a nomadic people of uncertain
origins.
Although in the course of history other peoples displaced, or
became intermingled with, the Yuezhi and the Xiongnu, their
activities, conflicts, and internal and external relations
established a pattern, with four principal themes, that continued
almost unchanged--except for the conquest of Eurasia in the
thirteenth and fourteenth centuries--until the eighteenth
century. First, among these four themes, there were constant
fierce struggles involving neighboring tribes, engaged in
frequently shifting alliances that did not always follow ethnic,
racial, or linguistic lines. Second, during periods when China
was united and strong, trade with Inner Asian peoples was
allowed, and nomadic states either became vassals of the Chinese
emperor, or they retreated beyond his reach into the northern
steppes; conversely, when China appeared weak, raids were made
into rich Chinese lands, sometimes resulting in retaliatory
expeditions into Mongolia. Third, occasional, transitory
consolidation--of all or of large portions of the region under
the control of a conqueror or a coalition of similar tribes--took
place; such temporary consolidations could result in a life-or-
death struggle between major tribal groupings until one or the
other was exterminated or was expelled from the region, or until
they joined forces. Fourth, on several occasions, raids into
northern China were so vast and successful that the victorious
nomads settled in the conquered land, established dynasties, and
eventually became absorbed--sinicized--by the more numerous
Chinese.
Within this pattern, the Xiongnu eventually expelled the
Yuezhi, who were driven to the southwest to become the Kushans of
Iranian, Afghan, and Indian history. In turn, the Xiongnu
themselves later were driven west. Their descendants, or possibly
another group, continued this westward migration, establishing
the Hun Empire, in Central and Eastern Europe, that reached its
zenith under Attila.
The pattern was interrupted abruptly and dramatically late in
the twelfth century and throughout the thirteenth century by
Chinggis and his descendants. During the consolidation of
Mongolia and some of the invasions of northern China, Chinggis
created sophisticated military and political organizations,
exceeding in skill, efficiency, and vigor the institutions of the
most civilized nations of the time. Under him and his immediate
successors, the Mongols conquered most of Eurasia.
After a century of Mongol dominance in Eurasia, the
traditional patterns reasserted themselves. Mongols living
outside Mongolia were absorbed by the conquered populations;
Mongolia itself again became a land of incessantly warring
nomadic tribes. True to the fourth pattern, a similar people, the
Manchus, conquered China in the seventeenth century, and
ultimately became sinicized.
Here the pattern ended. The Manchu conquest of China came at
a time when the West was beginning to have a significant impact
on East Asia. Russian colonial expansionism was sweeping rapidly
across Asia--at first passing north of Mongolia but bringing
incessant pressure, from the west and the north, against Mongol
tribes--and was beginning to establish firm footholds in
Mongolian territory by conquest and the establishment of
protectorates. At the same time, the dynamic Manchus also applied
pressure from the east and the south. This pressure was partly
the traditional attempt at control over nomadic threats from
Mongolia, but it also was a response to the now clearly apparent
threat of Russian expansionism.
From the late seventeenth century to the early twentieth
century, Mongolia was a major focus of Russian and Manchu-Chinese
rivalry for predominant influence in all of Northeast Asia. In
the process, Russia absorbed those portions of historical
Mongolia to the west and north of the present Mongolian People's
Republic. The heart of Mongolia, which became known as
Outer Mongolia (see Glossary),
was claimed by the Chinese. The area was
distinct from Inner Mongolia, along the southern rim of the Gobi,
which China absorbed--those regions to the southwest, south, and
east that now are included in the People's Republic of China.
Continuing Russian interest in Mongolia was discouraged by the
Manchus.
As Chinese power waned in the nineteenth and the early
twentieth centuries, however, Russian influence in Mongolia grew.
Thus Russia supported Outer Mongolian declarations of
independence in the period immediately after the Chinese
Revolution of 1911. Russian interest in the area did not
diminish, even after the Russian Revolution of 1917, and the
Russian civil war spilled over into Mongolia in the period 1919
to 1921. Chinese efforts to take advantage of internal Russian
disorders by trying to reestablish their claims over Outer
Mongolia were thwarted in part by China's instability and in part
by the vigor of the Russian reaction once the Bolshevik
Revolution had succeeded. Russian predominance in Outer Mongolia
was unquestioned after 1921, and when the Mongolian People's
Republic was established in 1924, it was as a communistcontrolled satellite of Moscow.
Data as of June 1989
|