MongoliaKitan and Jurchen
Free of Uighur restraint, the Kitan expanded in all
directions in the latter half of the ninth century and the early
years of the tenth century. By 925 the Kitan ruled eastern
Mongolia, most of Manchuria, and much of China north of the Huang
He. In the recurrent process of sinicization, by the middle of
the tenth century Kitan chieftains had established themselves as
emperors of northern China; their rule was known as the Liao
Dynasty (916-1125).
The period of the eleventh and twelfth centuries was one of
consolidation, preceding the most momentous era in Mongol
history, the era of Chinggis Khan. During those centuries, the
vast region of deserts, mountains, and grazing land was inhabited
by people resembling each other in racial, cultural, and
linguistic characteristics; ethnologically they were essentially
Mongol. The similarites among the Mongols, Türk, Tangut, and
Tatars (see Glossary)
who inhabited this region causes
considerable ethnic and historical confusion. Generally, the
Mongols and the closely related Tatars inhabited the northern and
the eastern areas; the Türk (who already had begun to spread over
western Asia and southeastern Europe) were in the west and the
southwest; the Tangut, who were more closely related to the
Tibetans than were the other nomads and who were not a Turkic
people, were in eastern Xinjiang, Gansu, and western Inner
Mongolia
(see
fig. 2). The Liao state was homogeneous, and the
Kitan had begun to lose their nomadic characteristics. The Kitan
built cities and exerted dominion over their agricultural
subjects as a means of consolidating their empire. To the west
and the northwest of Liao were many other Mongol tribes, linked
together in various tenuous alliances and groupings, but with
little national cohesiveness. In Gansu and eastern Xinjiang, the
Tangut--who had taken advantage of the Tang decline--had formed a
state, Western Xia or Xixia (1038-1227), nominally under Chinese
suzerainty. Xinjiang was dominated by the Uighurs, who were
loosely allied with the Chinese.
Chinggis Khan, detail from
a sixteenth-century Iranian genealogical manuscript
Courtesy The Granger Collection
The people of Mongolia at this time were predominantly spirit
worshipers, with shamans providing spiritual and religious
guidance to the people and tribal leaders. There had been some
infusion of Buddhism, which had spread from Xinjiang, but it did
not yet have a strong influence
(see The Yuan Dynasty;
Return to Nomadic Patterns
, this ch.). Nestorian Christianity also had
penetrated Inner Asia.
In the eleventh century, the Kitan completed the conquest of
China north of the Huang He. Despite close cultural ties between
the Kitan and Western Xia that led the latter to become
increasingly sinicized, during the remainder of that century and
the early years of the twelfth century, the two Mongol groups
were frequently at war with each other and with the Song Dynasty
(A.D. 960-1279) of China. The Uighurs of the Turpan region often
were involved in these wars, usually aiding the Chinese against
Western Xia.
A Tungusic people, the Jurchen, ancestors of the Manchu,
formed an alliance with the Song and reduced the Kitan Empire to
vassal status in a seven-year war (1115-1122; see
Caught Between the Russians and the Manchus
, this ch.). The Jurchen leader
proclaimed himself the founder of a new era, the Jin Dynasty
(1115-1234). Scarcely pausing in their conquests, the Jurchen
subdued neighboring Koryo (Korea) in 1226 and invaded the
territory of their former allies, the Song, to precipitate a
series of wars with China that continued through the remainder of
the century. Meanwhile, the defeated Kitan Liao ruler had fled
with the small remnant of his army to the Tarim Basin, where he
allied himself with the Uighurs and established the Karakitai
state (known also as the Western Liao Dynasty, 1124-1234), which
soon controlled both sides of the Pamir Mountains. The Jurchen
turned their attention to the Mongols who, in 1139 and in 1147,
warded them off.
Data as of June 1989
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