MongoliaThe Era of Chinggis Khan, 1206-27
Figure 2. Tribes, Nations, and Boundaries of Mongolia and
Inner Asia, ca. A.D. 1150-1227
Based on information from John K. Fairbank, Edwin O.
Reischauer, and Albert M. Craig, East Asia: Tradition and
Transformation, Boston, 1978, 165.
Rise of Chinggis Khan
After the migration of the Jurchen, the Borjigin Mongols had
emerged in central Mongolia as the leading clan of a loose
federation. The principal Borjigin Mongol leader, Kabul Khan,
began a series of raids into Jin in 1135. In 1162 (some
historians say 1167), Temujin, the first son of Mongol chieftain
Yesugei, and grandson of Kabul, was born. Yesugei, who was chief
of the Kiyat subclan of the Borjigin Mongols, was killed by
neighboring Tatars in 1175, when Temujin was only twelve years
old. The Kiyat rejected the boy as their leader and chose one of
his kin instead. Temujin and his immediate family were abandoned
and apparently left to die in a semidesert, mountainous region.
Temujin did not die, however. In a dramatic struggle
described in The Secret History of the Mongols, Temujin,
by the age of twenty, had become the leader of the Kiyat subclan
and by 1196, the unquestioned chief of the Borjigin Mongols.
Sixteen years of nearly constant warfare followed as Temujin
consolidated his power north of the Gobi. Much of his early
success was because of his first alliance, with the neighboring
Kereit clan, and because of subsidies that he and the Kereit
received from the Jin emperor in payment for punitive operations
against Tatars and other tribes that threatened the northern
frontiers of Jin. Jin by this time had become absorbed into the
Chinese cultural system and was politically weak and increasingly
subject to harassment by Western Xia, the Chinese, and finally
the Mongols. Later Temujin broke with the Kereit, and, in a
series of major campaigns, he defeated all the Mongol and Tatar
tribes in the region from the Altai Mountains to Manchuria. In
time Temujin emerged as the strongest chieftain among a number of
contending leaders in a confederation of clan lineages. His
principal opponents in this struggle had been the Naiman Mongols,
and he selected Karakorum (west-southwest of modern Ulaanbaatar,
near modern Har Horin), their capital, as the seat of his new
empire.
Stone turtle marking the reputed site of Chinggis
Khan's capital at Karakorum
Courtesyy Steve Mann
In 1206 Temujin's leadership of all Mongols and other peoples
they had conquered between the Altai Mountains and the Da Hinggan
(Greater Khingan) Range was acknowledged formally by a
kuriltai (council--see Glossary)
of chieftains as their
khan. Temujin took the honorific chinggis, meaning supreme
or great (also romanized as genghis or jenghiz),
creating the title Chinggis Khan, in an effort to signify the
unprecedented scope of his power. In latter hagiography, Chinggis
was said even to have had divine ancestry.
The contributions of Chinggis to Mongol organizational
development had lasting impact. He took personal control of the
old clan lineages, ending the tradition of noninterference by the
khan. He unified the Mongol tribes through a logistical nexus
involving food supplies, sheep and horse herds, intelligence and
security, and transportation. A census system was developed to
organize the decimal-based political jurisdictions and to recruit
soldiers more easily. As the great khan, Chinggis was able to
consolidate his organization and to institutionalize his
leadership over a Eurasian empire. Critical ingredients were his
new and unprecedented military system and politico-military
organization. His exceptionally flexible mounted army and the
cadre of Chinese and Muslim siege-warfare experts who facilitated
his conquest of cities comprised one of the most formidable
instruments of warfare that the world had ever seen
(see Historical Traditions
, ch. 5).
At the time of his first kuriltai at Karakorum,
Chinggis already was engaged in a dispute with Western Xia, the
first of his wars of conquest. In 1205 the Mongol military
organization, based on the
tumen (see Glossary), had
defeated the much larger Tangut forces easily. Despite problems
in conquering the well-fortified Western Xia cities, the results
were the same in the campaigns of 1207 and 1209. When peace was
concluded in 1209, the Western Xia emperor, with substantially
reduced dominion, acknowledged Chinggis as overlord.
Data as of June 1989
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