MongoliaThe Yuan Dynasty
Elephants carrying Khubilai Khan's command post in
battle
Courtesy Prints and Photographs Division,
A rich cultural diversity evolved in China during the Yuan
Dynasty, as it had in other periods of foreign dynastic rule.
Major achievements included the development of drama and the
novel and the increased use of the written vernacular. The Yuan
was involved in a fair amount of cultural exchange because of its
extensive West Asian and European contacts. The introduction of
foreign musical instruments enriched the Chinese performing arts.
The conversion to Islam of growing numbers of people in
northwestern and southwestern China dates from this period.
Nestorian Christianity and Roman Catholicism also enjoyed a
period of toleration. Lamaism flourished, although native Daoism
endured Mongol persecutions. Chinese governmental practices and
examinations were reinstated by the Mongols in the hope of
maintaining order within society. Advances were realized in the
fields of travel literature, cartography, geography, and
scientific education. Certain key Chinese innovations--such as
printing techniques, porcelain playing cards, and medical
literature--were introduced in Europe, while European skills,
such as the production of thin glass and cloisonné, became
popular in China.
The Mongols undertook extensive public works. Land and water
communications were reorganized and improved. To provide against
possible famines, new granaries were ordered to be built
throughout the empire. Dadu was rebuilt with new palace grounds
that included artificial lakes, hills, and parks, and the capital
became the terminus of the Grand Canal, which was completely
renovated. These commercially oriented improvements encouraged
overland as well as maritime commerce throughout Asia and
facilitated the first direct Chinese contacts with Europe.
Chinese and Mongol travelers to the West were able to provide
assistance in such areas as hydraulic engineering, and they
brought back to China new scientific discoveries, agricultural
crops, methods of food preparation, and architectural
innovations.
Early records of travel by Westerners to East Asia date from
this time. Much that the Western world of the thirteenth and
fourteenth centuries knew about the Mongols and Asia was the
result of the famous missions of a Venetian trading family. The
first mission was by two brothers, Niccolò and Maffeo Polo, from
1260 to 1268. Another started in 1271, when they were joined by
Niccolò's son, Marco. Marco Polo, who remained in Asia until
1295, was trusted by Khubilai Khan and undertook a number of
diplomatic missions and administrative assignments for him
throughout the empire. The account of his travels, Il
milione (or, The Million, known in English as the Travels
of Marco Polo), appeared about the year 1299 and astounded
the people of Europe, who knew little of the highly developed
culture of East Asia. The works of John of Plano Carpini and
William of Rubruck also provided early descriptions of the
Mongols to the West.
The Mongols sought, but failed, to govern China through its
traditional institutions. At the outset, they discriminated
against the Chinese socially and politically, monopolized the
most important central and regional government posts, and
developed an unprecedented and complex six-tier local-government
administration. Mongols also preferred employing non-Chinese from
other parts of the Mongol domain--Inner Asia, the Middle East,
and even Europe--in those positions for which no Mongol could be
found. Chinese, in turn, were more often employed in non-Chinese
regions of the empire.
In time, Khubilai's successors became sinicized, and they
then lost all influence on other Mongol lands across Asia.
Gradually, they lost influence in China as well. The reigns of
the later Yuan emperors were short and were marked by intrigues
and rivalries. Uninterested in administration, they were
separated from both their Mongolian army and their Chinese
subjects. China was torn by dissension and unrest; bandits ranged
the country without interference from the weakening Yuan armies.
The last of the nine successors of Khubilai was expelled from
Dadu in 1368 by Zhu Yuanzhang, the founder of the Ming Dynasty
(1368-1644), and died in Karakorum in 1370. Although Zhu, who
adopted Mongol military methods, drove the Mongols out of China,
he did not destroy their power. A later Chinese army invaded
Mongolia in 1380. In 1388 a decisive victory was won; about
70,000 Mongols were taken prisoner, and Karakorum was
annihilated.
Data as of June 1989
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