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Genghis Khan And The Making Of The Modern World (2005)

Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World (2005)

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3.99 of 5 Votes: 1
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ISBN
0609809644 (ISBN13: 9780609809648)
Language
English
Publisher
broadway books

About book Genghis Khan And The Making Of The Modern World (2005)

Genghis Khan and his Mongol Horde were good news for the world. Really. Not convinced? Consider the following:1.tGenghis Khan was an advocate of human rights, specifically freedom of religion, freedom from torture and free trade (he got two of the Four Freedoms right, which is pretty impressive by medieval standards, especially when they still, like, burned heretics and unbelievers in Europe and elsewhere). GK forbade the use of torture in trials and as punishment. He also granted religious freedom within his realm, though he demanded total loyalty from conquered subjects of all religions. His own immediate family was religiously diverse: besides those who were Shamanists or Buddhists, a significant number were Monophysite Christians --- and later also Muslim converts. As for the free trade thing, it was more of a byproduct of the commercial opportunities that developed along the Silk Road (“history’s largest free-trade zone”), once the interior of the Eurasian landmass became safe enough to travel under the Pax Mongolica. Free trade as human right is still a pretty iffy concept, anyway.2.tGK created a hitherto unprecedented egalitarian society where men and some women (more on this later) advanced through “individual merit, loyalty and achievement”, instead through birth and aristocratic privilege. This egalitarian society was also incredibly diverse, comprising of people of different religions and nations. The Mongols hired European artisans to decorate their HQ in Xanadu, Chinese engineers to man their siege engines, and Muslim astronomers to chart their horoscopes. And they might have hired an Italian guy called Marco Polo to govern the city of Hangzhou --- who knows? But there’s no independent proof of it whatsoever.3.tGK was a proto-feminist --- well, he was sort of pro-woman, in the context of his era. He made it law that women are not to be kidnapped, sold or traded. Through marital alliances, he installed his daughters as de facto rulers over conquered nations. In Mongol culture, when the men went off to war, the women ruled the roost. And since Mongol men in the time of GK went really far away to conquer distant nations and did not return for years, the wives and daughters were the real boss at home (and also at the various Mongol courts, when many of GK’s male descendants turned out to be drunken incompetents). A successful queen like Sorkhothani, the wife of GK’s youngest son, was able to rule in her dead husband’s stead and made all of her sons Great Khans. Failure, however, could doom such women into cruel and unusual punishments, such as being sewed up naked into a rug and then pummeled to death (Mongols abhorred the sight of blood, thus the rug).4.tThe Mongols promoted pragmatic, non-dogmatic intellectual development in the countries that they ruled. Although himself an illiterate, GK and his family recognized the value of learning and actively encouraged the development of the sciences. Under the Mongols, learned men did not have to “worry whether their astronomy agreed with the precepts of the Bible, that their standards of writing followed the classical principles taught by the mandarins of China, or that Muslim imams disapproved of their printing and painting.” New technology, such as paper and printing, gunpowder and the compass were transmitted through the Mongol realm to the West and sparked the Renaissance a few generations later. 5.tThe Mongols were for low taxes. GK lowered taxes for everyone, and abolished them altogether for professionals such as doctors, teachers and priests, and educational institutions.6.tThe Mongols established a regular census and created the first international postal system.7.tThe Mongols invented paper money (it was soon abandoned because of hyper-inflation, but they got the right idea) and elevated the status of merchants ahead of all religions and professions, second only to government officials (this is in contrast to Confucian culture, which ranked merchants as merely a step above robbers). They also widely distributed loot acquired in combat and thus promoted healthy commercial circulation of goods.8.tThe Mongols improved agriculture by encouraging farmers to adopt more efficient planting methods and tools, as well as transplanting different varieties of edible plants from country to country and developed new varieties and hybrids.Okay. So Pax Mongolica was basically good for the world. But wait, how about all of those terrible massacres, rapine and wholesale destruction of cities? Didn’t Genghis Khan famously stated that “the greatest joy a man can know is to conquer his enemies and drive them before him. To ride their horses and take away their possessions. To see the faces of those who were dear to them bedewed with tears, and to clasp their wives and daughters in his arms?” Actually, Muslim chroniclers attributed that quote to him and it is highly unlikely that he ever uttered it. Muslims writers of the era often exaggerated Mongol atrocities for Jihad purposes.* The Mongols were very aware of the value of propaganda as a weapon of war and actively encouraged scary stories about themselves.The Mongols decimated cities that resisted them, such as Baghdad, the capital of the Abbasid Caliphate, but they generally let those that surrendered remain unmolested. At the end of the fourteenth century, Tamerlane piled up pyramids of heads outside the cities that he conquered, and as he (flimsily) claimed to be a Mongol, “his practices were anachronistically assigned back to Genghis Khan.” Three centuries later, Voltaire adopted a Mongol dynasty play to fit his own personal political and social agenda by portraying GK, whom he used as a substitute for the French king, as an ignorant and cruel villain. So basically, GK got an undeservedly bad rap.Yay for Genghis Khan!* “…more conservative scholars place the number of dead from Genghis Khan’s invasion of central Asia at 15 million within five years. Even this more modest total, however, would require that each Mongol kill more than a hundred people; the inflated tallies for other cities required a slaughter of 350 people by every Mongol soldier. Had so many people lived in the cities of central Asia at the time, they could have easily overwhelmed the invading Mongols. Although accepted as fact and repeated through the generations, the (inflated) numbers have no basis in reality.”

The legacy of Genghis Khan is often riddled with fearsome myths around the man's cruelty and blood lust. The research that the author has undertaken shows us, as much as he is able, given the scanty written record of his earlier life and certainly little of his thoughts. What he does deliver is a blunt assessment of a man who, having been cast out with his mother and brothers from the clan after his father is killed, goes on to kill his elder half-brother, is imprisoned as a slave by another khan, forms a close alliance with Ong Khan, a friend of his father's and weds a woman to whom he was betrothed before his father was killed. Not having been trained in different kinds of warfare, I found it fascinating that Genghis had such a different approach to war strategies, that he could see through the weaknesses in the general methods of defense and attack and to device strategies for his army that allowed them to be victorious, even when faced by armies much larger and even armies behind high city walls. He also developed, what could be considered the original version of a platoon, he divided his warriors into groups of 10 and factors of 10, with each group responsible for managing sub-groups. His treatment of the conquered also differed from the norm. He didn't believe in torturing his prisoners, but encouraged them to assimilate with his people, although for the leaders who wouldn't accept him as khan, he killed swiftly. The treasures of their victories were gathered and he distributed them all among the his people instead of keeping it all for himself or his family. He ensured that his people shared in the growing prosperity.As his army and their families grew with each conquest, communication became key, especially as the territories they covered expanded, so Genghis developed the first postal system, although in those days, it was fixed stations where messages could be delivered from one station to another, and the messages then distributed to those in that area. His people believed that he was a powerful shaman and that the God of the Eternal Blue Sky spoke to him and blessed his ventures. He had innate leadership skills, perhaps honed through the harshness he experienced during his youth and the memories of ill-treatment at the hands of others. He rewarded those from other clans with positions of leadership if they showed that they were able to do so, even at the expense of his own brothers. He did manage to unite all the Mongols to one people, but it was his children after his death, who expanded their territory even further into Russia all the way over into Western Europe, and into China. They controlled at some point, the trade along the Silk Road. But while Genghis triumphed over his enemies and forged strong loyalty among most of his people and his army generals, he hadn't spent much time with his sons, and when he was in his 70s, he tried to make up for lost time, to teach his sons that leadership meant sometimes swallowing one's pride in order to achieve good for the community, and to encourage them to work together. Unfortunately, his sons and grandsons proved themselves not to be much like their illustrious ancestor and they quickly lost the lands so hard won by Genghis. If you were to compare the size of Mongolia today against the Mongolia conquered by Genghis, it's difficult not to be impressed by this one uneducated, illiterate and forward thinking tribal warrior from the steppes.

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If you choose to listen to this book as two-part, 14+-hour audio download from Audible, be aware that, although the author's introduction appears as the last chapter of the second part (of two) of the audio download, it could profitably be listened to before the rest of the book. Specifically, the author's introduction explains the history of the long-lost and recently-recovered “Secret History of the Mongols”, which is then referred to without explanation in the body of the text.The author's contention is that Genghis (here pronounced “Jeng-gis”) Khan was a enlightened leader of remarkable foresight who was the first to introduce many of the achievements of advanced societies, for example, freedom of religion, paper money, standardized weights and measures, effective postal services, civil service, organized systems of roads, central banking, public schools, and universal education in the local vernacular. Modern-day partisans of cultures that suffered at the hands of the Mongols are (if writings here at Goodreads and elsewhere are any indication) understandably less than enthusiastic about this thesis, but Weatherford might explain that resentment at Genghis is largely misdirected, as much of the cruelty associated with the Mongols was generated by Genghis's inferior successors, of whom only Kublai Khan managed to decelerate the Empire's decline even temporarily. The author's enthusiasm for all things Mongol gives a pleasantly vigorous narrative drive to the story, but it also leads him to an astonishing moment of statistical illiteracy, or maybe mendacity. While discussing capital punishment under the Mongols, at audiobook part 2, chapter 3, time 19:13, it is stated: “In total, fewer than 2,500 criminals were executed in more than three decades of Kublai's rule. His annual rate fell considerably short of the number of executions in modern countries, such as China or the United States.”While this statement might be true for China, it is probably not true for the United States. The discussion below is based largely on statistics gathered from Wikipedia and guesses made by me. Apologies for any inaccuracies.According to Weatherford, the Mongols may have executed 2,500 criminals during a period of thirty years. It is difficult to guess the average population of the Mongol Empire during that period, but Wikipedia gave a possible figure of 110 million. That works out to 2.27 executions per 100,000 population for the entire period, or an annual rate of .076 per 100,000.Capital punishment in People's Republic of China is difficult to judge because there are no reliable statistics about the number of people executed. Estimates vary wildly, but, based on some numbers on Wikipedia and elsewhere, I chose to start with a low-ball estimate of 3,000 per year, average, over the last thirty years. For the sake of convenience, I used the round number of 1 billion for the average population of the PRC during any given year during the 30-year period. That works out to nine executions per 100,000 population during the period, or an annual rate of .3 per 100,000 per year – almost 4 times that of the Mongol Empire.The United States executed 1,317 people during 1976-2012. To simplify the mathematics and standardize the unit of comparison, I'm going to call that 1,300 during 30 years. This figure, you might notice, is far lower than the 2,500 figure that Weatherford gives for the same period, even before we adjust for differences in population. Unsurprisingly, the total and annual execution rates, adjusted for population (US population = 2.7 times larger than Mongol population), are lower, too. During the entire period, there were .43 executions per 100,000 population. This works out to an annual rate of .014 per 100,000 per year – slightly less than one-fifth of the Mongol annual rate, and incidentally roughly one-twentieth of the present-day PRC's rate. Of course, executing merely one-fifth as many people as the Mongol Empire (and merely one-twentieth as many as the PRC) is not an achievement to be inordinately proud of, but nevertheless Weatherford's claim that the annual execution rate in the Mongol Empire was less than that of the present-day USA is almost certain wrong.Rather than attribute this mistake to malice, I was tempted to write off the fact that Weatherford did not take into account the relative size of the populations of the Mongol Empire vs. the USA to a possible case of innumeracy that, while not inevitable, would not be completely unsurprising to find in a professor of anthropology. However, later in the audio book (part 2, chapter 5, time 12:49), when Weatherford wishes to illustrate the severity of the Black Plague (which contributed to the end of the Mongol Empire), he demonstrates a mastery of these same concepts, meaning, he gives statistically-accurate comparisons of mortality rates as a percentage of the total population of the Plague versus various occasions of modern-day slaughter and/or mass illness. In other words, when doing so will strengthen his narrative, Weatherford apparently can understand and manipulate statistics adequately.Where were his editors? They are supposed to keep the author honest and catch things like this.At moments like these, I'm tempted to put the blackest possible interpretation on things, i.e., to say that this case of America-libeling is another example fashionable USA-bashing in academia. However, I try to keep in mind Hanlon's razor, which states: “Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity.” That may sound unnecessarily mean, but that's not my intention. I mean to say that writing a long book is hard and sometimes some of the details skitter away from us, go unchecked, and acquire the dignity of publication. It doesn't mean that the whole book should be disregarded.
—David

Би урьд нь Монголын нууц товчоог нэг удаа уншиж байсан. Одоо бараг мартагнаж байгаа. Уншаад тэр тэгсэн, энэ ингэсэн гэсэн болсон явдлыг л мэдсэнээс биш харин тэдгээр үйл явдлуудын учир шалтгаан, ач холбогдлуудыг тэгтлээ ухаарч мэдээгүй. Гэтэл Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World гэдэг энэхүү номыг уншаад Монголын нууц товчоонд өгүүлсэн зарим үйл явдлуудын ач холбогдлыг ойлгож авсан төдийгүй дэлхийн түүхийн талаас олон зүйлсийг мэддэг боллоо. Мөн Их монгол улс дэлхийн түүхэн хөгжилд ямар олон нөлөө үзүүлснийг гадарладаг боллоо.Би юу хэлэх гээд байна вэ гэвэл түүх бол түүх, зүгээр л бичигдсэн зүйл, харин түүхийг тайлбарлаж бичнэ гэдэг бол маш өөр зүйл бөгөөд түүнийг унших нь түүхийг уншихаас шал өөр мэдрэмж, ойлголтыг төрүүлдэг юм байна. Би Тэмүжиний түүхийг мэддэг боловч яг үнэндээ мэддэггүй байжээ. Жишээлбэл, Тэмүжин гэр бүлээ тонуулчдаас хамгаалуулахын тулд Тоорил ханы ивээлд орсон, Тоорил хан түүнийг дэргэдээ авч өөд нь татах гэхэд Тэмүжин татгалзаж энгийн амьдралаар амьдрахыг хүссэн, гэтэл Бөртэ үжинийг Мэргидэд булаалгаад амьдралынхаа хамгийн чухал шийдвэрийг гаргасан нь түүний ирээдүйг өөрчилж их хүн болох замд орсон гэдгийг урьд нь хараагүй байсан. Эхнэрээ эргүүлж авах гэж хөөцөлдөхгүйгээр зүгээр л цаашаа мөрөөрөө амьдарсан бол Есүхэй баатарт эхнэрээ булаалгаад юу ч хийгээгүй Их Чилэдү шиг ердийн нэг хүний амьдралаар төгсгөл болж, түүхэнд тэднийг хэн ч мэдэхгүй өнгөрөх байлаа. Гэтэл Тэмүжин эхнэрээ буцааж авахын төлөө бүх боломжийг ашиглан зүтгэсэн бөгөөд гэр бүл, ахуй амьдралаа хамгаалах, гэр орон, улс ахуйгаа төвхнүүлэх чин хүсэл эрмэлзэл нь түүнийг агуу хүн болоход хөтөлсөн гэдгийг би ойлгоогүй явжээ. Биеэ засаад гэрээ зас, гэрээ засаад төрөө зас гэдэг үг үнэхээр айхтар ажээ. Бурхан халдун ууланд бүгэж байхдаа ямар гурван сонголттой тулгарч байсныг би мэдээгүй. Энэ бол зөвхөн нэг л жишээ нь.Ингээд бодохоор түүхийг унших нэг хэрэг, учир холбогдлыг нь ойлгох бас нэг хэрэг ажээ. Зохиолч энэхүү номыг бичихдээ түүхэн үйл явдлыг бодит өнцгөөс харж, олон хүчин зүйлс, нөхцөл байдлыг тусгаж үзсэний үндсэн дээр үйл явдлыг тайлбарлаж тодорхойлохыг чармайсан ажээ. Энэ номыг уншаад би монголчууд бид түүхээ мэдэх бас л болоогүй байгаа юм байна гэдгийг ойлголоо. Дунд сургуульд Монголын нууц товчоог зүгээр л уншуулж мэдүүлдэг. Харин Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World мэтийн түүхэн зохиолуудыг унших нь энгийн бидэнд өөрсдийн түүхээ ач холбогдлоор нь ойлгоход тусалж байна. Нэг хүний тайлбарласнаар түүхийг ойлгож болохгүй нь зүйн хэрэг хэдий боловч энэ номыг хүн судлаач эрдэмтэн хүн бичсэн болохоор нэг их худлаа юм өгүүлээгүй л болов уу.Энэ ном надад маш их таалагдлаа. Өөрийн түүхээ улам их мэдэх хүслийг бадрааж өглөө. Болж өгвөл Чингис хаан болон Их Монгол улсын тухай дахиад нэг ном уншаад энэ номтой харьцуулж үзмээр байна. Би дэлхийн түүхийг л сонирхоод байснаас биш өөрийнхөө түүхийг тэгтлээ сонирхож байсангүй.Би уншсан бүх номондоо өгдөгийн адилаар энэ номонд таван од өгч байна. Ер нь эцсийн эцэст үнэлгээ өгдөг би хэн юм бэ. Уншаад л сууж байвал барав.
—Батбаяр Т

This is a pretty radical book, and like most revisionist history it goes a little bit overboard with it's thesis: Genghis Khan wasn't a bloodthirsty barbarian, he was the greatest civilizing influence the world has ever seen, bringing peace of rule of law wherever he went!In addition to the amazing personal details presented about Genghis Khan and his early life as an outcast from one of the most obscure fringe nomadic tribes of Mongolia to, well, King of the World, the book does make a fascinating and convincing case for how the Mongols were able to break past entrenched and provincial ways of thinking to create a world view. Also how they made their massive empire a meritocracy. In his effort to save Genghis Khan's image from evil conquerer to good guy he does seem to skip or gloss over a lot of the raping and pillaging that must have happened. Not that I really want to know the gory details, but what's a detailed biography of Genghis Khan without talking about the gore?
—Jamie

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