The
Thirteenth Century:
Century of the Strirrup
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Central Asia:
Mongol Conquest
Until the
13th century, the grassy plains of Central Asia were full of dangers.
Fear of the tribes that lived there created a barrier between the peoples of
East and West. Only the finest horsemen could hope to survive a journey through the steppes.
Then, from
Mongolia, emerged a conqueror -- the creator of an empire that shattered the barrier between
Europe and
Asia.
Genghis Khan brought the scattered
Mongol tribes together and gave them a vision of a world united under Mongol rule.
In barely 50 years,
Khan turned a nomadic people numbering barely a million into a fighting force and created an empire twice the size of the
United States. Stretching from the
Pacific to the
Danube, the
Mongol Empire became the largest continuous land empire the world has ever known.
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Central Asia: Mongol
Peace
After the
Mongol conquest came the Mongol
peace. Genghis Khan and his successors enforced law and order across Central Asia. They policed a network of routes connecting East and West, allowing merchants -- and ideas -- to travel freely between Asia and Europe.
The Mongol highways revolutionized 13th century travel. Mongol soldiers established military stations along a fast, new route through the steppes. They revived and patrolled the old
Silk Roads linking oasis and market towns.
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China:
Decadence of
Xanadu
Conquerors have often been seduced by the soft life of the people they conquer. And this was true for the
Mongols.
Genghis Khan lived and died in a saddle. But his grandson,
Kublai, rejected the harsh life of the steppes. He built a luxurious pleasure dome in China, immortalized by
English poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge who based his "Xanadu" on the travels of a 17-year-old
Venetian,
Marco Polo.
Marco Polo arrived with his merchant father to explore prospects for trade and stayed for 17 years. Through
Kublai Khan and Marco Polo, the mysteries of China were unveiled to the outside world for the first time in history.
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Egypt:
Baybars the
Mamluk
In Cairo, the
Mamluks were forging an empire. Mamluk means slave, and the
Mamluk Empire was founded upon young slave boys bought in the marketplace, instructed in Islamic doctrine and trained in
Cairo's academy of war.
The founder of the military academy was Baybars, bought for a sultan's household at 14. Baybars means "lion" or "panther," and he excelled on the battlefield.
Through intrigue and assassination, he rose quickly through the ranks, from royal bodyguard to sultan, and won an empire encompassing
Palestine and
Syria. Baybars boasted he could play polo in both Cairo and
Damascus within a single week.
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Europe:
Wealth of
Venice
In the 13th century, the great trade routes of East and West met in Venice. Along with
Oriental luxuries reaching Venice came new technology and new ideas.
Europeans who traveled the Mongol roads brought back reports of exotic lands and advanced civilizations.
Among the returning Venetian merchants was Marco Polo. He had spent many years in China acquiring new ideas, including the use of coal for power, and paper for money. And, it is said, he had a coat full of gems.
He told the story of his travels in a book, written when he was taken prisoner in a local trade war. At a time when all books had to be copied by hand, Marco Polo's travels became
the best-seller of the age.
- published: 21 Jun 2016
- views: 397