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March 8, 2014
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1 Introduction
Genghis Khan

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Image:Mongol1.jpg|200px>Genghis Khan portrait
Genghis Khan
Birth name Tem?jin (Mongolian language|Mongolian: Тэмүүжин)
Family name Боржигин)
Title Great Khan of Mongol Empire
(Khan of the Mongols)
Birth 1155/1162/1167
Place of birth Hentiy_aymag|Hentiy, next to Onon River
Death August 18, 1227
Dates of reign 1206 - August 18, 1227
Succeeded by Ogedei Khan
Marriage B?rte
Children
  • Borjigin Jochi, son
  • Borjigin Chagatai Khan|Chagatai, son
  • Borjigin Ogedei, son
  • Borjigin Tolui, son

Genghis Khan (Mongolian language|Mongolian: Чингис Хаан, Jenghis Khan, Jinghis Khan, Chinghiz Khan, Jinghiz Khan, Chinggis Khan, Chingis Khan, etc., born as Tem?jin, Temuchin, Mongolian language|Mongolian: Тэмүүжин) (c. 1155/1162/1167 ? August 18, 1227), (pronunciation: chi ng'g s h??n) was a Mongol Khan and founder of the Mongol Empire, unifying independent Mongol tribes under his banner by 1206. One of the foremost leaders of world history, he is regarded with extreme respect by Mongols as a leader who eliminated centuries of dissension and brought political and economic stability in Eurasia, although with considerable loss of life and property to those that opposed him. His grandson and successor Kublai Khan established China's Yuan Dynasty (1271?1368) by re-establishing the invasion of Southern Song Dynasty. Khan's descendents continued to claim leadership over Mongolia until the 17th century, when the last Chingissids were over-ruled by the Manchu.

Genghis Khan's reputation was so powerful that many later leaders claimed to be descended from him: for example, Timur Lenk, Turkic conquerer and Babur, founder of India's Mughal Empire.



Genghis Khan was born by the name of Tem?jin in 1162, the second son of Yesugay Ba'atur|Yes?khei, a tribal chief of the Kiyad (singular: Kiyan). Yes?khei's clan was called Borjigin (plural: Borjigid). His mother was Hoelun of the Olkunut tribe. He was named after a defeated rival chief.

Tem?jin's early life was a most difficult one. When he was only nine, his father delivered Tem?jin to his future wife's family, where he was to live until he reached the marriageable age of 14. Shortly thereafter, his father was murdered by the neighboring Tartars while returning home and Tem?jin was inducted as the clan's chief. His clan abandoned him and his family, refusing to be led by a mere boy. For the next few years, he and his family lived the way of life of poor nomads, surviving primarily off rodents. In one instance he slew his half-brother over a dispute about sharing hunting spoils. In another, Tem?jin was captured in a raid by his former tribe and held captive with a wooden collar around his neck. He later escaped with help from a sympathetic captor. His mother Hoelun taught him many lessons on how to survive in the harsh climate of Mongolia, especially the need for alliances with others, which would shape his understanding in his later years.

Around the age of 16, Tem?jin married B?rte of the Konkirat tribe, and received a black sable coat as a dowry; this was the foundation for his increased wealth from conquest. Later she was kidnapped in a raid by the Merkit tribe and Tem?jin called on his friend and later rival, Jamuka, and his protector, Toghril of the Kereit tribe. The birth of B?rte's first child too soon after she was freed led to doubt over whose son he was and Jochi and his descendants were never considered for the Mongol succession.



Tem?jin began his slow ascent to power by allying himself with his father's friend Toghril, a local chief. He traded his coat for an army and joined the Keriat, a confederacy of Mongols led by Wang Khan. After successful campaigns against the Tartars (1202), Tem?jin was adopted as Wang Khan's heir. This led to bitterness on the part of Senggum, Wang's former heir, who planned to assassinate Tem?jin. Tem?jin, after learning of Senggum's intentions, eventually defeated Senggum and his loyalists and succeeded to the title of Wang Khan. Tem?jin eventually created a written code of laws for the Mongols called Yassa, and he demanded it to be followed very strictly in order to strengthen his organization and his power among his people.

Feeling the need to secure his borders from the south against the Jin Dynasty|Jin Empire and from the west against the Xia Xia, Genghis Khan organized his people to prepare for possible conflicts, especially with the Chinese. The Chinese had grown uncomfortable with the newly emergent Mongols, fearing (correctly) that would eventually restrict the supply of goods, as many trade routes ran through Mongol territory. With his personal charisma and strong will Genghis Khan finally managed to unite the tribes under a single system, a monumental feature for Mongols, who had a long history of internecine dispute and economic hardship.

In 1206 Tem?jin had successfully united the formerly fragmented tribes of what is now Mongolia, and at a Kurultai (a council of Mongol chiefs) he was titled "Genghis Khan" (alternate spellings exist; see above) or Universal Ruler (also "Ruler of all between the oceans").



China
At the time of the Khuriltai, Genghis was involved in a dispute with Western Xia Jurchen, a state that demanded tribute from the Mongols. Genghis Khan led the Mongols to war and conquered Xia, despite initial difficulties in conquering well-defended cities in western Xia. By 1209, he was acknowledged by their emperor as overlord. The emperor, however, soon breached his agreement with the Mongols and Genghis in 1211 set about to bring the Jurchen completely under his dominion, and to prevent them from challenging the Mongols for teritory and resources. In 1215 Genghis besieged, captured, and sacked the Jin capital of Yanjing (later known as Beijing). The Jin emperor, Emperor Xuan Zong of Jin|Xuan Zong, however, did not surrender. Instead, he moved his capital to Kaifeng because of the growing threat of Mongols on the north. There his successors finally were defeated, but not until 1234.

Central Asia
Meanwhile, Kuchlug, the deposed khan of the Naiman Mongols, had fled west and had usurped the khanate of Kara-Khitan Khanate|Kara-Khitan, the western allies that had decided to side with Genghis. By this time, the Mongol army was exhausted by ten years of continuous campaigning against the Western Xia and the Jin. Therefore, Genghis sent only two tumen under a brilliant young general, Jebe, against Kuchlug. An internal revolt was incited by Mongol agents; then Jebe overran the country. Kuchlug's forces were defeated west of Kashgar; he was captured and executed, and Kara-Khitan was annexed. By 1218 the Mongol state extended as far west as Lake Balkhash and adjoined Khwarizm, a Islam|Muslim state that reached to the Caspian Sea in the west and to the Persian Gulf and the Arabian Sea in the south.

In 1218 Genghis sent emissary|emissaries to an eastern province of Khwarizm with the intention of discussing possible trade with the Khwarizmian Empire. The governor of the province had them killed, and Genghis Khan retaliated with a force of 200,000 troops. The Mongol army quickly took the town, using superior strategy and tactics, and executed the governor by pouring molten silver into his ears and eyes as retribution for the insult.

At this point (1219), Genghis decided to extend Mongol dominions into the Islam|Muslim world. The Mongol army methodically marched through Khwarizm's main cities (Bukhara, Samarkand, and Balkh), and the shah, Muhammad, prepared to battle them. However, he was outmaneuvered by the much swifter Mongol army and driven into extended retreat. In the end, the shah killed himself when he was cornered and by 1220, the Khwarizmian Empire was eradicated.

Now the Mongol armies split into two component forces. Genghis Khan led a division on a raid through Afghanistan and northern India, while another contingent, led by his general Subedei, marched through the Caucasus and Russia. Neither campaign added territory to the empire, but they pillaged settlements and defeated any armies they met that did not acknowledge Genghis Khan as the rightful leader of the world. In 1225 both divisions returned to Mongolia.

These invasions added Transoxiana and Persia to an already formidable empire and began to establish Genghis Khan's reputation as a bloodthirsty warrior.

Europe
While Genghis was gathering his forces in Persia and Armenia, 40,000 of his troops pushed deep into Armenia and Azerbaijan (see above in Central Asia). There Genghis destroyed Georgian crusaders, took a Genoa|Genoese trade-fortress in Crimea, and stayed the winter near Black Sea. While Genghis was heading home, he met Prince Mstitslav of Kiev with his 80,000 troops, which was the presumed Battle of Kalka River in 1223. He destroyed Prince Mstitslav and his army.

See also: Khwarezmid Empire



The vassal emperor of Western Xia had refused to take part in the war against the Khwarizm, and Genghis had vowed revenge. While he was in Iran, Western Xia and Jin had formed an alliance against the Mongols. After rest and a reorganization of his armies, Genghis prepared for war against their alliance.

By this time, his advancing age had led Genghis to prepare for the future and to assure an orderly succession among his descendants; he selected his third son Ögedei Khan|Ögedei as his successor and established the method of selection of subsequent khans, specifying that they should come from his direct descendants. Meanwhile, he studied intelligence reports from Western Xia and Jin and readied a force of 180,000 troops for a new campaign.

Image:Mongol_Empire_after_Genghis.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Khanates of Mongol Empire: Ilkhanate, Chagatai Khanate, Empire of the Great Khan (Yuan Dynasty), Golden Horde

At his death, Genghis Khan divided his empire amongst his four sons. Jochi was the eldest, but he was already dead and his paternity was in doubt, so the most distant lands trodden by the Mongols, then southern Ruthenia, were divided among his sons Batu, leader of the Blue Horde, and Orda, leader of the White Horde. Chagatai Khan|Chagatai was the next-eldest son of Genghis, but he was considered a hothead, and so was given Central Asia and northern Iran. Ogedei, third oldest, was made Great Khan and given China. Tolui, the youngest, was given the Mongol homeland as Mongol custom.

In AD 1226, Genghis Khan attacked the Tanguts (Western Xia) on the pretext that the Tanguts received the Mongols' enemies and he sought retribution for this betrayal. In February, Genghis Khan took Heisui City, Gan-zhou and Su-zhou and in the autumn, he took Xiliang-fu. A Western Xia general challenged the Mongols for a battle near Helanshan Mountain. (Helan means "great horse" in northern dialect.) The Western Xia armies were defeated. In November, he laid siege to the Tangut city of Ling-zhou and then crossed the Yellow River and defeated the Tangut relief army. Genghis reportedly saw five stars arranged in a line in the sky, which he took to be an omen.

In AD 1227, Genghis Khan attacked the Tanguts' capital, and in February, he took Lintiao-fu. In March, he took Xining prefecture and Xindu-fu. In April, he took Deshun prefecture. At Deshun, the Western Xia General Ma Jianlong resisted the Mongols for days and personally led charges against them outside of the city gate. Ma Jianlong later died from wounds received from many arrows. Genghis, after conquering Deshun, went to Liupanshan Mountain (Qingshui County, Gansu Province) for shelter from the severe summer.

The new Western Xia emperor surrendered to the Mongols. The Tanguts officially surrendered in AD 1227, after being in existence for 190 years, from 1038 to 1227. The Mongols killed the Tangut emperor and his royal family members for their betrayal and dishonor.

On his deathbed in 1227, Genghis Khan outlined to his youngest son, Tolui, the plans that later would be used by his successors to complete the destruction of the Jin Empire.

Image:Mongol_Empire_at_1227.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Mongol Empire in 1227 at Genghis Khan's death.

In his last campaign leading the Mongol fight against Western Xia, Genghis Khan died on August 18, 1227. The reason of his death is uncertain. Many assume he fell off his horse, due to old age and physical wearing down; some contemporary observers even cited prophecies from his opponents. The Galician-Volhynian Chronicle alleges he was killed by Tanguts, but as of today the truth is unclear.

After he died, his body was returned to Mongolia and presumably to his birthplace in Hentiy aimag, where many assume he is buried somewhere close to the Onon river. The funeral escort killed anyone and anything that strayed across their path to his burial, so as not to reveal where he was finally laid to rest. The Genghis Khan Mausoleum is his memorial, but not his burial site. As of October 6, 2004, there has been an alleged discovery of "Genghis Khan's palace" that makes a discovery of his burial site more likely.



Politics and economics
Genghis Khan was a strict and capable leader. He initiated a Mongol written code of law in which violaters would be put to death for minor offenses. Because of the ethnic, religious and tribal diversity of the civilians and soldiers of Mongol Empire, including modern day Persians, Chinese and Europeans, he transferred all loyalty only to himself (Great Khan) and no others. In order to sustain and replenish his army, Genghis Khan allowed leaders to remain in power as long as they provided military service, payed tribute and furnished labor on a constant basis. Having conquered a vast land, Genghis Khan encouraged trade and exchange; Mongols valued goods and trade that came from other lands and peoples. A unified Mongol Empire made travel across Asia far easier than it had been under a fractured group of minor kings, facilitating greater exposure to the West and travel for both Asians and Western traders (e.g. Marco Polo). Under Genghis Khan's rule, all "individuals and religions were equal under Mongol law".

Because of the extent of his empire, Genghis Khan deeply affected the cultures of many Asian countries, most notably China and Russia. He destroyed the existing aristocracy of every region he controlled, creating a rough meritocracy during that time. He created a wide postal system and spread the use of a universal alphabet, though he for many years was believed to be illiterate due to the estimated recentness of the language, and his age at its implementation. Recently, however, findings by Chinese and Mongolian academics have shown that Genghis Khan was a highly literate man. A handwritten note was proven to be his, and the contents of the note indicated that he was able to read Taoist sermons http://www.guardian.co.uk/china/story/0,7369,1289618,00.html. Trade and travel between China, the Middle East and Europe flourished through the political stability that Mongol Empire provided, re-establishing the Silk Road. He outlawed torture in his provinces, exempted teachers and doctors from taxes, and established freedom of religion. Various languages spread, such as Turkish language|Turkish; also, many different kinds of religion flourished because of freedom of religion. The Mongols introduced most of Asia to the abacus and the compass, and brought to Europe the explosives that were first created in China, as well as high-powered siege engines that the Chinese developed for European compatriots.
Genghis Khan also united all the Mongol tribes, which some argue was his most significant achievement. It's claimed that Genghis Khan also stopped the division between southern and northern China that began from the time of Song Dynasty.

Military
Image:H_01.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Representation of 12th and 13th century Mongol soldiers in Naadam.
Genghis Khan's armies seemed to be incomparibly superior in the 12th century|12th and 13th century because of their superior strategy and mobility.

Genghis organized the Mongol soldiers into groups based around the number ten (i.e. 10 (arban), 100 (zuun), 1000(myangan), 10,000(tumen), and each group of soldiers had a leader whom would report higher up in his rank, up to to the rank of tumen. This command structure proved to be highly flexible and allowed the Mongol army to attack en masse, divide into somewhat smaller groups to encircle and lead enemies into an ambush, or divide into small groups of 10 to mop up a fleeing and broken army. The Mongol army also was highly flexible due to the durability of its soldiers. Each Mongol soldier would have between 2 and 4 horses, allowing them to gallop for days without stopping or tiring. The Mongol soldier also could live for days off of only his horse's blood and eating dried yak meat if times were hard.

When integrating new soldiers into the army, Genghis Khan divided the soldiers under different leaders to break up the social and tribal connections, so as to there be no division based on heritage of tribal alliances. In all campaigns, the soldiers took their families along with them for the battle. Only through merit were regular soldiers promoted to a higher rank. Each unit leader was responsible for preparedness of his soldiers at any time and would be replaced if this were found lacking.

Mongol cavalry soldiers were extremely light troops relative to contemporary standards, allowing them to practice tactics and false retreats that would be impractical for a heavier enemy (such as European knights). Mongols under Genghis Khan and his descendants were the perfection of light cavalry/horse archer warfare. One of the commonly used techniques of Mongol soldiers was the feinted retreat; during the middle of battle, a Mongol unit or whole army would retreat suddenly, which gave the opposition false confidence. After that, the opposition would find itself surrounded by Mongol soldiers that would eventually shower them with arrows. Mongols didn't favor close combat and mostly preferred to fight from a distance with their bows and long-practiced marksmanship from horses.

In terms of battle detail, a Mongol army leader during battle might be anywhere in the formation and would use flags and horns to order his strategies during the battle. To the Mongols, victory seemed to matter most, and they couldn't afford to lose battles nor men because they were poor in logistics and had few spare troops (at best half as many soldiers in almost all major battles than their enemies, and travelling far away from their homeland). The main weapon of the Mongol soldiers was the Hun bow and curved sword, lighter and more efficient for slashing and parrying than the European long sword. The rules of engagement were clear under Genghis Khan. For a specific example, if two or more soldiers break away from their group without their leader's approval, they would be put to death. The Mongol style of engaging in warfare seemed to be natural to their nomadic way of life, as they were very comfortable with travelling long distances. Genghis Khan added the one necessary ingredient, which was strict military discipline|discipline, to his armies, which were similar to many armies of the steppes during the time.

Genghis Khan's military philosophy in general was to defeat opponents with the least risk and cost to the Mongols, relying on his loyal and meritocratically chosen generals and his soldiers.

Genghis Khan employed psychological warfare successfully in his battles, especially in terms of spreading terror and fear to other towns and cities. For example if he found that there was an opposition, Genghis Khan would offer an opportunity to surrender and pay tribute. If the offer was refused, he would invade the cities and towns and let a few civilians flee to spread word of their loss to other cities. When word got out that Genghis Khan's force destroyed any resistance, it became much harder for other leaders to persuade their people to stop Genghis Khan. Genghis Khan's stance against opponents was for them to surrender and pay tribute or have them die. When besieging, Genghis Khan usually left the town unharmed and guaranteed them protection as a resource for future campaigns and logistics; if they resisted, however, he would attack without mercy. It is said, however, that he saved many lives because of intimidation of opponents.

Technology was one of the important facets of his warfare. For instance siege engine|siege machines were an important part of Genghis Khan's warfare especially in attacking fortified cities. He used China|Chinese technicians that were very advanced for the time. The siege engines were disassembled and were caried on horses to be rebuilt at the site of the battle.

Before invasion of an opposing area, Genghis Khan and his generals made extensive preparation in Kurultai to decide how the upcoming war would be conducted and as well which generals would participate; meanwhile they would thoroughly accumulate intelligence about their opponents, after which the course of hostilities would be calculated through. From this campaign planning, they decided how many units would be needed. Nevertheless, Mongol generals were armed with a high degree of independent decision-making privileges, as long as they abode by Genghis Khan's general directives and get the job done. Because of the light nature of Mongol armies, Genghis Khan built a sophisticated intelligence network through the Mongol army, trade networks and vassals. It is said that, in preparation of warfare, the generals would send out 200 horsemen to four geographic directions to scout for possible enemy activity. Soldiers riding 300 km in one or two days was common on such occasions.

Even though Mongol strategy seemed to vary slightly in response to their enemies, their technique might have been the same. Mongols would engage in columns, usually three separate columns, so that the two side columns could diverge from the center when they figured out where they should split up. Once they let their presence known and had scouted for surrounding fields and cities, they would somewhere reunite with the center column and give one final push against the main army or city. The idea and the advantage of flanking forces was to spread terror, gather intelligence on their opponents and eliminate smaller opponent armies. In other words, it was a sort of divide and conquer approach. These flanking columns had messengers that quickly relayed intelligence to the mother column. Mongol armies were willing to engage field armies before seeking battle with the main opposition. Mongols were good at siege warfare and diverting rivers and food for cities; they also sent off refugees to other, unconquered cities, in order to strain enemy resources. They were continuously expanding their fighting power with conquered land, resources, knowledge, technology and manpower.

Once the main battle and siege was over, the Mongol army would follow the enemy leader until he was killed in order to make him unable to be a rallying point for his army after war. Most times the enemy leaders would try to escape realizing that they would likely lose the war, but the Mongol forces followed until they made sure they died.



Perceptions of Genghis Khan
Genghis is an extremely polarizing figure to many who look at him from both the Eastern and Western points of view. In the West and the Middle East, the perception of Genghis Khan is negative due to the destruction brought about by his armies. While those in the East acknowledge this, they nonetheless admire his superior military command and historical legacy. On the other hand, in the Middle East, people have mixed views about Genghis Khan and his descendants because their armies conquered and destroyed Baghdad; on the other hand, some Mongol armies eventually converted to Islam and adopted its way of life, because the religious tolerance faciliated cultural exchange and assimilation. Many scholars and scientists, depending heavily on their nationality, consider Mongols as some of the greatest builders and destroyers.

Views toward Genghis Khan in the modern day People's Republic of China are ambivalent, with current Chinese historians seeing him as neither strongly positive or negative. While acknowledging the vast amount of damage the Genghis Khan caused, his reputation is somewhat redeemed by the fact that he would set into motion events which would later end the north-south division of China that had begun during the Song Dynasty. In addition, to vilify Genghis would greatly offend Chinese citizens of Mongol descent, who like their relations in Mongolia regard Genghis Khan as an ethnic folk hero, and so the tendency in modern Chinese histories has been to avoid doing so.

Legacy

Image:Mongol dominions1.jpg|thumb|right|right|250px|Mongol Empire in 1300-1405.

Genghis Khan's successors expanded the empire even further, into south China, Russia, Iraq, Korea, and Tibet. The Mongols eventually conquered Poland and Hungary under Batu Khan's rule, and (with varying degrees of success) Syria, Japan, and Vietnam. The European expansion came to halt when high-ranking members of Mongols returned to modern day Mongolia to participate in selection of the next great Khan. The Mongols might have been ready to conquer all of Europe, having conquered Poland and Hungary in a month. The Mongol Empire reached its height under Genghis Khan's grandson Kublai Khan, but broke apart into separate and less powerful khanates shortly afterward.

At its height, the Mongol Empire was the largest empire in human history (sometimes largest "contiguous" empire), stretching from Southeast Asia to Europe, covering 35 million square kilometers (13.8 million square miles). According to some sources, the empire encompassed almost 50% of the world population and included the most advanced and populous nations of that time; China and many of the main contemporary states of the Islamic world in Iraq, Persia, and Asia Minor.

It can't be denied that Genghis Khan's waging of war was characterized by wholesale destruction on unprecedented scale and radically changed the demographic situation in Asia. According to the works of Iranian historian Rashid-ad-Din Fadl Allah, Mongols killed over 70,000 people in Merv and more than a million in Nishapur. China suffered a drastic decline in population. Before the Mongol invasion, China had about 100 million inhabitants; after the complete conquest in 1279, the census in 1300 showed it to have roughly 60 million people. This does not, of course, mean that Genghis Khan's men were directly responsible for the deaths of 40 million people but it does give a sense of the ferocity of the onslaught.

In recent times, Genghis Khan has become a symbol for Mongolia's attempts to regain its identity after many long years of Communism under Russia. Genghis Khan's face appears on Mongolian bank notes and vodka labels. Later Mongol Khans encouraged the people to even worship Genghis Khan as a religious entity throughout the empire. Without Genghis Khan, there would seem to be no Mongolia, as the Mongol Empire consistenly shrank from what was built by Genghis Khan when he was titled in 1206.

A recent genetic survey (Zerjal et al. 2003, http://www.ceacb.ucl.ac.uk/cultureclub/files/CC2005-02-03-Zerjal%20et%20al._2003_Genetic%20Legacy%20of%20the%20Mongols.pdf pdf of paper) found a cluster of Y chromosome variants in 1/12 of the men in the area of the Mongol Empire, and 1/200 of men worldwide. The age of the cluster, estimated from the mutation rate, places its origin around the time of Genghis Khan, and it is especially common among the Hazara people, who claim to be descended from Genghis Khan, which has traditionally been rejected by most scientists because it was assumed to be local folklore.

He is remembered for his wholesale destruction, his strong willpower, persuasiveness, but in Eastern Asia also for his achievements as a unifying, even cosmopolitan ruler, who nonetheless valued his Mongol identity over all.



  • History of Mongolia

  • Mongka Khan

  • Hulegu

  • Baber

  • House of Taimur

  • Kublai Khan




  • http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0609610627/002-0991999-9524804?v=glance Amazon.com: Books: Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World

  • http://www.fsmitha.com/h3/h11mon.htm Genghis Khan and the Mongols

  • http://www.ub-mongolia.mn/genghis-khan.html Genghis Khan Movie

  • http://www.coldsiberia.org/ Welcome to The Realm of the Mongols

  • http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/mntoc.html Parts of this biography were taken from the Area Handbook series at the Library of Congress

  • http://koreanhistoryproject.org/Ket/Idx/KETIndex0504.htm Coverage of Temujin's Earlier Years

  • http://users.erols.com/mwhite28/warstat0.htm#Mongol Estimates of Mongol warfare casualties

  • http://www.isidore-of-seville.com/genghis/ Genghis Khan on the Web (directory of some 250 resources)

  • http://www.accd.edu/sac/history/keller/Mongols/empsub2.html Mongol Arms

  • http://www.leader-values.com/Content/detail.asp?ContentDetailID=799 LeaderValues




wikiquote
  • Zerjal, Tatiana, Yali Xue, Giorgio Bertorelle, R. Spencer Wells, Weidong Bao, Suling Zhu, Raheel Qamar, Qasim Ayub, Aisha Mohyuddin, Songbin Fu, Pu Li, Nadira Yuldasheva, Ruslan Ruzibakiev, Jiujin Xu, Qunfang Shu, Ruofu Du, Huanming Yang, Matthew E. Hurles, Elizabeth Robinson, Tudevdagva Gerelsaikhan, Bumbein Dashnyam, S. Qasim Mehdi, and Chris Tyler-Smith. 2003. The Genetic Legacy of the Mongols. The American Journal of Human Genetics 72:718-721

  • Web reference | title=Genghis Khan and the Mongols | work=Genghis Khan and the Mongols | URL=http://www.fsmitha.com/h3/h11mon.htm | date=October 12 | year=2004

  • Web reference | title=Mongol Arms | work=Mongol Arms | URL=http://www.accd.edu/sac/history/keller/Mongols/empsub2.html| date=June 24 | year=2003




  • Cable, Mildred and French, Francesca. 1943. The Gobi Desert. London. Landsborough Publications.

  • Man, John. 1997. Gobi : Tracking the Desert. Weidenfield & Nicolson. Paperback by Phoenix, Orion Books. London. 1998.

  • Stewart, Stanley. 2001. In the Empire of Genghis Khan: A Journey among Nomads. HarperCollinsPublishers, London. ISBN 0-00-653027-3.



Preceded by:
none
Great Khan of Mongol Empire
1206–1227
Succeeded by:
Ogedei Khan


Category:Genghis Khan|*Genghis Khan
Category:Mongol Khans
Category:1227 deaths
Category:Mongol peoples

ar:جنكيز خان
bs:D%C5%BEingis_Kan
ca:Genguis Khan
cs:Čingischán
da:Djengis Khan
de:Dschingis Khan
es:Gengis Kan
eo:Ĝingis-Ĥano
fa:چنگیزخان
fr:Gengis Khan
fy:Genghis Khan
ko:칭기즈 칸
hr:Džingis kan
id:Genghis Khan
it:Genghis Khan
he:ג'ינג'יס חאן
lb:Dschingis Khan
hu:Dzsingisz k?n
jbo:tcingis xan
ms:Genghis Khan
nl:Genghis Khan
ja:チンギス・ハーン
pl:Czyngis-chan
pt:Genghis Khan
simple:Genghis Khan
fi:Tšingis-kaani
sv:Djingis Khan
tt:?ı?ğız xan
vi:Th?nh C?t Tư H?n
zh:成吉思汗

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Genghis Khan".


Last Modified:   2005-04-13


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