Genghis Khan. The name conjures up blood-lust and plunder, barbarism and cruelty. Deservedly so, in some respects. But historically, the Mongol horde brought a lot less proverbial rape and pillage and a lot more cultural synthesis, engineering skills, and adaptive political function than the popular imagination credits them with. Absent the Mongols, we quite possibly would never have witnessed the Russian, Indian, or Chinese empires, or the European Renaissance – what we think of, in other words, as the birth of the modern world.
I
picked up a couple of books, lately.
Following on my recent interest in the Ottomans (provoked, I imagine, by
Orhan Pamuk’s Nights of Plague), and
because nobody seems to know where the Ottomans came from, or how they got
where they got, beforehand, I went back a little in time, to the nomadic horse
tribes of the Great Steppe. This biome
reaches from
The two books I’ve been reading, not back-to-back, but in tandem, are Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World by Jack Weatherford, and Empires of the Steppes by Kenneth Harl. Weatherford’s book is the more readable, in part because it’s more manageable, even though it includes most of the 13th century. Harl’s book is more unwieldy, covering more ground, in time from Cyrus the Great to Tamerlane, but also literally, across
I was
fascinated by the Mongols after I read Harold Lamb’s bio of Genghis. (I was ten or eleven, I’m guessing.) They rode with their knees, their arms and
hands free, and they shot from horseback with compound bows, reinforced with
horn, more powerful than the English longbow that defeated the French cavalry
at
I’d be the first to admit that The Conqueror (1956) was a disappointment. Everybody makes fun of the casting, of course.
This
recent development seems, first of all, like a kind of vindication. Maybe we all go through a dinosaur phase,
when we’re a certain age, or science fiction (which a lot of us never outgrow),
but I’m pleased that the Mongols have
come back around into fashion. There are
two parallel strands of historiography going on, here. One is the movement away from Caesar and
Napoleon, and an emphasis on the farriers and quartermasters that kept armies
on the move. There’s a famous French
guy, Braudel, the founder of the Annales school, who believes the groundlings
give us a better picture of the past than the emperors. This idea led me to a book called The Lisle Letters, about a merchant
family’s rise to power under the Tudors, and a revealing social portrait of the
era. The second shift in thinking about
history is a de-emphasis of the European.
This appears to have taken hold only since around the year 2000. We see, for example, new histories of the
Who wouldn’t want to have these people in their genealogy? It’s not just opening a vein in the horse’s neck, or the fact that they conquered the known world, it’s that they’re us. This myth, this memory, is ours.