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Mongol conquest of China

The Mongol conquest of China was a series of major military efforts by the Mongol Empire to conquer various empires ruling over China. It spanned six decades in the 13th century and involved the defeat of the Jin dynasty, Western Liao, Western Xia, Tibet, the Dali Kingdom, the Southern Song, and the Eastern Xia. The Mongol Empire under Genghis Khan started the conquest with small-scale raids into Western Xia in 1205 and 1207.[1]

Mongol conquest of China
Part of the Mongol invasions and conquests

Mongol conquest of regimes located in modern-day China.
Date1205–1279
Location
Modern-day China, Mongolia
Result

Decisive Mongol Empire/Yuan dynasty victory

Territorial
changes
All of China and neighbouring states (Western Xia, Liao, Jin, Tibet, Dali, etc) annexed by the Yuan dynasty
Belligerents

Mongol Empire/Yuan dynasty

Southern Song dynasty (1211–1234)
Dali Kingdom (1253-1279)
Eastern Liao (1213–1269)

Goryeo (1218-1219)

Western Xia (1205–1210, 1225–1227)
Jin dynasty (1211–1234)
Dali Kingdom (1252–1253)
Southern Song dynasty (1235–1279)
Eastern Xia (1217, 1222–1233)

Later Liao (1216-1219)
Commanders and leaders
Genghis Khan (possibly  )
Jebe
Muqali
Boal (Bor)
Doqolqu
Tolui
Ögedei
Subutai
Qarachar
Chagaan
Kublai Khan
Khochu
Töregene
Güyük Khan
Möngke Khan (possibly  )
Bayan
Aju
Arikhgiya
General Shi Tianze
General Zhang Hongfan
General Zhang Rou
General Yan Shi
General Liu Heima (Liu Ni)
General Xiao Zhala
General Uryankhadai
General Guo Kan
King Duan Xingzhi of Dali
Emperor Huanzong
Emperor Li Anquan
Kao Liang-Hui
Wei-ming Ling-kung
Wanyan Yongji  
Emperor Xuanzong of Jin  
Li Ying
Moran Jinzhong
Emperor Aizong of Jin  
Wanyan Heda
Puxian Wannu
Pucha Guannu
Ma Yong
Emperor Mo of Jin  
Emperor Xianzong
Emperor Mozhu  
(1226–1227)
Asha
King Duan Xingzhi of Dali (defected to Mongols)
Emperor Lizong
Emperor Duzong
Emperor Gong of Song
Emperor Duanzong
Emperor Bing of Song 
Jia Sidao
Lü Wenhuan
Li Tingzhi
Zhang Shijie
Wen Tianxiang
Battle between the Mongol and Jin Jurchen armies in north China in 1211 depicted in the Jami' al-tawarikh (Compendium of Chronicles) by Rashid-al-Din Hamadani.

By 1279, the Mongol ruler Kublai Khan had established the Yuan dynasty in China and crushed the last Song resistance, which marked the onset of all of China under Yuan rule. This was the first time in history that the whole of China was unified by non-Han people, and it marked the first time in history when Tibet was unified with the rest of China.[2]

Conquest of Western Xia

In the early 1200s, Temujin, soon to be Genghis Khan, began consolidating his power in Mongolia. Following the death of the Kerait leader Ong Khan to Temujin's emerging Mongol Empire in 1203, Kerait leader Nilqa Senggum led a small band of followers into Western Xia, also known as Xi-Xia.[3] However, after his adherents took to plundering the locals, Nilqa Senggum was expelled from Western Xia territory.[3]

Using his rival Nilga Senggum's temporary refuge in Western Xia as a pretext, Temujin launched a raid against the state in 1205 in the Edsin region.[3][4][5] The Mongols plundered border settlements and one local Western Xia noble accepted Mongol supremacy.[6] The next year, 1206, Temujin was formally proclaimed Genghis Khan, ruler of all the Mongols, marking the official start of the Mongol Empire. In 1207, Genghis led another raid into Western Xia, invading the Ordo region and sacking Wuhai, the main garrison along the Yellow River, before withdrawing in 1208.[5][7]

In 1209, the Genghis undertook a larger campaign to secure the submission of Western Xia. After defeating a force led by Kao Liang-Hui outside Wuhai, Genghis captured the city and pushed up along the Yellow River, defeated several cities, and besieged the capital, Yinchuan, which held a well-fortified garrison of 150,000.[8] The Mongols, at this point inexperienced at siege warfare, attempted to flood out the city by diverting the Yellow River, but the dike they built to accomplish this broke and flooded the Mongol camp.[3] Nevertheless, Emperor Li Anquan, still threatened by the Mongols and receiving no relief from the Jin dynasty, surrendered to the Mongol and demonstrated his loyalty by giving a daughter, Chaka, in marriage to Genghis and paying a tribute of camels, falcons, and textiles.[9]

After their defeat in 1210, Western Xia served as faithful vassals to the Mongol Empire for almost a decade, aiding the Mongols in their war against the Jin dynasty. In 1219, Genghis Khan launched his campaign against the Khwarazmian dynasty in Central Asia, and requested military aid from Western Xia. However, the emperor and his military commander Asha refused to take part in the campaign, stating that if Genghis had too few troops to attack Khwarazm, then he had no claim to supreme power.[10][11] Infuriated, Genghis swore vengeance and left to invade Khwarazm, while Western Xia attempted alliances with the Jin and Song dynasties against the Mongols.[12]

After defeating Khwarazm in 1221, Genghis prepared his armies to punish Western Xia for their betrayal, and in 1225 he attacked with a force of approximately 180,000.[13] After taking Khara-Khoto, the Mongols began a steady advance southward. Asha, commander of the Western Xia troops, could not afford to meet the Mongols as it would involve an exhausting westward march from the capital Yinchuan through 500 kilometers of desert, and so the Mongols steadily advanced from city to city.[14] Enraged by Western Xia's fierce resistance, Genghis engaged the countryside in annihilative warfare and ordered his generals to systematically destroy cities and garrisons as they went.[10][12][15] Genghis divided his army and sent general Subutai to take care of the westernmost cities, while the main force under Genghis moved east into the heart of the Western Xia Empire and took Ganzhou, which was spared destruction upon its capture due to it being the hometown of Genghis's commander Chagaan.[16]

In August 1226, Mongol troops approached Wuwei, the second-largest city of the Western Xia empire, which surrendered without resistance in order to escape destruction.[17] In Autumn 1226, Genghis took Liangchow, crossed the Helan Shan desert, and in November lay siege to Lingwu, a mere 30 kilometers from Yinchuan.[18][19] Here, in the Battle of Yellow River, the Mongols destroyed a force of 300,000 Western Xia that launched a counter-attack against them.[18][20]

Genghis reached Yinchuan in 1227, laid siege to the city, and launched several offensives into Jin to prevent them from sending reinforcements to Western Xia, with one force reaching as a far as Kaifeng, the Jin capital.[21] Yinchuan lay besieged for about six months, after which Genghis opened up peace negotiations while secretly planning to kill the emperor.[22] During the peace negotiations, Genghis continued his military operations around the Liupan mountains near Guyuan, rejected an offer of peace from the Jin, and prepared to invade them near their border with the Song.[23][24] However, in August 1227, Genghis died of a historically uncertain cause, and, in order not to jeopardize the ongoing campaign, his death was kept a secret.[25][26] In September 1227, Emperor Mozhu surrendered to the Mongols and was promptly executed.[24][27] The Mongols then mercilessly pillaged Yinchuan, slaughtered the city's population, plundered the imperial tombs west of the city, and completed the effective annihilation of the Western Xia state.[12][24][28][29]

Conquest of Jin dynasty

 
The siege of Zhongdu (modern Beijing) in 1213–14.
 
Mongol Empire's Ayimaq in North China

One of the major goals of Genghis Khan was the conquest of the Jin dynasty, allowing the Mongols to avenge the earlier death of a Mongol Khan, gain the riches of northern China and to establish the Mongols as a major power in the East-Asian world.

Genghis Khan declared war in 1211, and while Mongols were victorious in the field, they were frustrated in their efforts to take major cities. In his typically logical and determined fashion, Genghis and his highly developed staff studied the problems of the assault of fortifications. With the help of Chinese engineers, they gradually developed the techniques to take down fortifications. This eventually would make troops under the Mongols some of the most accomplished and most successful besiegers in the history of warfare.

As a result of a number of overwhelming victories in the field and a few successes in the capture of fortifications deep within China, Genghis had conquered and consolidated Jin territory as far south as the Great Wall by 1213. Cherik soldiers were non-nomad soldiers in the Mongol military. Jin defectors and Han Chinese conscripts were recruited into new armies formed by the Mongols as they destroyed the Jin dynasty. A critical role in the defeat of the Jin was carried out by the Han Chinese cherik forces. Han Chinese defectors led by General Liu Bolin defending Tiancheng from the Jin in 1214 while Genghis Khan was busy going back north. In 1215 Xijing fell to Liu Bolin's army. The original Han cherik forces were created in 1216 and Liu Bolin appointed as their leading officer. As Han troops kept defecting from the Jin to the Mongols the size of Han cherik forces swelled and they had to be partitioned between different units. Han soldiers made up the majority of the Khitan Yelu Tuhua's army, while Juyin soldiers from Zhongdu made up Chalaer's army and Khitan made up Uyar's army. Chalaer, Yelu Tuhua and Uyar led three cherik armies in northern China under the Mongol commander Muqali in addition to his tamma armies in 1217–1218.[30]

Many Han Chinese and Khitan defected to the Mongols to fight against the Jin. Two Han Chinese leaders, Shi Tianze, Liu Heima [zh] (劉黑馬, Liu Ni),[31][32][33][34] and the Khitan Xiao Zhala [zh] (蕭札剌) defected and commanded the 3 Tumens in the Mongol army.[35][36][37][38] Liu Heima and Shi Tianze served Ogödei Khan.[39] Liu Heima and Shi Tianxiang led armies against Western Xia for the Mongols.[40] There were 4 Han Tumens and 3 Khitan Tumens, with each Tumen consisting of 10,000 troops. The three Khitan Generals Shimobeidier (石抹孛迭兒), Tabuyir (塔不已兒) and Xiao Zhongxi (蕭重喜) commanded the three Khitan Tumens and the four Han Generals Zhang Rou, Yan Shi, Shi Tianze, and Liu Heima commanded the four Han tumens under Ogödei Khan.[41][42][43][44] Shi Tianze (Shih T'ien-tse), Zhang Rou [zh] (Chang Jou, 張柔), and Yan Shi [zh] (Yen Shih, 嚴實) and other high ranking Chinese who served in the Jin dynasty and defected to the Mongols helped build the structure for the administration of the new state.[45] The Mongols received defections from Han Chinese and Khitans while the Jin were abandoned by their own Jurchen officers.[46] Interethnic marriage between Han and Jurchen became common at this time. The Han Chinese General Shi Tianze's father Shi Bingzhi (史秉直, Shih Ping-chih) were married to a Jurchen woman[47] Shi Tianze was married to two Jurchen women (Mo-nien and Na-ho), a Han Chinese woman (Shi), and a Korean woman (Li), and his son Shi Gang was born to one of his Jurchen wives and the family served the Yuan prominently.[48][47] and Shi Gang married a Kerait woman, the Kerait were Mongolified Turkic people and part of the "Mongol nation".[49][50]

Genghis advanced with three armies into the heart of Jin territory, between the Great Wall and the Yellow River. With the help of Chenyu Liu, one of the top officers who betrayed Jin, as well as the Southern Song, who wanted revenge on Jin, Genghis defeated the Jin forces, devastated northern China, captured numerous cities, and in 1215 besieged, captured and sacked the Jin capital of Yanjing (modern-day Beijing).

However, the Jin emperor, Xuan Zong, did not surrender, but moved his capital to Kaifeng. The city fell in the siege of Kaifeng in 1232. Emperor Aizong fled to the town of Caizhou. After this, the Han Chinese general Shi Tianze led troops to pursue Emperor Aizong as he retreated, and destroyed an 80,000-strong Jin army led by Wanyan Chengyi (完顏承裔) at Pucheng (蒲城). The Jin dynasty collapsed after the siege of Caizhou in 1234. Eastern Xia, an short-lived kingdom which declared independence from Jin in 1215, was conquered in 1233.

The first Han armies in the Mongol army were those led by defecting individual officers. There were 1,000 Han (Chinese) troops each in 26 units which made up three tumeds arranged by Ogedei Khan on a decimal system. The Han officer Shi Tianze, Han officer Liu Ni and the Khitan officer Xiao Chala, all three of whom defected to the Mongols from the Jin led these three tumeds. Chang Jung, Yen Shi and Chung Jou led three additional tumeds which were created before 1234. The Han defectors were called the "Black Army" (Hei Jun) by the Mongols before 1235. A new infantry based "New Army" (Xin Jun) was created after the Mongols received 95,000 additional Han soldiers through conscription once the 1236 and 1241 censuses were taken after the Jin was crushed. Han cherik forces were used to fight against Li Tan's revolt in 1262. The New Army and Black Army had hereditary officer posts like the Mongol army itself.[51]

The Mongols valued physicians, craftsmen and religious clerics and ordered them to be spared from death and brought to them when cities were taken in northern China.[52]

Conquest of Dali Kingdom

Möngke Khan dispatched Kublai to the Dali Kingdom in 1253 to outflank the Song. The Gao family dominated the court, resisted and murdered Mongol envoys. The Mongols divided their forces into three. One wing rode eastward into the Sichuan basin. The second column under Uryankhadai took a difficult way into the mountains of western Sichuan.[53] Kublai himself headed south over the grasslands, meeting up with the first column. While Uryankhadai galloping in along the lakeside from the north, Kublai took the capital city of Dali and spared the residents despite the slaying of his ambassadors. The Dali King Duan Xingzhi [zh] (段興智) himself defected to the Mongols, who used his troops to conquer the rest of Yunnan. The Mongols appointed King Duan Xingzhi as Maharajah and stationed a pacification commissioner there.[54] After Kublai's departure, unrest broke out among the Black Jang (one of the main ethnic groups of the Dali kingdom). By 1256, Uryankhadai, the son of Subutai had completely pacified Yunnan. The Duan family were originally Han Chinese from Wuwei in Gansu.

The Duan family still ruled Dali relatively independently during the Yuan dynasty.[55] The Ming abolished them.[56]

The Tusi chieftains and local tribe leaders and kingdoms in Yunnan, Guizhou and Sichuan submitted to Yuan rule and were allowed to keep their titles. The Han Chinese Yang family ruling the Chiefdom of Bozhou which was recognized by the Song dynasty and Tang dynasty also received recognition by the Mongols in the Yuan dynasty and later by the Ming dynasty. The Luo clan in Shuixi led by Ahua were recognized by the Yuan emperors, as they were by the Song emperors when led by Pugui and Tang emperors when led by Apei. They descended from the Shu Han era king Huoji who helped Zhuge Liang against Meng Huo. They were also recognized by the Ming dynasty.[57][58]

Southwestern China

Many Tusi chiefdoms and kingdoms in southwestern China which existed before the Mongol invasions were allowed to retain their integrity as vassals of the Yuan dynasty after surrendering, including the Kingdom of Dali, the Han Chinese Yang family ruling the Chiefdom of Bozhou with its seat at the castle Hailongtun, Chiefdom of Lijiang, Chiefdom of Shuidong, Chiefdom of Sizhou, Chiefdom of Yao'an, Chiefdom of Yongning and Mu'ege. As were the Goryeo dynasty and the Kingdom of Qocho.

The Han Chinese nobles Duke Yansheng and Celestial Masters continued possessing their titles in the Yuan dynasty since the previous dynasties.

Conquest of Southern Song

At second, the Mongols allied with Southern Song as both had a common enemy in the form of Jin. However, this alliance broke down with the destruction of Jur'chen Jin in 1234. After Song forces captured the former Northern Song capitals of Luoyang, Chang'an and Kaifeng from the Mongols and the Song had killed a Mongol ambassador, the Mongols declared war on the Song. Very quickly the Mongol armies forced the Song back to the Yangtze, although the two sides would be engaged in a four-decade war until the fall of the Song in 1276. Islamic engineers joined later and especially contributed counterweight trebuchets, "Muslim phao", which had a maximum range of 300 meters compared to 150 meters of the ancient Chinese predecessor. It played a significant role in taking the Chinese strongholds and was as well used against infantry units on the battlefield.

The Mongol force which invaded south China was far greater than the force they sent to invade the Middle East in 1256.[59]

The Mongols made heavy use of indigenous ethnic minority soldiers in southern China rather than Mongols. The Kingdom of Dali's indigenous Cuan-Bo army led by the Duan royal family were the majority of the forces in the Mongol Yuan army sent to attack Song China during battles along the Yangtze river. During a Mongol attack against the Song China, there were only 3,000 Mongol cavalry at one point under the Mongol commander Uriyangkhadai, the majority of his army were native Cuan-Bo with Duan officers.[60]

While the Mongol forces had success against the non-Han Chinese ruled states of the Jin and Xia, conquering the Song took much more time. The Song forces were equipped with the best technology available at the time, such as an ample supply of gunpowder weapons like fire lances, rockets and flamethrowers. The fierce resistance of the Song forces resulted in the Mongols having to fight the most difficult war in all of their conquests,[61] and the Mongols required every advantage they could gain and "every military artifice known at that time" in order to win. They looked to peoples they already conquered to acquire various military advantages.[62] However, intrigues at the Song court would favor the Mongols.

The Yuan dynasty created a "Han Army" (漢軍) out of defected Jin troops and army of defected Song troops called the "Newly Submitted Army" (新附軍).[63] Southern Song Chinese troops who defected and surrendered to the Mongols were granted Korean women as wives by the Mongols, whom the Mongols earlier took during their invasion of Korea as war booty.[64] The many Song Chinese troops who defected to the Mongols were given oxen, clothes and land by Kublai Khan.[65] As prize for battlefield victories, lands sectioned off as appanages were handed by the Yuan dynasty to Chinese military officers who defected to the Mongol side. The Yuan gave Song Chinese soldiers who defected to the Mongols juntun, a type of military farmland.[66] Chagaan (Tsagaan) and Han tumen General Zhang Rou jointly launched an attack on the Song dynasty ordered by Töregene Khatun.

After several indecisive wars, the Mongols unsuccessfully attacked the Song garrison at Diaoyu Fortress Hechuan when their Great Khan, Möngke, died of cholera or dysentery. However, the general responsible for this defence was not rewarded but instead was punished by the Song court.[citation needed] Discouraged, he defected to the Mongols and suggested to Möngke's successor, Kublai, that the key to the conquest of Song was the capture of Xiangyang, a vital Song stronghold.[citation needed]

 
The Yuan dynasty under Kublai Khan after the conquest of Southern Song dynasty.

The Mongols quickly enclosed Xiangyang and defeated any attempt to reinforce it by the Song.

After a siege that lasted several years, and with the help of Muslim artillery created by Iraqi engineers, the Mongols finally forced the city of Xiangyang to surrender. The dying Song dynasty sent its armies against the Mongols at Yehue under the incompetent chancellor Jia Sidao. Predictably, the battle was a disaster. Running out of troops and supplies, the Song court surrendered to the Mongols in 1276.

Many Han Chinese were enslaved in the process of the Mongols invasion of China proper.[67] According to Japanese historian Sugiyama Masaaki (杉山正明) and Funada Yoshiyuki (舩田善之), there were also a certain number of Mongolian slaves owned by Han Chinese during the Yuan dynasty. However, there is no evidence that Han Chinese, who were considered people of the bottom of Yuan society according to some researchers, suffered particularly cruel abuse.[68][69]

With the desire to rule all of China, Kublai established the Yuan dynasty and became Emperor of China. However, despite the surrender of the Song court, resistance of Song remnants remained. Chinese resistance lasted for a few more years as Song loyalists organized themselves around a powerless boy emperor, brother to the last formal Song emperor. In an attempt to restore the Song dynasty, several Song officials set up a government in Guangdong, aboard ships of the vast Song navy, which still maintained over a thousand ships (which then carried the Song army, which had been forced by the Mongol army off of the land onto these Song warships). Realizing this, in 1279 Kublai sent his fleet to engage the Song fleet at the battle of Yamen in the waters off of modern Hong Kong, winning a decisive victory in which the last Song Emperor Bing of Song and his loyal officials committed suicide. This was the final major military confrontation of the Mongol conquest of the Song in southern China.

However, members of the Song Imperial Family continued to live in the Yuan dynasty like Emperor Gong of Song, Zhao Mengfu, and Zhao Yong. Zhao Mengfu painted at the Yuan court and was personally interviewed by Kublai Khan. This practice was referred to as 二王三恪.

Historian Patricia Buckley Ebrey noted that the Mongol Yuan dynasty treated the Jurchen Jin dynasty the Mongols treated the Jurchen Wanyan royal family harshly, totally butchering them by the hundreds as well as the Tangut emperor of Western Xia when they defeated him earlier. However Patricia also noted the Mongols were totally lenient on the Han Chinese Zhao royal family of the Southern Song explicitly unlike the Jurchens in the Jingkang incident, sparing both the Southern Song royals in the capital Hangzhou like the Emperor Gong of Song and his mother as well as sparing the civilians inside it and not sacking the city, allowing them to go about their normal business, rehiring Southern Song officials. The Mongols did not take the southern Song palace women for themselves but instead had Han Chinese artisans in Shangdu marry the palace women.[70] The Mongol emperor Kublai Khan even granted a Mongol princess from his own Borjigin family as a wife to the surrendered Han Chinese Southern Song Emperor Gong of Song and they fathered a son together named Zhao Wanpu.[71][72]

Chinese resistance in Vietnam against the Mongols

The ancestors of the Trần clan originated from the province of Fujian and later migrated to Đại Việt under Trần Kinh (陳京 Chén Jīng), the ancestor of the Trần clan. Their descendants, the later rulers of Đại Việt who were of mixed-blooded descent later established the Trần dynasty, which ruled Vietnam (Đại Việt). Despite many intermarriages between the Trần and several members of the Lý dynasty alongside members of their imperial court as in the case of Trần Lý[73][74] and Trần Thừa,[75] some of the mixed-blooded descendants of the Trần dynasty and certain members of the clan were still capable of speaking Chinese such as when a Yuan dynasty envoy had a meeting with the Chinese-speaking Trần prince Trần Quốc Tuấn in 1282.[76][77][78][79][80][81][82]

Professor Liam Kelley noted that people from Song dynasty China like Zhao Zhong and Xu Zongdao fled to Tran dynasty ruled Vietnam after the Mongol invasion of the Song and they helped the Tran fight against the Mongol invasion. The ancestors of the Tran clan originated from the modern day province of Fujian as did the Daoist cleric Xu Zongdao who recorded the Mongol invasion and referred to them as "Northern bandits". He quoted the Đại Việt Sử Ký Toàn Thư which said "When the Song [Dynasty] was lost, its people came to us. Nhật Duật took them in. There was Zhao Zhong who served as his personal guard. Therefore, among the accomplishments in defeating the Yuan [i.e., Mongols], Nhật Duật had the most."[83][84] The Tran defeated the Mongol invasions of Vietnam.

Southern Song Chinese military officers and civilian officials left to overseas countries, went to Vietnam and intermarried with the Vietnamese ruling elite and went to Champa to serve the government there as recorded by Zheng Sixiao.[85] Southern Song soldiers were part of the Vietnamese army prepared by emperor Trần Thánh Tông against the second Mongol invasion.[86]

Tactics and policies

During their campaigns, the Mongol Empire recruited many nationalities in their warfare, such as those of Central and East Asia.[87][88][89][90][91] The Mongols employed Chinese troops,[92] especially those who worked catapults and gunpowder to assist them in other conquests. In addition to Chinese troops, many scholars and doctors from China accompanied Mongol commanders to the west. The Mongols valued people with specialized skills.

The ability to make cast iron which was tough enough for shooting objects with gunpowder was available to the Chinese in the Song dynasty and it was adopted by the Liao, Jin, and Yuan dynasties.[93]

During the invasion of Transoxiana in 1219, along with the main Mongol force, Genghis Khan used a Chinese specialist catapult unit in battle. They were used in Transoxania again in 1220. The Chinese may have used the catapults to hurl gunpowder bombs, since they already had them by this time[94] (although there were other siege engineers and technologies used in the campaigns, too.[95]) While Genghis Khan was conquering Transoxania and Central Asia, several Chinese who were familiar with gunpowder were serving with Genghis's army.[96] "Whole regiments" entirely made out of Chinese were used by the Mongols to command bomb hurling trebuchets during the invasion of Iran.[97] Historians have suggested that the Mongol invasion had brought Chinese gunpowder weapons to Central Asia. One of these was the huochong, a Chinese mortar.[98] Books written around the area afterward depicted the use of gunpowder weapons which resembled that of China.[99]

One thousand northern Chinese engineer squads accompanied the Mongol Hulagu Khan during his conquest of the Middle East.[100][101] 1,000 Chinese participated in the Siege of Baghdad (1258).[102][103] The Chinese General Guo Kan was one of the commanders during the siege and appointed Governor of Baghdad after the city was taken.[104][105][106][107][108]

While serving in the Mongol armies, Chinese generals were able to observe the invasion of West Asia.[109]

According to Ata-Malik Juvayni during the assault on the Alamut Assassins fort, "Khitayan" built siege weapons resembling crossbows were used.[110][111][112] "Khitayan" meant Chinese and it was a type of arcuballista, deployed in 1256 under Hulagu's command.[113] Stones were knocked off the castle and the bolts "burnt" a great number of the Assassins. They could fire a distance around 2,500 paces.[114] The device was described as an ox's bow.[115] Pitch which was lit on fire was applied to the bolts of the weapon before firing.[116] Another historian thinks that instead gunpowder might have been strapped onto the bolts which caused the burns during the battle recorded by Juvayini.[117]

Alans were recruited into the Mongol forces with one unit called "Right Alan Guard" which was combined with "recently surrendered" soldiers, Mongols, and Chinese soldiers stationed in the area of the former Kingdom of Qocho and in Besh Balikh the Mongols established a Chinese military colony led by Chinese general Qi Kongzhi (Ch'i Kung-chih).[118]

Against the Alans and the Cumans (Kipchaks), the Mongols used divide and conquer tactics: first the Mongols told the Cumans to stop allying with the Alans and then, after the Cumans followed their suggestion, the Mongols defeated the Alans[119] and then attacked the Cumans.[120] Alan and Kipchak guards were used by Kublai Khan.[121] In 1368 at the end of the Yuan dynasty in China Toghan Temür was accompanied by his faithful Alan guards.[122] "Mangu enlisted in his bodyguard half the troops of the Alan prince, Arslan, whose younger son Nicholas took a part in the expedition of the Mongols against Karajang (Yunnan). This Alan imperial guard was still in existence in 1272, 1286 and 1309, and it was divided into two corps with headquarters in the Ling pei province (Karakorúm)."[123] Alans were converted to Roman Catholic Christianity as were Armenians in China by John of Montecorvino.

Siege strategy

James Waterson cautioned against attributing the population drop in northern China to Mongol slaughter since much of the population may have moved to southern China under the Southern Song or died of disease and famine as agricultural and urban city infrastructure were destroyed.[124] The Mongols spared cities from massacre and sacking if they surrendered, like Kaifeng which was surrendered to Subetai by Xu Li,[125] Yangzhou, which was surrendered to Bayan by Li Tingzhi's second in command after Li Tingzhi was executed by the Southern Song,[126] and Hangzhou, which was spared from sacking when it surrendered to Kublai Khan.[127] Han Chinese and Khitan soldiers defected en masse to Genghis Khan against the Jurchen Jin dynasty.[128] Towns which surrendered were spared from sacking and massacre by Kublai Khan.[129] The Khitan reluctantly left their homeland in Manchuria as the Jin moved their primary capital from Beijing south to Kaifeng and defected to the Mongols.[130]

See also

References

Citations

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  94. ^ Kenneth Warren Chase (2003). Firearms: a global history to 1700 (illustrated ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 58. ISBN 0-521-82274-2. Retrieved November 28, 2011. Chinggis Khan organized a unit of Chinese catapult specialists in 1214, and these men formed part of the first Mongol army to invade Transoania in 1219. This was not too early for true firearms, and it was nearly two centuries after catapult-thrown gunpowder bombs had been added to the Chinese arsenal. Chinese siege equipment saw action in Transoxania in 1220 and in the north Caucasus in 1239–40.
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  96. ^ David Nicolle; Richard Hook (1998). The Mongol Warlords: Genghis Khan, Kublai Khan, Hulegu, Tamerlane (illustrated ed.). Brockhampton Press. p. 86. ISBN 1-86019-407-9. Retrieved November 28, 2011. Though he was himself a Chinese, he learned his trade from his father, who had accompanied Genghis Khan on his invasion of Muslim Transoxania and Iran. Perhaps the use of gunpowder as a propellant, in other words the invention of true guns, appeared first in the Muslim Middle East, whereas the invention of gunpowder itself was a Chinese achievement
  97. ^ Arnold Pacey (1991). Technology in world civilization: a thousand-year history (reprint, illustrated ed.). MIT Press. p. 46. ISBN 0-262-66072-5. Retrieved November 28, 2011. During the 1250s, the Mongols invaded Iran with 'whole regiments' of Chinese engineers operating trebuchets (catapults) throwing gunpowder bombs. Their progress was rapid and devastating until, after the sack of Baghdad in 1258, they entered Syria. There they met an Islamic army similarly equipped and experienced their first defeat. In 1291, the same sort of weapon was used during the siege of Acre, when the European Crusaders were expelled form Palestine.
  98. ^ Chahryar Adle; Irfan Habib (2003). Ahmad Hasan Dani; Chahryar Adle; Irfan Habib (eds.). History of Civilizations of Central Asia: Development in contrast : from the sixteenth to the mid-nineteenth century. Vol. 5 (illustrated ed.). UNESCO. p. 474. ISBN 92-3-103876-1. Retrieved November 28, 2011. Indeed, it is possible that gunpowder devices, including Chinese mortar (huochong), had reached Central Asia through the Mongols as early as the thirteenth century.71 Yet the potential remained unexploited; even Sultan Husayn's use of cannon may have had Ottoman inspiration.
  99. ^ Arnold Pacey (1991). Technology in world civilization: a thousand-year history (reprint, illustrated ed.). MIT Press. p. 46. ISBN 0-262-66072-5. Retrieved November 28, 2011. The presence of these individuals in China in the 1270s, and the deployment of Chinese engineers in Iran, mean that there were several routes by which information about gunpowder weapons could pass from the Islamic world to China, or vice versa. Thus when two authors from the eastern Mediterranean region wrote books about gunpowder weapons around the year 1280, it is not surprising that they described bombs, rockets and fire-lances very similar to some types of Chinese weaponry.
  100. ^ Josef W. Meri (2005). Josef W. Meri (ed.). Medieval Islamic Civilization: An Encyclopedia. Psychology Press. p. 510. ISBN 0-415-96690-6. Retrieved November 28, 2011. This called for the employment of engineers to engaged in mining operations, to build siege engines and artillery, and to concoct and use incendiary and explosive devices. For instance, Hulagu, who led Mongol forces into the Middle East during the second wave of the invasions in 1250, had with him a thousand squads of engineers, evidently of north Han Chinese (or perhaps Khitan) provenance.
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  102. ^ Lillian Craig Harris (1993). China considers the Middle East (illustrated ed.). Tauris. p. 26. ISBN 1-85043-598-7. Retrieved June 28, 2010.
  103. ^ Gloria Skurzynski (2010). This Is Rocket Science: True Stories of the Risk-Taking Scientists Who Figure Out Ways to Explore Beyond Earth (illustrated ed.). National Geographic Books. p. 1958. ISBN 978-1-4263-0597-9. Retrieved November 28, 2011. In A.D. 1232 an army of 30,000 Mongol warriors invaded the Chinese city of Kai-fung-fu, where the Chinese fought back with fire arrows ... Mongol leaders learned from their enemies and found ways to make fire arrows even more deadly as their invasion spread toward Europe. On Christmas Day 1241 Mongol troops used fire arrows to capture the city of Budapest in Hungary, and in 1258 to capture the city of Baghdad in what's now Iraq.
  104. ^ Colin A. Ronan (1995). The Shorter Science and Civilisation in China. Vol. 5 (illustrated ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 250. ISBN 0-521-46773-X. Retrieved November 28, 2011. Moreover, many Chinese were in the first wave of the Mongolian conquest of Iran and Iraq – a Han general, Guo Kan, was first governor of Baghdad after its capture in ad 1258. As the Mongols had a habit of destroying irrigation and
  105. ^ Original from the University of Michigan Thomas Francis Carter (1955). The invention of printing in China and its spread westward (2 ed.). Ronald Press Co. p. 174. ISBN 9780608113135. Retrieved November 28, 2011. The name of this Chinese general was Kuo K'an (Mongol, Kuka Ilka). He commanded the right flank of the Mongol army in its advance on Baghdad and remained in charge of the city after its surrender. His life in Chinese has been preserved
  106. ^ Thomas Francis Carter (1955). The invention of printing in China and its spread westward (2 ed.). Ronald Press Co. p. 171. ISBN 9780608113135. Retrieved June 28, 2010. Chinese influences soon made themselves strongly felt in Hulagu's dominions. A Han general was made the first governor of Baghdad,5 and Chinese engineers were employed to improve the irrigation of the Tigris-Euphrates basin
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mongol, conquest, china, mongol, invasion, china, redirects, here, mongolian, invasion, japanese, occupied, china, during, world, soviet, japanese, border, conflicts, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, artic. Mongol invasion of China redirects here For the Mongolian invasion of Japanese occupied China during World War II see Soviet Japanese border conflicts This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Mongol conquest of China news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Mongol conquest of China was a series of major military efforts by the Mongol Empire to conquer various empires ruling over China It spanned six decades in the 13th century and involved the defeat of the Jin dynasty Western Liao Western Xia Tibet the Dali Kingdom the Southern Song and the Eastern Xia The Mongol Empire under Genghis Khan started the conquest with small scale raids into Western Xia in 1205 and 1207 1 Mongol conquest of ChinaPart of the Mongol invasions and conquestsMongol conquest of regimes located in modern day China Date1205 1279LocationModern day China MongoliaResultDecisive Mongol Empire Yuan dynasty victory Establishment of Yuan dynasty Destruction of the Western Xia Jin dynasty 1115 1234 Dali Kingdom and Southern Song dynastyTerritorialchangesAll of China and neighbouring states Western Xia Liao Jin Tibet Dali etc annexed by the Yuan dynastyBelligerentsMongol Empire Yuan dynasty Western Xia 1210 1219 Chinese Yuan loyalists Khitans Alans Asud Turkics Cuan bo Bai people and Yi people from the Kingdom of Dali Southern Song dynasty 1211 1234 Dali Kingdom 1253 1279 Eastern Liao 1213 1269 Goryeo 1218 1219 Western Xia 1205 1210 1225 1227 Jin dynasty 1211 1234 Dali Kingdom 1252 1253 Southern Song dynasty 1235 1279 Eastern Xia 1217 1222 1233 Later Liao 1216 1219 Commanders and leadersGenghis Khan possibly JebeMuqali Boal Bor DoqolquToluiOgedeiSubutaiQaracharChagaanKublai KhanKhochuToregeneGuyuk KhanMongke Khan possibly BayanAjuArikhgiyaGeneral Shi TianzeGeneral Zhang HongfanGeneral Zhang RouGeneral Yan ShiGeneral Liu Heima Liu Ni General Xiao ZhalaGeneral UryankhadaiGeneral Guo KanKing Duan Xingzhi of DaliEmperor HuanzongEmperor Li AnquanKao Liang HuiWei ming Ling kungWanyan Yongji Emperor Xuanzong of Jin Li YingMoran JinzhongEmperor Aizong of Jin Wanyan HedaPuxian WannuPucha GuannuMa YongEmperor Mo of Jin Emperor XianzongEmperor Mozhu 1226 1227 AshaKing Duan Xingzhi of Dali defected to Mongols Emperor LizongEmperor DuzongEmperor Gong of SongEmperor DuanzongEmperor Bing of Song Jia SidaoLu WenhuanLi TingzhiZhang ShijieWen Tianxiang Battle between the Mongol and Jin Jurchen armies in north China in 1211 depicted in the Jami al tawarikh Compendium of Chronicles by Rashid al Din Hamadani By 1279 the Mongol ruler Kublai Khan had established the Yuan dynasty in China and crushed the last Song resistance which marked the onset of all of China under Yuan rule This was the first time in history that the whole of China was unified by non Han people and it marked the first time in history when Tibet was unified with the rest of China 2 Contents 1 Conquest of Western Xia 2 Conquest of Jin dynasty 3 Conquest of Dali Kingdom 4 Southwestern China 5 Conquest of Southern Song 6 Chinese resistance in Vietnam against the Mongols 7 Tactics and policies 7 1 Siege strategy 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 SourcesConquest of Western Xia EditMain article Mongol conquest of Western Xia In the early 1200s Temujin soon to be Genghis Khan began consolidating his power in Mongolia Following the death of the Kerait leader Ong Khan to Temujin s emerging Mongol Empire in 1203 Kerait leader Nilqa Senggum led a small band of followers into Western Xia also known as Xi Xia 3 However after his adherents took to plundering the locals Nilqa Senggum was expelled from Western Xia territory 3 Using his rival Nilga Senggum s temporary refuge in Western Xia as a pretext Temujin launched a raid against the state in 1205 in the Edsin region 3 4 5 The Mongols plundered border settlements and one local Western Xia noble accepted Mongol supremacy 6 The next year 1206 Temujin was formally proclaimed Genghis Khan ruler of all the Mongols marking the official start of the Mongol Empire In 1207 Genghis led another raid into Western Xia invading the Ordo region and sacking Wuhai the main garrison along the Yellow River before withdrawing in 1208 5 7 In 1209 the Genghis undertook a larger campaign to secure the submission of Western Xia After defeating a force led by Kao Liang Hui outside Wuhai Genghis captured the city and pushed up along the Yellow River defeated several cities and besieged the capital Yinchuan which held a well fortified garrison of 150 000 8 The Mongols at this point inexperienced at siege warfare attempted to flood out the city by diverting the Yellow River but the dike they built to accomplish this broke and flooded the Mongol camp 3 Nevertheless Emperor Li Anquan still threatened by the Mongols and receiving no relief from the Jin dynasty surrendered to the Mongol and demonstrated his loyalty by giving a daughter Chaka in marriage to Genghis and paying a tribute of camels falcons and textiles 9 After their defeat in 1210 Western Xia served as faithful vassals to the Mongol Empire for almost a decade aiding the Mongols in their war against the Jin dynasty In 1219 Genghis Khan launched his campaign against the Khwarazmian dynasty in Central Asia and requested military aid from Western Xia However the emperor and his military commander Asha refused to take part in the campaign stating that if Genghis had too few troops to attack Khwarazm then he had no claim to supreme power 10 11 Infuriated Genghis swore vengeance and left to invade Khwarazm while Western Xia attempted alliances with the Jin and Song dynasties against the Mongols 12 After defeating Khwarazm in 1221 Genghis prepared his armies to punish Western Xia for their betrayal and in 1225 he attacked with a force of approximately 180 000 13 After taking Khara Khoto the Mongols began a steady advance southward Asha commander of the Western Xia troops could not afford to meet the Mongols as it would involve an exhausting westward march from the capital Yinchuan through 500 kilometers of desert and so the Mongols steadily advanced from city to city 14 Enraged by Western Xia s fierce resistance Genghis engaged the countryside in annihilative warfare and ordered his generals to systematically destroy cities and garrisons as they went 10 12 15 Genghis divided his army and sent general Subutai to take care of the westernmost cities while the main force under Genghis moved east into the heart of the Western Xia Empire and took Ganzhou which was spared destruction upon its capture due to it being the hometown of Genghis s commander Chagaan 16 In August 1226 Mongol troops approached Wuwei the second largest city of the Western Xia empire which surrendered without resistance in order to escape destruction 17 In Autumn 1226 Genghis took Liangchow crossed the Helan Shan desert and in November lay siege to Lingwu a mere 30 kilometers from Yinchuan 18 19 Here in the Battle of Yellow River the Mongols destroyed a force of 300 000 Western Xia that launched a counter attack against them 18 20 Genghis reached Yinchuan in 1227 laid siege to the city and launched several offensives into Jin to prevent them from sending reinforcements to Western Xia with one force reaching as a far as Kaifeng the Jin capital 21 Yinchuan lay besieged for about six months after which Genghis opened up peace negotiations while secretly planning to kill the emperor 22 During the peace negotiations Genghis continued his military operations around the Liupan mountains near Guyuan rejected an offer of peace from the Jin and prepared to invade them near their border with the Song 23 24 However in August 1227 Genghis died of a historically uncertain cause and in order not to jeopardize the ongoing campaign his death was kept a secret 25 26 In September 1227 Emperor Mozhu surrendered to the Mongols and was promptly executed 24 27 The Mongols then mercilessly pillaged Yinchuan slaughtered the city s population plundered the imperial tombs west of the city and completed the effective annihilation of the Western Xia state 12 24 28 29 Conquest of Jin dynasty Edit The siege of Zhongdu modern Beijing in 1213 14 Mongol Empire s Ayimaq in North China Main article Mongol conquest of Jin China One of the major goals of Genghis Khan was the conquest of the Jin dynasty allowing the Mongols to avenge the earlier death of a Mongol Khan gain the riches of northern China and to establish the Mongols as a major power in the East Asian world Genghis Khan declared war in 1211 and while Mongols were victorious in the field they were frustrated in their efforts to take major cities In his typically logical and determined fashion Genghis and his highly developed staff studied the problems of the assault of fortifications With the help of Chinese engineers they gradually developed the techniques to take down fortifications This eventually would make troops under the Mongols some of the most accomplished and most successful besiegers in the history of warfare As a result of a number of overwhelming victories in the field and a few successes in the capture of fortifications deep within China Genghis had conquered and consolidated Jin territory as far south as the Great Wall by 1213 Cherik soldiers were non nomad soldiers in the Mongol military Jin defectors and Han Chinese conscripts were recruited into new armies formed by the Mongols as they destroyed the Jin dynasty A critical role in the defeat of the Jin was carried out by the Han Chinese cherik forces Han Chinese defectors led by General Liu Bolin defending Tiancheng from the Jin in 1214 while Genghis Khan was busy going back north In 1215 Xijing fell to Liu Bolin s army The original Han cherik forces were created in 1216 and Liu Bolin appointed as their leading officer As Han troops kept defecting from the Jin to the Mongols the size of Han cherik forces swelled and they had to be partitioned between different units Han soldiers made up the majority of the Khitan Yelu Tuhua s army while Juyin soldiers from Zhongdu made up Chalaer s army and Khitan made up Uyar s army Chalaer Yelu Tuhua and Uyar led three cherik armies in northern China under the Mongol commander Muqali in addition to his tamma armies in 1217 1218 30 Many Han Chinese and Khitan defected to the Mongols to fight against the Jin Two Han Chinese leaders Shi Tianze Liu Heima zh 劉黑馬 Liu Ni 31 32 33 34 and the Khitan Xiao Zhala zh 蕭札剌 defected and commanded the 3 Tumens in the Mongol army 35 36 37 38 Liu Heima and Shi Tianze served Ogodei Khan 39 Liu Heima and Shi Tianxiang led armies against Western Xia for the Mongols 40 There were 4 Han Tumens and 3 Khitan Tumens with each Tumen consisting of 10 000 troops The three Khitan Generals Shimobeidier 石抹孛迭兒 Tabuyir 塔不已兒 and Xiao Zhongxi 蕭重喜 commanded the three Khitan Tumens and the four Han Generals Zhang Rou Yan Shi Shi Tianze and Liu Heima commanded the four Han tumens under Ogodei Khan 41 42 43 44 Shi Tianze Shih T ien tse Zhang Rou zh Chang Jou 張柔 and Yan Shi zh Yen Shih 嚴實 and other high ranking Chinese who served in the Jin dynasty and defected to the Mongols helped build the structure for the administration of the new state 45 The Mongols received defections from Han Chinese and Khitans while the Jin were abandoned by their own Jurchen officers 46 Interethnic marriage between Han and Jurchen became common at this time The Han Chinese General Shi Tianze s father Shi Bingzhi 史秉直 Shih Ping chih were married to a Jurchen woman 47 Shi Tianze was married to two Jurchen women Mo nien and Na ho a Han Chinese woman Shi and a Korean woman Li and his son Shi Gang was born to one of his Jurchen wives and the family served the Yuan prominently 48 47 and Shi Gang married a Kerait woman the Kerait were Mongolified Turkic people and part of the Mongol nation 49 50 Genghis advanced with three armies into the heart of Jin territory between the Great Wall and the Yellow River With the help of Chenyu Liu one of the top officers who betrayed Jin as well as the Southern Song who wanted revenge on Jin Genghis defeated the Jin forces devastated northern China captured numerous cities and in 1215 besieged captured and sacked the Jin capital of Yanjing modern day Beijing However the Jin emperor Xuan Zong did not surrender but moved his capital to Kaifeng The city fell in the siege of Kaifeng in 1232 Emperor Aizong fled to the town of Caizhou After this the Han Chinese general Shi Tianze led troops to pursue Emperor Aizong as he retreated and destroyed an 80 000 strong Jin army led by Wanyan Chengyi 完顏承裔 at Pucheng 蒲城 The Jin dynasty collapsed after the siege of Caizhou in 1234 Eastern Xia an short lived kingdom which declared independence from Jin in 1215 was conquered in 1233 The first Han armies in the Mongol army were those led by defecting individual officers There were 1 000 Han Chinese troops each in 26 units which made up three tumeds arranged by Ogedei Khan on a decimal system The Han officer Shi Tianze Han officer Liu Ni and the Khitan officer Xiao Chala all three of whom defected to the Mongols from the Jin led these three tumeds Chang Jung Yen Shi and Chung Jou led three additional tumeds which were created before 1234 The Han defectors were called the Black Army Hei Jun by the Mongols before 1235 A new infantry based New Army Xin Jun was created after the Mongols received 95 000 additional Han soldiers through conscription once the 1236 and 1241 censuses were taken after the Jin was crushed Han cherik forces were used to fight against Li Tan s revolt in 1262 The New Army and Black Army had hereditary officer posts like the Mongol army itself 51 The Mongols valued physicians craftsmen and religious clerics and ordered them to be spared from death and brought to them when cities were taken in northern China 52 Conquest of Dali Kingdom EditMongke Khan dispatched Kublai to the Dali Kingdom in 1253 to outflank the Song The Gao family dominated the court resisted and murdered Mongol envoys The Mongols divided their forces into three One wing rode eastward into the Sichuan basin The second column under Uryankhadai took a difficult way into the mountains of western Sichuan 53 Kublai himself headed south over the grasslands meeting up with the first column While Uryankhadai galloping in along the lakeside from the north Kublai took the capital city of Dali and spared the residents despite the slaying of his ambassadors The Dali King Duan Xingzhi zh 段興智 himself defected to the Mongols who used his troops to conquer the rest of Yunnan The Mongols appointed King Duan Xingzhi as Maharajah and stationed a pacification commissioner there 54 After Kublai s departure unrest broke out among the Black Jang one of the main ethnic groups of the Dali kingdom By 1256 Uryankhadai the son of Subutai had completely pacified Yunnan The Duan family were originally Han Chinese from Wuwei in Gansu The Duan family still ruled Dali relatively independently during the Yuan dynasty 55 The Ming abolished them 56 The Tusi chieftains and local tribe leaders and kingdoms in Yunnan Guizhou and Sichuan submitted to Yuan rule and were allowed to keep their titles The Han Chinese Yang family ruling the Chiefdom of Bozhou which was recognized by the Song dynasty and Tang dynasty also received recognition by the Mongols in the Yuan dynasty and later by the Ming dynasty The Luo clan in Shuixi led by Ahua were recognized by the Yuan emperors as they were by the Song emperors when led by Pugui and Tang emperors when led by Apei They descended from the Shu Han era king Huoji who helped Zhuge Liang against Meng Huo They were also recognized by the Ming dynasty 57 58 Southwestern China EditMany Tusi chiefdoms and kingdoms in southwestern China which existed before the Mongol invasions were allowed to retain their integrity as vassals of the Yuan dynasty after surrendering including the Kingdom of Dali the Han Chinese Yang family ruling the Chiefdom of Bozhou with its seat at the castle Hailongtun Chiefdom of Lijiang Chiefdom of Shuidong Chiefdom of Sizhou Chiefdom of Yao an Chiefdom of Yongning and Mu ege As were the Goryeo dynasty and the Kingdom of Qocho The Han Chinese nobles Duke Yansheng and Celestial Masters continued possessing their titles in the Yuan dynasty since the previous dynasties Conquest of Southern Song EditMain article Mongol conquest of Song China At second the Mongols allied with Southern Song as both had a common enemy in the form of Jin However this alliance broke down with the destruction of Jur chen Jin in 1234 After Song forces captured the former Northern Song capitals of Luoyang Chang an and Kaifeng from the Mongols and the Song had killed a Mongol ambassador the Mongols declared war on the Song Very quickly the Mongol armies forced the Song back to the Yangtze although the two sides would be engaged in a four decade war until the fall of the Song in 1276 Islamic engineers joined later and especially contributed counterweight trebuchets Muslim phao which had a maximum range of 300 meters compared to 150 meters of the ancient Chinese predecessor It played a significant role in taking the Chinese strongholds and was as well used against infantry units on the battlefield The Mongol force which invaded south China was far greater than the force they sent to invade the Middle East in 1256 59 The Mongols made heavy use of indigenous ethnic minority soldiers in southern China rather than Mongols The Kingdom of Dali s indigenous Cuan Bo army led by the Duan royal family were the majority of the forces in the Mongol Yuan army sent to attack Song China during battles along the Yangtze river During a Mongol attack against the Song China there were only 3 000 Mongol cavalry at one point under the Mongol commander Uriyangkhadai the majority of his army were native Cuan Bo with Duan officers 60 While the Mongol forces had success against the non Han Chinese ruled states of the Jin and Xia conquering the Song took much more time The Song forces were equipped with the best technology available at the time such as an ample supply of gunpowder weapons like fire lances rockets and flamethrowers The fierce resistance of the Song forces resulted in the Mongols having to fight the most difficult war in all of their conquests 61 and the Mongols required every advantage they could gain and every military artifice known at that time in order to win They looked to peoples they already conquered to acquire various military advantages 62 However intrigues at the Song court would favor the Mongols The Yuan dynasty created a Han Army 漢軍 out of defected Jin troops and army of defected Song troops called the Newly Submitted Army 新附軍 63 Southern Song Chinese troops who defected and surrendered to the Mongols were granted Korean women as wives by the Mongols whom the Mongols earlier took during their invasion of Korea as war booty 64 The many Song Chinese troops who defected to the Mongols were given oxen clothes and land by Kublai Khan 65 As prize for battlefield victories lands sectioned off as appanages were handed by the Yuan dynasty to Chinese military officers who defected to the Mongol side The Yuan gave Song Chinese soldiers who defected to the Mongols juntun a type of military farmland 66 Chagaan Tsagaan and Han tumen General Zhang Rou jointly launched an attack on the Song dynasty ordered by Toregene Khatun After several indecisive wars the Mongols unsuccessfully attacked the Song garrison at Diaoyu Fortress Hechuan when their Great Khan Mongke died of cholera or dysentery However the general responsible for this defence was not rewarded but instead was punished by the Song court citation needed Discouraged he defected to the Mongols and suggested to Mongke s successor Kublai that the key to the conquest of Song was the capture of Xiangyang a vital Song stronghold citation needed The Yuan dynasty under Kublai Khan after the conquest of Southern Song dynasty The Mongols quickly enclosed Xiangyang and defeated any attempt to reinforce it by the Song After a siege that lasted several years and with the help of Muslim artillery created by Iraqi engineers the Mongols finally forced the city of Xiangyang to surrender The dying Song dynasty sent its armies against the Mongols at Yehue under the incompetent chancellor Jia Sidao Predictably the battle was a disaster Running out of troops and supplies the Song court surrendered to the Mongols in 1276 Many Han Chinese were enslaved in the process of the Mongols invasion of China proper 67 According to Japanese historian Sugiyama Masaaki 杉山正明 and Funada Yoshiyuki 舩田善之 there were also a certain number of Mongolian slaves owned by Han Chinese during the Yuan dynasty However there is no evidence that Han Chinese who were considered people of the bottom of Yuan society according to some researchers suffered particularly cruel abuse 68 69 With the desire to rule all of China Kublai established the Yuan dynasty and became Emperor of China However despite the surrender of the Song court resistance of Song remnants remained Chinese resistance lasted for a few more years as Song loyalists organized themselves around a powerless boy emperor brother to the last formal Song emperor In an attempt to restore the Song dynasty several Song officials set up a government in Guangdong aboard ships of the vast Song navy which still maintained over a thousand ships which then carried the Song army which had been forced by the Mongol army off of the land onto these Song warships Realizing this in 1279 Kublai sent his fleet to engage the Song fleet at the battle of Yamen in the waters off of modern Hong Kong winning a decisive victory in which the last Song Emperor Bing of Song and his loyal officials committed suicide This was the final major military confrontation of the Mongol conquest of the Song in southern China However members of the Song Imperial Family continued to live in the Yuan dynasty like Emperor Gong of Song Zhao Mengfu and Zhao Yong Zhao Mengfu painted at the Yuan court and was personally interviewed by Kublai Khan This practice was referred to as 二王三恪 Historian Patricia Buckley Ebrey noted that the Mongol Yuan dynasty treated the Jurchen Jin dynasty the Mongols treated the Jurchen Wanyan royal family harshly totally butchering them by the hundreds as well as the Tangut emperor of Western Xia when they defeated him earlier However Patricia also noted the Mongols were totally lenient on the Han Chinese Zhao royal family of the Southern Song explicitly unlike the Jurchens in the Jingkang incident sparing both the Southern Song royals in the capital Hangzhou like the Emperor Gong of Song and his mother as well as sparing the civilians inside it and not sacking the city allowing them to go about their normal business rehiring Southern Song officials The Mongols did not take the southern Song palace women for themselves but instead had Han Chinese artisans in Shangdu marry the palace women 70 The Mongol emperor Kublai Khan even granted a Mongol princess from his own Borjigin family as a wife to the surrendered Han Chinese Southern Song Emperor Gong of Song and they fathered a son together named Zhao Wanpu 71 72 Chinese resistance in Vietnam against the Mongols EditThe ancestors of the Trần clan originated from the province of Fujian and later migrated to Đại Việt under Trần Kinh 陳京 Chen Jing the ancestor of the Trần clan Their descendants the later rulers of Đại Việt who were of mixed blooded descent later established the Trần dynasty which ruled Vietnam Đại Việt Despite many intermarriages between the Trần and several members of the Ly dynasty alongside members of their imperial court as in the case of Trần Ly 73 74 and Trần Thừa 75 some of the mixed blooded descendants of the Trần dynasty and certain members of the clan were still capable of speaking Chinese such as when a Yuan dynasty envoy had a meeting with the Chinese speaking Trần prince Trần Quốc Tuấn in 1282 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 Professor Liam Kelley noted that people from Song dynasty China like Zhao Zhong and Xu Zongdao fled to Tran dynasty ruled Vietnam after the Mongol invasion of the Song and they helped the Tran fight against the Mongol invasion The ancestors of the Tran clan originated from the modern day province of Fujian as did the Daoist cleric Xu Zongdao who recorded the Mongol invasion and referred to them as Northern bandits He quoted the Đại Việt Sử Ky Toan Thư which said When the Song Dynasty was lost its people came to us Nhật Duật took them in There was Zhao Zhong who served as his personal guard Therefore among the accomplishments in defeating the Yuan i e Mongols Nhật Duật had the most 83 84 The Tran defeated the Mongol invasions of Vietnam Southern Song Chinese military officers and civilian officials left to overseas countries went to Vietnam and intermarried with the Vietnamese ruling elite and went to Champa to serve the government there as recorded by Zheng Sixiao 85 Southern Song soldiers were part of the Vietnamese army prepared by emperor Trần Thanh Tong against the second Mongol invasion 86 Tactics and policies EditMain articles Mongol invasion of Central Asia Mongol invasion of Khwarezmia Siege of Baghdad 1258 Mongol Empire and Ilkhanate During their campaigns the Mongol Empire recruited many nationalities in their warfare such as those of Central and East Asia 87 88 89 90 91 The Mongols employed Chinese troops 92 especially those who worked catapults and gunpowder to assist them in other conquests In addition to Chinese troops many scholars and doctors from China accompanied Mongol commanders to the west The Mongols valued people with specialized skills The ability to make cast iron which was tough enough for shooting objects with gunpowder was available to the Chinese in the Song dynasty and it was adopted by the Liao Jin and Yuan dynasties 93 During the invasion of Transoxiana in 1219 along with the main Mongol force Genghis Khan used a Chinese specialist catapult unit in battle They were used in Transoxania again in 1220 The Chinese may have used the catapults to hurl gunpowder bombs since they already had them by this time 94 although there were other siege engineers and technologies used in the campaigns too 95 While Genghis Khan was conquering Transoxania and Central Asia several Chinese who were familiar with gunpowder were serving with Genghis s army 96 Whole regiments entirely made out of Chinese were used by the Mongols to command bomb hurling trebuchets during the invasion of Iran 97 Historians have suggested that the Mongol invasion had brought Chinese gunpowder weapons to Central Asia One of these was the huochong a Chinese mortar 98 Books written around the area afterward depicted the use of gunpowder weapons which resembled that of China 99 One thousand northern Chinese engineer squads accompanied the Mongol Hulagu Khan during his conquest of the Middle East 100 101 1 000 Chinese participated in the Siege of Baghdad 1258 102 103 The Chinese General Guo Kan was one of the commanders during the siege and appointed Governor of Baghdad after the city was taken 104 105 106 107 108 While serving in the Mongol armies Chinese generals were able to observe the invasion of West Asia 109 According to Ata Malik Juvayni during the assault on the Alamut Assassins fort Khitayan built siege weapons resembling crossbows were used 110 111 112 Khitayan meant Chinese and it was a type of arcuballista deployed in 1256 under Hulagu s command 113 Stones were knocked off the castle and the bolts burnt a great number of the Assassins They could fire a distance around 2 500 paces 114 The device was described as an ox s bow 115 Pitch which was lit on fire was applied to the bolts of the weapon before firing 116 Another historian thinks that instead gunpowder might have been strapped onto the bolts which caused the burns during the battle recorded by Juvayini 117 Alans were recruited into the Mongol forces with one unit called Right Alan Guard which was combined with recently surrendered soldiers Mongols and Chinese soldiers stationed in the area of the former Kingdom of Qocho and in Besh Balikh the Mongols established a Chinese military colony led by Chinese general Qi Kongzhi Ch i Kung chih 118 Against the Alans and the Cumans Kipchaks the Mongols used divide and conquer tactics first the Mongols told the Cumans to stop allying with the Alans and then after the Cumans followed their suggestion the Mongols defeated the Alans 119 and then attacked the Cumans 120 Alan and Kipchak guards were used by Kublai Khan 121 In 1368 at the end of the Yuan dynasty in China Toghan Temur was accompanied by his faithful Alan guards 122 Mangu enlisted in his bodyguard half the troops of the Alan prince Arslan whose younger son Nicholas took a part in the expedition of the Mongols against Karajang Yunnan This Alan imperial guard was still in existence in 1272 1286 and 1309 and it was divided into two corps with headquarters in the Ling pei province Karakorum 123 Alans were converted to Roman Catholic Christianity as were Armenians in China by John of Montecorvino Siege strategy Edit James Waterson cautioned against attributing the population drop in northern China to Mongol slaughter since much of the population may have moved to southern China under the Southern Song or died of disease and famine as agricultural and urban city infrastructure were destroyed 124 The Mongols spared cities from massacre and sacking if they surrendered like Kaifeng which was surrendered to Subetai by Xu Li 125 Yangzhou which was surrendered to Bayan by Li Tingzhi s second in command after Li Tingzhi was executed by the Southern Song 126 and Hangzhou which was spared from sacking when it surrendered to Kublai Khan 127 Han Chinese and Khitan soldiers defected en masse to Genghis Khan against the Jurchen Jin dynasty 128 Towns which surrendered were spared from sacking and massacre by Kublai Khan 129 The Khitan reluctantly left their homeland in Manchuria as the Jin moved their primary capital from Beijing south to Kaifeng and defected to the Mongols 130 See also EditConquest dynasty Mongol conquest of the Qara Khitai Mongol invasions of TibetReferences EditCitations Edit Republicanchina org Updates www imperialchina org Hugh D Walker Traditional Sino Korean Diplomatic Relations A Realistic Historical Appraisal Monumenta Serica Vol 24 1965 pp 155 16 p 159 a b c d May Timothy 2012 The Mongol Conquests in World History London Reaktion Books p 1211 ISBN 9781861899712 C P Atwood Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire p 590 a b de Hartog Leo 2004 Genghis Khan Conqueror of the World New York City I B Tauris p 59 ISBN 1860649726 J Bor Mongol hiigeed Eurasiin diplomat shashtir vol II p 204 Rossabi William 2009 Genghis Khan and the Mongol empire Seattle University of Washington Press p 156 ISBN 978 9622178359 Jack Weatherford Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World p 85 Man John 2004 Genghis Khan Life Death and Resurrection New York City St Martin s Press p 133 ISBN 9780312366247 a b Kohn George C 2007 Dictionary of Wars 3rd ed New York City Infobase Publishing p 205 ISBN 9781438129167 Man John 2004 Genghis Khan Life Death and Resurrection New York City St Martin s Press p 160 ISBN 9780312366247 a b c Ebrey Patricia Buckley 2012 East Asia A Cultural Social and Political History 3rd ed Stamford Connecticut Cengage Learning p 199 ISBN 9781133606475 Emmons James B 2012 Genghis Khan In Li Xiaobing ed China at War An Encyclopedia Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO p 139 ISBN 9781598844153 Man John 2004 Genghis Khan Life Death and Resurrection New York City St Martin s Press p 212 ISBN 9780312366247 Mote Frederick W 1999 Imperial China 900 1800 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press pp 255 256 ISBN 0674012127 Man John 2004 Genghis Khan Life Death and Resurrection New York City St Martin s Press pp 212 213 ISBN 9780312366247 Man John 2004 Genghis Khan Life Death and Resurrection New York City St Martin s Press p 213 ISBN 9780312366247 a b Man John 2004 Genghis Khan Life Death and Resurrection New York City St Martin s Press p 214 ISBN 9780312366247 Hartog 2004 pg 134 Tucker Spencer C ed 2010 A Global Chronology of Conflict From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO p 276 ISBN 978 1851096725 de Hartog Leo 2004 Genghis Khan Conqueror of the World New York City I B Tauris p 135 ISBN 1860649726 Man John 2004 Genghis Khan Life Death and Resurrection New York City St Martin s Press p 219 ISBN 9780312366247 Man John 2004 Genghis Khan Life Death and Resurrection New York City St Martin s Press pp 219 220 ISBN 9780312366247 a b c de Hartog Leo 2004 Genghis Khan Conqueror of the World New York City I B Tauris p 137 ISBN 1860649726 Lange Brenda 2003 Genghis Khan New York City Infobase Publishing p 71 ISBN 9780791072226 Man John 2004 Genghis Khan Life Death and Resurrection New York City St Martin s Press p 238 ISBN 9780312366247 Sinor D Shimin Geng Kychanov Y I 1998 Asimov M S Bosworth C E eds The Uighurs the Kyrgyz and the Tangut Eighth to the Thirteenth Century Age of Achievement A D 750 to the End of the Fifteenth Century Vol 4 Paris UNESCO p 214 ISBN 9231034677 Mote Frederick W 1999 Imperial China 900 1800 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press p 256 ISBN 0674012127 Boland Crewe Tara Lea David eds 2002 The Territories of the People s Republic of China London Europa Publications p 215 ISBN 9780203403112 May Timothy 2016 May Timothy ed The Mongol Empire A Historical Encyclopedia 2 volumes A Historical Encyclopedia illustrated annotated ed ABC CLIO p 81 ISBN 978 1610693400 Collectif 2002 p 147 萬戶路 千戶州 蒙古千戶百戶制度與華北路府州郡體制 新疆哲學社會科學 Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved January 28 2016 白话元史 刘伯林传 附刘黑马传 www wenxue100 com 万户路 千户州 蒙古千户百户制度与华北路府州郡体制 中国人民大学清史研究所 May 2004 p 50 http 123 125 114 20 view ca3dae260722192e4536f629 html re view permanent dead link 国际儒学人物信息平台 Archived from the original on July 1 2017 Retrieved January 10 2016 豆丁网 doc 兼论金元之际的汉地七万户 docin org Archived from the original on June 29 2017 Retrieved January 10 2016 Schram 1987 p 130 eds Seaman Marks 1991 p 175 窝阔台汗己丑年汉军万户萧札剌考辨 兼论金元之际的汉地七万户 www wanfangdata com cn in Chinese Retrieved January 31 2019 窝阔台汗己丑年汉军万户萧札剌考辨 兼论金元之际的汉地七万户 国家哲学社会科学学术期刊数据库 www nssd org in Chinese 新元史 卷146 維基文庫 自由的圖書館 Wikisource in Traditional Chinese Retrieved January 31 2019 Archived copy Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved May 3 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Chan Hok Lam 1997 A Recipe to Qubilai Qa an on Governance The Case of Chang Te hui and Li Chih Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 7 2 Cambridge University Press 257 83 https www jstor org stable 25183352 David M Robinson 2009 Empire s Twilight Northeast Asia Under the Mongols Harvard University Press pp 24 ISBN 978 0 674 03608 6 a b ed de Rachewiltz 1993 p 41 Kinoshita 2013 p 47 Watt 2010 p 14 Kinoshita 2013 p 47 May Timothy 2016 May Timothy ed The Mongol Empire A Historical Encyclopedia 2 volumes A Historical Encyclopedia illustrated annotated ed ABC CLIO p 82 ISBN 978 1610693400 Shinno Reiko 2016 2 The Mongol conquest and the new configuration of power 1206 76 The Politics of Chinese Medicine Under Mongol Rule Needham Research Institute Series illustrated ed Routledge pp 24 29 ISBN 978 1317671602 John Man Kublai Khan p 79 C P Atwood Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongols p 613 Anderson James A Whitmore John K 2014 China s Encounters on the South and Southwest Reforging the Fiery Frontier Over Two Millennia reprint revised ed BRILL p 146 ISBN 978 9004282483 Dillon Michael 1999 China s Muslim Hui Community Migration Settlement and Sects Psychology Press pp 33 34 ISBN 0700710264 Herman John E 2005 Di Cosmo Nicola Wyatt Don J eds Political Frontiers Ethnic Boundaries and Human Geographies in Chinese History illustrated ed Routledge p 260 ISBN 1135790957 Crossley Pamela Kyle Siu Helen F Sutton Donald S eds 2006 Empire at the Margins Culture Ethnicity and Frontier in Early Modern China Vol 28 of Studies on China illustrated ed University of California Press p 143 ISBN 0520230159 Smith John Masson Jr January March 1998 Review Nomads on Ponies vs Slaves on Horses Journal of the American Oriental Society American Oriental Society 118 1 54 62 doi 10 2307 606298 JSTOR 606298 Yang Bin 2009 Chapter 4 Rule Based on Native Customs Between winds and clouds the making of Yunnan second century BCE to twentieth century CE Columbia University Press p 112 ISBN 978 0231142540 Alt URL David Nicolle Richard Hook 1998 The Mongol Warlords Genghis Khan Kublai Khan Hulegu Tamerlane illustrated ed Brockhampton Press p 57 ISBN 1 86019 407 9 Retrieved November 28 2011 For his part Kublai dedicated himself totally to the task but it was still to be the Mongol s thoughest war The Sung Chinese showed themselves to be the most resilient of foes Southern China was not only densely populated and full of strongly walled cities It was also a land of mountain ranges and wide fast flowing L Carrington Goodrich 2002 A Short History of the Chinese People illustrated ed Courier Dover Publications p 173 ISBN 0 486 42488 X Retrieved November 28 2011 Unquestionably in the Chinese the Mongols encountered more stubborn opposition and better defense than any of their other opponents in Europe and Asia had shown They needed every military artifice known at that time for they had to fight in terrain that was difficult for their horses in regions infested with diseases fatal to large numbers of their forces and in boats to which they were not accustomed Hucker 1985 p 66 Robinson David M 2009 1 Northeast Asia and the Mongol Empire Empire s Twilight Northeast Asia Under the Mongols illustrated ed Cambridge Massachusetts USA Harvard University Press p 52 ISBN 978 0674036086 Man John 2012 Kublai Khan reprint ed Random House p 168 ISBN 978 1446486153 Cheung Ming Tai 2001 China s Entrepreneurial Army illustrated reprint ed Oxford University Press p 14 ISBN 0199246904 Junius P Rodriguez The Historical Encyclopedia of World Slavery ABC CLIO 1997 pp146 杉山正明 忽必烈的挑战 社会科学文献出版社 2013年 第44 46頁 船田善之 色目人与元代制度 社会 重新探讨蒙古 色目 汉人 南人划分的位置 蒙古学信息 2003年第2期 Ebrey Patricia Buckley 2016 9 State Forced Relocations in China 900 1300 THE MONGOLS AND THE STATE OF YUAN In Ebrey Patricia Buckley Smith Paul Jakov eds State Power in China 900 1325 illustrated ed University of Washington Press pp 325 326 ISBN 978 0295998480 Archived from the original on June 13 2021 Hua Kaiqi 2018 Chapter 6 The Journey of Zhao Xian and the Exile of Royal Descendants in the Yuan Dynasty 1271 1358 In Heirman Ann Meinert Carmen Anderl Christoph eds Buddhist Encounters and Identities Across East Asia Leiden Netherlands BRILL p 213 doi 10 1163 9789004366152 008 ISBN 978 9004366152 Rasid ad Din Faḍlallah 1971 The Successors of Genghis Khan Translated by Boyle John Andrew Columbia University Press p 287 ISBN 0 231 03351 6 Ham sắc To Trung Từ tự hại minh Retrieved March 9 2017 Nha Trần khởi nghiệp Retrieved March 9 2016 Chapuis Oscar 1995 A history of Vietnam from Hong Bang to Tu Duc Greenwood Press p 85 ISBN 0 313 29622 7 Taylor K W 2013 A history of the Vietnamese 1 publ ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 103 120 ISBN 978 0521699150 K W Taylor May 9 2013 A History of the Vietnamese Cambridge University Press pp 120 ISBN 978 0 521 87586 8 Hall Kenneth R ed 2008 Secondary cities and urban networking in the Indian Ocean Realm c 1400 1800 Lanham Lexington Books pp 159 ISBN 978 0 7391 2835 0 Jayne Werner John K Whitmore George Dutton August 21 2012 Sources of Vietnamese Tradition Columbia University Press pp 29 ISBN 978 0 231 51110 0 Geoffrey C Gunn August 1 2011 History Without Borders The Making of an Asian World Region 1000 1800 Hong Kong University Press pp 112 ISBN 978 988 8083 34 3 Ainslie Thomas Embree Robin Jeanne Lewis 1988 Encyclopedia of Asian history Scribner p 190 ISBN 9780684189017 p 190 Alexander Woodside 1971 Vietnam and the Chinese Model A Comparative Study of Vietnamese and Chinese Government in the First Half of the Nineteenth Century Harvard Univ Asia Center pp 8 ISBN 978 0 674 93721 5 Giặc Bắc đến xam lược Translations and Exclamation Points wordpress com December 4 2015 Archived from the original on October 6 2016 Retrieved April 5 2016 Liam Kelley Department of History October 14 2014 Archived from the original on October 14 2014 Anderson James A Whitmore John K 2014 China s Encounters on the South and Southwest Reforging the Fiery Frontier Over Two Millennia reprint revised ed BRILL p 122 ISBN 978 9004282483 Anderson James A Whitmore John K 2014 China s Encounters on the South and Southwest Reforging the Fiery Frontier Over Two Millennia reprint revised ed BRILL p 123 ISBN 978 9004282483 Reuven Amitai Preiss Mongols and Mamluks The Mamluk Ilkhanid War 1260 1281 p 189 Angus Donal Stewart The Armenian kingdom and the Mamluks p 54 Michael Biran The empire of the Qara Khitai in Eurasian history between China and the Islam p 143 Stepehen Turnball The Mongol Invasions of Japan 1274 and 1281 p 72 Peter Jackson The Mongols and the West p 86 Morris Rossabi November 28 2014 From Yuan to Modern China and Mongolia The Writings of Morris Rossabi BRILL pp 443 ISBN 978 90 04 28529 3 HAW STEPHEN G July 2013 The Mongol Empire the first gunpowder empire Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 23 3 444 451 doi 10 1017 S1356186313000369 S2CID 162200994 Kenneth Warren Chase 2003 Firearms a global history to 1700 illustrated ed Cambridge University Press p 58 ISBN 0 521 82274 2 Retrieved November 28 2011 Chinggis Khan organized a unit of Chinese catapult specialists in 1214 and these men formed part of the first Mongol army to invade Transoania in 1219 This was not too early for true firearms and it was nearly two centuries after catapult thrown gunpowder bombs had been added to the Chinese arsenal Chinese siege equipment saw action in Transoxania in 1220 and in the north Caucasus in 1239 40 The Devil s Horsemen The Mongol Invasion of Europe by James Chambers p 71 David Nicolle Richard Hook 1998 The Mongol Warlords Genghis Khan Kublai Khan Hulegu Tamerlane illustrated ed Brockhampton Press p 86 ISBN 1 86019 407 9 Retrieved November 28 2011 Though he was himself a Chinese he learned his trade from his father who had accompanied Genghis Khan on his invasion of Muslim Transoxania and Iran Perhaps the use of gunpowder as a propellant in other words the invention of true guns appeared first in the Muslim Middle East whereas the invention of gunpowder itself was a Chinese achievement Arnold Pacey 1991 Technology in world civilization a thousand year history reprint illustrated ed MIT Press p 46 ISBN 0 262 66072 5 Retrieved November 28 2011 During the 1250s the Mongols invaded Iran with whole regiments of Chinese engineers operating trebuchets catapults throwing gunpowder bombs Their progress was rapid and devastating until after the sack of Baghdad in 1258 they entered Syria There they met an Islamic army similarly equipped and experienced their first defeat In 1291 the same sort of weapon was used during the siege of Acre when the European Crusaders were expelled form Palestine Chahryar Adle Irfan Habib 2003 Ahmad Hasan Dani Chahryar Adle Irfan Habib eds History of Civilizations of Central Asia Development in contrast from the sixteenth to the mid nineteenth century Vol 5 illustrated ed UNESCO p 474 ISBN 92 3 103876 1 Retrieved November 28 2011 Indeed it is possible that gunpowder devices including Chinese mortar huochong had reached Central Asia through the Mongols as early as the thirteenth century 71 Yet the potential remained unexploited even Sultan Husayn s use of cannon may have had Ottoman inspiration Arnold Pacey 1991 Technology in world civilization a thousand year history reprint illustrated ed MIT Press p 46 ISBN 0 262 66072 5 Retrieved November 28 2011 The presence of these individuals in China in the 1270s and the deployment of Chinese engineers in Iran mean that there were several routes by which information about gunpowder weapons could pass from the Islamic world to China or vice versa Thus when two authors from the eastern Mediterranean region wrote books about gunpowder weapons around the year 1280 it is not surprising that they described bombs rockets and fire lances very similar to some types of Chinese weaponry Josef W Meri 2005 Josef W Meri ed Medieval Islamic Civilization An Encyclopedia Psychology Press p 510 ISBN 0 415 96690 6 Retrieved November 28 2011 This called for the employment of engineers to engaged in mining operations to build siege engines and artillery and to concoct and use incendiary and explosive devices For instance Hulagu who led Mongol forces into the Middle East during the second wave of the invasions in 1250 had with him a thousand squads of engineers evidently of north Han Chinese or perhaps Khitan provenance Josef W Meri Jere L Bacharach 2006 Josef W Meri Jere L Bacharach eds Medieval Islamic Civilization L Z index Vol 2 illustrated ed Taylor amp Francis p 510 ISBN 0 415 96692 2 Retrieved November 28 2011 This called for the employment of engineers to engaged in mining operations to build siege engines and artillery and to concoct and use incendiary and explosive devices For instance Hulagu who led Mongol forces into the Middle East during the second wave of the invasions in 1250 had with him a thousand squads of engineers evidently of north Chinese or perhaps Khitan provenance Lillian Craig Harris 1993 China considers the Middle East illustrated ed Tauris p 26 ISBN 1 85043 598 7 Retrieved June 28 2010 Gloria Skurzynski 2010 This Is Rocket Science True Stories of the Risk Taking Scientists Who Figure Out Ways to Explore Beyond Earth illustrated ed National Geographic Books p 1958 ISBN 978 1 4263 0597 9 Retrieved November 28 2011 In A D 1232 an army of 30 000 Mongol warriors invaded the Chinese city of Kai fung fu where the Chinese fought back with fire arrows Mongol leaders learned from their enemies and found ways to make fire arrows even more deadly as their invasion spread toward Europe On Christmas Day 1241 Mongol troops used fire arrows to capture the city of Budapest in Hungary and in 1258 to capture the city of Baghdad in what s now Iraq Colin A Ronan 1995 The Shorter Science and Civilisation in China Vol 5 illustrated ed Cambridge University Press p 250 ISBN 0 521 46773 X Retrieved November 28 2011 Moreover many Chinese were in the first wave of the Mongolian conquest of Iran and Iraq a Han general Guo Kan was first governor of Baghdad after its capture in ad 1258 As the Mongols had a habit of destroying irrigation and Original from the University of Michigan Thomas Francis Carter 1955 The invention of printing in China and its spread westward 2 ed Ronald Press Co p 174 ISBN 9780608113135 Retrieved November 28 2011 The name of this Chinese general was Kuo K an Mongol Kuka Ilka He commanded the right flank of the Mongol army in its advance on Baghdad and remained in charge of the city after its surrender His life in Chinese has been preserved Thomas Francis Carter 1955 The invention of printing in China and its spread westward 2 ed Ronald Press Co p 171 ISBN 9780608113135 Retrieved June 28 2010 Chinese influences soon made themselves strongly felt in Hulagu s dominions A Han general was made the first governor of Baghdad 5 and Chinese engineers were employed to improve the irrigation of the Tigris Euphrates basin Jacques Gernet 1996 A history of Chinese civilization Cambridge University Press p 377 ISBN 0 521 49781 7 Retrieved October 28 2010 Lillian Craig Harris 1993 China considers the Middle East illustrated ed Tauris p 26 ISBN 1 85043 598 7 Retrieved June 28 2010 The first governor of Baghdad under the new regime was Guo Kan a Han general who had commanded the Mongols right flank in the siege of Baghdad Irrigation works in the Tigris Euphrates basin were improved by Chinese engineers Original from the University of Michigan Hyunhee Park August 27 2012 Mapping the Chinese and Islamic Worlds Cross Cultural Exchange in Pre Modern Asia Cambridge University Press pp 126 ISBN 978 1 139 53662 2 ʻAla al Din ʻAṭa Malek Joveyni 1958 The history of the World Conqueror Harvard University Press p 631 Journal of Asian History O Harrassowitz 1998 p 20 Mansura Haidar Aligarh Muslim University Centre of Advanced Study in History September 1 2004 Medieval Central Asia polity economy and military organization fourteenth to sixteenth centuries Manohar Publishers Distributors p 325 ISBN 978 81 7304 554 7 Wright David Curtis 2008 Ferris John ed NOMADIC POWER SEDENTARY SECURITY AND THE CROSSBOW Calgary Papers in Military and Strategic Studies Military Studies and History Centre for Military and Strategic Studies 2 86 ISBN 978 0 88953 324 0 Ala ad Din Ata Malik Juvaini 1958 The history of the world conqueror Vol II Harvard University Press pp 630 631 Wright David C The Sung Kitan War of A D 1004 1005 and the Treaty of Shan Yuan Journal of Asian History vol 32 no 1 1998 p 20 JSTOR 41933065 Peter Willey 2001 The Castles of the Assassins Linden Pub p 166 ISBN 978 0 941936 64 4 Haw Stephen G July 2013 The Mongol Empire the first gunpowder empire Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 23 3 458 doi 10 1017 S1356186313000369 S2CID 162200994 Morris Rossabi 1983 China Among Equals The Middle Kingdom and Its Neighbors 10th 14th Centuries University of California Press pp 255 ISBN 978 0 520 04562 0 Halperin Charles J 2000 The Kipchak Connection The Ilkhans the Mamluks and Ayn Jalut Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies University of London 63 2 Cambridge University Press 235 JSTOR 1559539 Sinor Denis 1999 The Mingols in the West Journal of Asian History 33 1 Harrassowitz Verlag 1 44 JSTOR 41933117 David Nicolle January 2004 The Mongol Warlords Genghis Khan Kublai Khan Hulegu Tamerlane Brockhampton Press p 85 ISBN 978 1 86019 407 8 Arthur Thomas Hatto 1991 Archivum Eurasiae Medii Aevi Peter de Ridder Press p 36 Henry Yule 1915 Cathay and the Way Thither Being a Collection of Medieval Notices of China Asian Educational Services pp 187 ISBN 978 81 206 1966 1 Waterson James 2013 Defending Heaven China s Mongol Wars 1209 1370 Casemate Publishers ISBN 978 1783469437 Waterson James 2013 Defending Heaven China s Mongol Wars 1209 1370 Casemate Publishers ISBN 978 1783469437 Waterson James 2013 Defending Heaven China s Mongol Wars 1209 1370 Casemate Publishers ISBN 978 1783469437 Balfour Alan H Zheng Shiling 2002 Balfour Alan H ed Shanghai illustrated ed Wiley Academy p 25 ISBN 0471877336 Waterson James 2013 Defending Heaven China s Mongol Wars 1209 1370 Casemate Publishers ISBN 978 1783469437 Coatsworth John Cole Juan Ricardo Hanagan Michael P Perdue Peter C Tilly Charles Tilly Louise 2015 Global Connections Vol 1 of Global Connections Politics Exchange and Social Life in World History illustrated ed Cambridge University Press p 356 ISBN 978 0521191890 Man John 2013 Genghis Khan Life Death and Resurrection Macmillan ISBN 978 1466861565 Sources Edit Li Bo Zheng Yin 5000 years of Chinese history Inner Mongolian People s publishing corp 2001 ISBN 7 204 04420 7 Smith John Masson Jr January March 1998 Review Nomads on Ponies vs Slaves on Horses Journal of the American Oriental Society American Oriental Society 118 1 54 62 doi 10 2307 606298 JSTOR 606298 Wright David Curtis Mongol conquest of China in Gordon Martel ed The Encyclopedia of War First Edition Hoboken New Jersey Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mongol conquest of China amp oldid 1135258621, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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