fbpx
Wikipedia

Proto-Mongols

The proto-Mongols emerged from an area that had been inhabited by humans and predecessor hominin species as far back as 45,000 years ago during the Upper Paleolithic.[1] The people there went through the Bronze and Iron Ages, forming tribal alliances, peopling, and coming into conflict with early polities in the Central Plain.[citation needed]

The proto-Mongols formed various tribal kingdoms that fought against each other for supremacy, such as the Rouran Khaganate (330–555) until it was defeated by the Göktürks, who founded the First Turkic Khaganate (552–744), which in turn was subdued by the growing strength of the Tang dynasty. The destruction of the Uyghur Khaganate (744–848) by the Yenisei Kyrgyz resulted in the end of Turkic dominance on the Mongolian Plateau.

The para-Mongol Khitan people[2] founded a Chinese dynasty known as the Liao dynasty (916–1125) and ruled Mongolia and portions of the eastern coast of Siberia now known as the Russian Far East, northern Korea, and North China. Over the next few hundred years, the Jurchens in China subtly encouraged warfare among the Mongols as a way of keeping them distracted from invading China proper.[citation needed]

In the 12th century, Genghis Khan was able to unite or conquer the warring tribes, forging them into a unified fighting force that went on to create the largest contiguous empire in world history, the Mongol Empire, which was finally able to conquer the whole of China proper—beginning with his invasion of the Khitan-led Western Liao dynasty and the Tangut-led Western Xia dynasty, and ending with his grandson Kublai Khan's conquest of the Southern Song dynasty. Kublai then founded the Yuan dynasty of China in 1271.[3]

Origins

Archaeological evidence suggests that Upper Paleolithic hominins inhabited Mongolia as early as 45,000 years ago.[1]

By the first millennium BC, bronze-working peoples lived on the Mongolia Plateau. With the appearance of iron weapons by the 3rd century BC, the inhabitants of Mongolia had begun to form clan alliances and lived a hunter and herder lifestyle.

The origins of more modern inhabitants are found among the forest hunters and nomadic tribes of Inner Asia. They inhabited a great arc of land extending generally from the Korean Peninsula in the east, across the northern parts of China to present-day Kazakhstan and to the Pamir Mountains and Lake Balkash in the west. During most of recorded history, this has been an area of constant ferment from which emerged numerous migrations and invasions to the southeast (into China), to the southwest (into Transoxiana—modern Uzbekistan, Iran, and India), and to the west (across Scythia toward Europe).

By the eighth century BC, the inhabitants of western Mongolia evidently were nomadic Indo-European speakers, either Scythians or Yuezhi. In central and eastern parts of Mongolia were many other tribes, such as the Slab Grave culture and the Ordos culture.

Xiongnu

 
Location of Xiongnu and other steppe nations in 1 AD

According to a number of sources, one of the ancestors of the Mongols were the Xiongnu, although it is not yet known whether they were proto-Mongols.[4][citation needed]

The Xiongnu were a group of nomads who dominated the Asian steppe from the late 3rd century BC for more than 500 years. The Xiongnu invasions prompted the kingdoms of North China to begin erecting what later became the Great Wall.[5]

The identity of the ethnic core of Xiongnu has been a subject of varied hypotheses and some scholars, including A. Luvsandendev, Bernát Munkácsy, Henry Hoyle Howorth, Bolor Erike,[6] Alexey Okladnikov, Peter Simon Pallas, Isaac Jacob Schmidt, Hyacinth and Byambyn Rinchen,[7] insisted on a proto-Mongolian origin. There are several other theories about the ethnolinguistic identity of the Xiongnu, such as Turkic, Yeniseian, Iranian, Uralic, multiethnic.[4]

There are many cultural similarities between the Xiongnu and Mongols such as yurt on cart, mounted use of the composite bow, board game, horn bow and long song.[8] The Mongolian long song is believed to date back at least 2000 years.[9] A mythical origin of the long song is mentioned in the Book of Wei, volume 113.

Donghu, Tuoba, and Rouran

 
The proto-Mongolic Xianbei and other steppe nations around 200 AD
 
The Rouran Khaganate and contemporary continental Asian polities c. 500 AD

The Donghu (or Tung Hu, the Eastern Hu), a proto-Mongol and/or Tunguz group mentioned in Chinese histories as existing as early as the 4th century BC. The language of the Donghu, unlike that of the Xiongnu, is believed by modern scholars to be proto-Mongolic. The Donghu were among the first peoples conquered by the Xiongnu. By the 1st century AD, the Donghu had split, along geographical lines in two: the proto-Mongolic Xianbei in the north and the Wuhuan in the south. After the Xiongnu were driven back into their homeland by the Chinese (48 AD), the Xianbei (in particular) began moving (from apparently the north or northwest) into the region vacated by the Xiongnu.

By the 2nd century AD, the Xianbei had begun attacking Chinese farms south of the Great Wall, established an empire, which, although short-lived, gave rise to numerous tribal states along the Chinese frontier. Among these states was that of the Tuoba, a subgroup of the Xianbei, in modern China's Shanxi Province. The Wuhuan also were prominent in the 2nd century, but they disappeared thereafter; possibly they were absorbed in the Xianbei western expansion. The Xianbei and the Wuhuan used mounted archers in warfare, and they had only temporary war leaders instead of hereditary chiefs. Agriculture, rather than full-scale nomadism, was the basis of their economy. In the 6th century, the Wuhuan were driven out of Inner Asia into the Russian[clarification needed] steppe.

Chinese control of parts of Inner Asia did not last beyond the opening years of the 2nd century AD, and, as the Eastern Han Dynasty ended early in the 3rd century AD, suzerainty was limited primarily to the Gansu corridor. The Xianbei were able to make forays into a China beset with internal unrest and political disintegration. By 317 all of China north of the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang) had been overrun by nomadic peoples: the Xianbei from the north; some remnants of the Xiongnu from the northwest; and the Chiang people of Gansu and Tibet (present-day China's Xizang Autonomous Region) from the west and the southwest. Chaos prevailed as these groups warred with each other and repulsed the vain efforts of the fragmented Chinese kingdoms south of the Yangtze River to reconquer the region.

By the end of the 4th century, the region between the Yangtze and the Gobi, including much of modern Xinjiang, was dominated by the Tuoba. Emerging as the partially sinicized state of Dai between AD 338 and 376 in the Shanxi area, the Tuoba established control over the region as the Northern Wei Dynasty (AD 386–533). Northern Wei armies drove back the Ruruan (referred to as Ruanruan or Juan-Juan by Chinese chroniclers), a newly arising nomadic Mongol people in the steppes north of the Altai Mountains, and reconstructed the Great Wall. During the 4th century also, the Huns left the steppes north of the Aral Sea to invade Europe[dubious ]. By the middle of the 5th century, Northern Wei had penetrated into the Tarim Basin in Inner Asia, as had the Chinese in the 2nd century. As the empire grew, however, Tuoba tribal customs were supplanted by those of the Chinese, an evolution not accepted by all Tuoba.

The Ruruan, only temporarily repelled by Northern Wei, had driven the Xiongnu toward the Ural Mountains and the Caspian Sea and were making raids into China. In the late 5th century, the Ruruan established a powerful nomadic empire spreading generally farther north of Northern Wei. It was probably the Ruruan who first used the title khan.

Rise of the Göktürks

 
Asia in AD 565, showing Göktürk Khaganate and its neighbors

Northern Wei was disintegrating rapidly because of revolts of semi-tribal Tuoba military forces that were opposed to being sinicized, when disaster struck the flourishing Rouran Khaganate. The Göktürks, known as Tujue to Chinese chroniclers, revolted against their Ruruan rulers. The uprising began in the Altai Mountains, where many of the Türk were serfs working the iron mines. Thus, from the outset of their revolt, they had the advantage of controlling what had been one of the major bases of Ruruan power. Between 546 and 553, the Göktürks overthrew the Ruruan and established themselves as the most powerful force in North Asia and Inner Asia. This was the beginning of a pattern of conquest that was to have a significant effect upon Eurasian history for more than 1,000 years.[clarification needed] The Göktürks were the first people to use this later widespread name. They are also the earliest Inner Asian people whose language is known[citation needed], because they left behind inscriptions in a runic-like Orkhon script, which was deciphered in 1896.

It was not long before the tribes in the region north of the Gobi—the Eastern Göktürks—were following invasion routes into China proper used in previous centuries by Xiongnu, Xianbei, Tuoba, and Ruruan. Like their predecessors who had inhabited the mountains and the steppes, the attention of the Göktürks quickly was attracted by the wealth of China proper. At first these new raiders encountered little resistance, but toward the end of the 6th century, as China proper slowly began to recover from centuries of disunity, border defenses stiffened. The original Göktürk state split into eastern and western parts, with some of the Eastern Göktürk acknowledging Sui overlordship.

For a brief period at the beginning of the 7th century, a new consolidation of the Göktürks, under the Western Göktürk ruler Tardu, again threatened China proper. In 601 Tardu's army besieged Chang'an (modern Xi'an), then the capital of the Sui dynasty. Tardu was turned back, however, and, upon his death two years later, the Göktürk state again fragmented. The Eastern Göktürk nonetheless continued their depredations, occasionally threatening Chang'an.

Tang Dynasty and the Uyghur Empire

 
Asia in 800 AD, showing the Uyghur Khaganate and its neighbors

From 629 to 648, a reunited China proper under the Tang dynasty (618-907) destroyed the power of the Eastern Göktürk north of the Gobi; established suzerainty over the Khitans, a semi-nomadic proto-Mongol people who lived in areas that became the modern Chinese provinces of Heilongjiang and Jilin; and formed an alliance with the Uyghurs, who inhabited the region between the Altai Mountains and Lake Balkash. Between 641 and 648, the Tang conquered the Western Göktürk, reestablishing Chinese control over Xinjiang and exacting tribute from west of the Pamir Mountains. The Göktürk empire finally ended in 744.

For half a century, the Tang retained control of Central Asia and modern-day Mongolia and parts of Inner Asia. Both sides of the Great Wall came under Tang rule. During this period, the Tang expanded Chinese control into the Oxus Valley. At the same time, their allies, the Uyghurs, conquered much of western and northern Mongolia until, by the middle of the 8th century, the Uyghur seminomadic empire extended from Lake Balkash to Lake Baykal.

Despite these crippling losses,[clarification needed] the Tang recovered and, with considerable Uyghur assistance, held their frontiers. Tang dependence upon their northern allies was apparently a source of embarrassment for its rulers, who surreptitiously encouraged the Kirghiz and the Karluks to attack the Uyghurs, driving them south into the Tarim Basin. As a result of the Kirghiz action, the Uyghur empire collapsed in 846. Some of the Uyghurs emigrated to the Turpan Depression, where they established the Kingdom of Qocho that freely submitted to Genghis Khan several centuries later. Ironically, this weakening of the Uyghurs undoubtedly hastened the decline and fall of the Tang Dynasty over the next fifty years.

Khitan and Jurchen

 
Asia in 900 AD, showing location of the Khitan people and their neighbors
 
The Liao dynasty and main polities in Asia c. 1100

Free of Uyghur restraint, the Para-Mongolic Khitan expanded in all directions in the latter half of the 9th century and the early years of the 10th century. By 925 the Khitan ruled eastern Mongolia, most of Manchuria, and the Sixteen Prefectures of northern China. By the middle of the 10th century, Khitan chieftains had declared themselves as Chinese emperors and chose a dynastic name in the Chinese fashion; their rule was known as the Liao dynasty (916–1125).

The period of the 11th and 12th centuries was one of consolidation[dubious ], preceding the most momentous era in Mongol history, the era of Genghis Khan. During those centuries, the vast region of deserts, mountains, and grazing land was inhabited by people resembling each other in racial, cultural, and linguistic characteristics; ethnologically they were essentially Mongol[citation needed]. The similarities[citation needed] among the Mongols, Göktürk, and Tatars who inhabited this region cause considerable ethnic and historical confusion. Generally, the Mongols and the closely related Tatars inhabited the northern and the eastern areas; the Göktürk (who already had begun to spread over western Asia and Eastern Europe) were in the west and the southwest; the Tangut, who were more closely related to the Tibetans than were the other nomads and who were not a Turkic people, were in eastern Xinjiang, Gansu, and western Inner Mongolia. The Liao state was homogeneous, and the Khitan had begun to lose their nomadic characteristics. The Khitan built cities and exerted dominion over their agricultural subjects as a means of consolidating their empire. To the west and the northwest of Liao were many other Mongol tribes, linked together in various tenuous alliances and groupings, but with little national cohesiveness. In Gansu and eastern Xinjiang, the Tangut—who had taken advantage of the Tang decline—had formed a state, Western Xia (1038–1227), nominally under Song suzerainty. Xinjiang was dominated by the Uyghurs, who were loosely allied with the Song dynasty.

The people of Mongolia at this time were predominantly spirit worshipers, with shamans providing spiritual and religious guidance to the people and tribal leaders. There had been infusion of Buddhism.

A Tungusic people, the Jurchen, ancestors of the Manchu, formed an alliance with the Song and reduced the Liao dynasty to vassal status in a seven-year war (1115–1122). The Jurchen leader proclaimed himself the founder of a new Chinese dynasty, the Jin dynasty. Scarcely pausing in their conquests, the Tungusic Jurchen subdued neighboring Goryeo (Korea) in 1226[citation needed] and invaded the territory of their former allies, the Song, to precipitate a series of wars with China that continued through the remainder of the century. Meanwhile, the defeated Liao ruler had fled with the small remnant of his army to the Tarim Basin, where he allied himself with the Uyghurs and established the Qara Khitai state (known also as the Western Liao dynasty, 1124–1234), which soon controlled both sides of the Pamir Mountains. The Jurchen turned their attention to the Mongols who, in 1139 and in 1147, warded them off[citation needed].

Shiwei and Menggu

Some Shiwei tribes, though little is known, have been considered the ancestors of the Mongols according to ancient Chinese records[citation needed]. Term "Shiwei" was an umbrella term of the Mongolic and some Tungusic peoples in the 6th to 12th centuries. During the 5th century, they occupied the area east of the Greater Khingan Range, what is the Hulun Buir, Ergune, Nonni (Noon), Middle Amur, and the Zeya Watersheds. They may have been divided into five to twenty tribes. They were said to be dressed in fish skins. They may have been nomadic, staying in the marshy lowlands in the winter and the mountains during the summer. The burial was by exposure in trees. Their language is described as being similar to Manchu-Tungusic languages and Khitan. The Türk dynasties (550-740) installed tuduns, or governors over the Shiwei and collected tribute. Other Shiwei may have stayed and become the Ewenkis. The Kitans conquered the Shiwei during the late 9th century. One Shiwei tribe, living near the Amur and Ergune rivers, was called the "Menggu" (Mongol)[citation needed]. A few scholars believe they, other Shiwei tribes, and many other peoples from the area moved west from the forest to the Mongolian proper steppe[citation needed].

States established by proto-Mongols

The proto-Mongols founded many states such as the Xianbei state, the Rouran Khaganate, and the Liao dynasty.[10][11][12]

Name Years Area Map Capital
Bida state
(Our state)[13]
Xianbei
Xianbei state 93–234   Orda,
Khangai Mountains,
Mongolia
Western Qin 385–431 Yongshicheng (385-386)
Wanchuan (386-388, 400, 410–412)

Jincheng (388-395)
Xicheng (395-400)
Dujianshan (409-410)
Tanjiao (412)
Fuhan (412-429)
Dinglian (429-430)
Nan'an (430-431)

Murong Xianbei
Former Yan 337–370 Jicheng (337-341)
Longcheng (341-350)
Jicheng (350-357)
Yecheng (357-370)
Western Yan 384–394 Chang'an (385-386)
Zhangzi (386-394)
Later Yan 384–409   Zhongshan (386-397)
Longcheng (397-409)
Tuyuhun 284–672   Fuqi
Tuoba Xianbei states
Southern Liang 397–414   Lianchuan (397-399)
Ledu (399, 402–406, 410–414)
Xiping (399-402)
Guzang (406-410)
Dai 315–377 Shengle
Northern Wei 386–535 2,000,000 km2(450)[14]   Shengle (386-398,
capital of former
Dai, near modern Huhhot)
Pingcheng (398-493)
Luoyang (493-534)
Chang'an (534-535)
Eastern Wei 534–550 1,000,000 km2(550 AD)[14]   Luoyang (534)
Yecheng (534-550)
Western Wei 535–557 1,300,000 km2(557 AD)[14] Chang'an
Yuwen Xianbei
Northern Zhou 557–581 1,500,000 km2(577 AD)[14]   Chang'an
Rouran
Rouran Khaganate 330–555 4,000,000 km2(405 AD)[14][15]   Mumo City, in Mongolia
Khitans (sometimes considered to be Para-Mongolic)
Liao dynasty 907–1125 2,600,000 km2(947)[15][16]
4,000,000 km2(1111)
  Shangjing
Dongdan Kingdom 926–936
Northern Liao 1122–1123
Western Liao (Qara Khitai) 1124/1125–1221 2,500,000 km2(1210)[15]   Balasagun
Eastern Liao 1211–1220
Later Liao 1216–1219
Qutlugh-Khanid dynasty 1220s–1306
Kumo Xi (Tatabi)
Great Xi 1123

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b Zwyns, Nicolas; et al. (August 2019). "The Northern Route for Human dispersal in Central and Northeast Asia: New evidence from the site of Tolbor-16, Mongolia". Scientific Reports. 9 (1): 11759. Bibcode:2019NatSR...911759Z. doi:10.1038/s41598-019-47972-1. PMC 6692324. PMID 31409814.
  2. ^ Janhunen, Juha (2014). Mongolian. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. p. 4. ISBN 9789027238252.
  3. ^ "Kublai Khan".
  4. ^ a b Дёрфер Г. (2011). "О языке гуннов" (PDF) (Научный Татарстан. Гуманитарные науки ed.). Казань. Печатается по: Дёрфер Г. О языке гуннов / пер. с нем. В. Г. Гузева: 183–190. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  5. ^ "Xiongnu | People & History". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2021-03-29.
  6. ^ Rashpunstag (1776) "The Crystal Beads"
  7. ^ Ts. Baasansuren "The scholar who showed the true Mongolia to the world", Summer 2010 vol.6 (14) Mongolica, pp.40
  8. ^ Н.Сэр-Оджав, Монголын эртний түүх. 1977
  9. ^ Mongolian traditional folk song UNESCO.org
  10. ^ Janhunen 2003b, pp. 391–394.
  11. ^ Janhunen 2003a, pp. 1–3.
  12. ^ Andrews 1999, p. 72.
  13. ^ The Blue Chronicle, Vanchinbalyn Injinash
  14. ^ a b c d e Rein Taagepera "Size and Duration of Empires: Growth-Decline Curves, 600 B.C. to 600 A.D.", Social Science History Vol. 3, 115-138 (1979)
  15. ^ a b c Jonathan M. Adams, Thomas D. Hall and Peter Turchin (2006). East-West Orientation of Historical Empires.Journal of World-Systems Research (University of Connecticut). 12 (no. 2): 219–229.
  16. ^ Rein Taagepera (September 1997). "Expansion and Contraction Patterns of Large Polities: Context for Russia". International Studies Quarterly 41 (3): 475–504.

Sources

  • Atwood, Christopher (2004). The Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire.
  •   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain. "Mongolia". Country Studies. Federal Research Division. publication link as of 10 December 2021

proto, mongols, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding,. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages 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 Proto Mongols news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The proto Mongols emerged from an area that had been inhabited by humans and predecessor hominin species as far back as 45 000 years ago during the Upper Paleolithic 1 The people there went through the Bronze and Iron Ages forming tribal alliances peopling and coming into conflict with early polities in the Central Plain citation needed The proto Mongols formed various tribal kingdoms that fought against each other for supremacy such as the Rouran Khaganate 330 555 until it was defeated by the Gokturks who founded the First Turkic Khaganate 552 744 which in turn was subdued by the growing strength of the Tang dynasty The destruction of the Uyghur Khaganate 744 848 by the Yenisei Kyrgyz resulted in the end of Turkic dominance on the Mongolian Plateau The para Mongol Khitan people 2 founded a Chinese dynasty known as the Liao dynasty 916 1125 and ruled Mongolia and portions of the eastern coast of Siberia now known as the Russian Far East northern Korea and North China Over the next few hundred years the Jurchens in China subtly encouraged warfare among the Mongols as a way of keeping them distracted from invading China proper citation needed In the 12th century Genghis Khan was able to unite or conquer the warring tribes forging them into a unified fighting force that went on to create the largest contiguous empire in world history the Mongol Empire which was finally able to conquer the whole of China proper beginning with his invasion of the Khitan led Western Liao dynasty and the Tangut led Western Xia dynasty and ending with his grandson Kublai Khan s conquest of the Southern Song dynasty Kublai then founded the Yuan dynasty of China in 1271 3 Contents 1 Origins 2 Xiongnu 3 Donghu Tuoba and Rouran 4 Rise of the Gokturks 5 Tang Dynasty and the Uyghur Empire 6 Khitan and Jurchen 7 Shiwei and Menggu 8 States established by proto Mongols 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 SourcesOrigins EditArchaeological evidence suggests that Upper Paleolithic hominins inhabited Mongolia as early as 45 000 years ago 1 By the first millennium BC bronze working peoples lived on the Mongolia Plateau With the appearance of iron weapons by the 3rd century BC the inhabitants of Mongolia had begun to form clan alliances and lived a hunter and herder lifestyle The origins of more modern inhabitants are found among the forest hunters and nomadic tribes of Inner Asia They inhabited a great arc of land extending generally from the Korean Peninsula in the east across the northern parts of China to present day Kazakhstan and to the Pamir Mountains and Lake Balkash in the west During most of recorded history this has been an area of constant ferment from which emerged numerous migrations and invasions to the southeast into China to the southwest into Transoxiana modern Uzbekistan Iran and India and to the west across Scythia toward Europe By the eighth century BC the inhabitants of western Mongolia evidently were nomadic Indo European speakers either Scythians or Yuezhi In central and eastern parts of Mongolia were many other tribes such as the Slab Grave culture and the Ordos culture Xiongnu Edit Location of Xiongnu and other steppe nations in 1 ADAccording to a number of sources one of the ancestors of the Mongols were the Xiongnu although it is not yet known whether they were proto Mongols 4 citation needed The Xiongnu were a group of nomads who dominated the Asian steppe from the late 3rd century BC for more than 500 years The Xiongnu invasions prompted the kingdoms of North China to begin erecting what later became the Great Wall 5 The identity of the ethnic core of Xiongnu has been a subject of varied hypotheses and some scholars including A Luvsandendev Bernat Munkacsy Henry Hoyle Howorth Bolor Erike 6 Alexey Okladnikov Peter Simon Pallas Isaac Jacob Schmidt Hyacinth and Byambyn Rinchen 7 insisted on a proto Mongolian origin There are several other theories about the ethnolinguistic identity of the Xiongnu such as Turkic Yeniseian Iranian Uralic multiethnic 4 There are many cultural similarities between the Xiongnu and Mongols such as yurt on cart mounted use of the composite bow board game horn bow and long song 8 The Mongolian long song is believed to date back at least 2000 years 9 A mythical origin of the long song is mentioned in the Book of Wei volume 113 Donghu Tuoba and Rouran EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The proto Mongolic Xianbei and other steppe nations around 200 AD The Rouran Khaganate and contemporary continental Asian polities c 500 ADThe Donghu or Tung Hu the Eastern Hu a proto Mongol and or Tunguz group mentioned in Chinese histories as existing as early as the 4th century BC The language of the Donghu unlike that of the Xiongnu is believed by modern scholars to be proto Mongolic The Donghu were among the first peoples conquered by the Xiongnu By the 1st century AD the Donghu had split along geographical lines in two the proto Mongolic Xianbei in the north and the Wuhuan in the south After the Xiongnu were driven back into their homeland by the Chinese 48 AD the Xianbei in particular began moving from apparently the north or northwest into the region vacated by the Xiongnu By the 2nd century AD the Xianbei had begun attacking Chinese farms south of the Great Wall established an empire which although short lived gave rise to numerous tribal states along the Chinese frontier Among these states was that of the Tuoba a subgroup of the Xianbei in modern China s Shanxi Province The Wuhuan also were prominent in the 2nd century but they disappeared thereafter possibly they were absorbed in the Xianbei western expansion The Xianbei and the Wuhuan used mounted archers in warfare and they had only temporary war leaders instead of hereditary chiefs Agriculture rather than full scale nomadism was the basis of their economy In the 6th century the Wuhuan were driven out of Inner Asia into the Russian clarification needed steppe Chinese control of parts of Inner Asia did not last beyond the opening years of the 2nd century AD and as the Eastern Han Dynasty ended early in the 3rd century AD suzerainty was limited primarily to the Gansu corridor The Xianbei were able to make forays into a China beset with internal unrest and political disintegration By 317 all of China north of the Yangtze River Chang Jiang had been overrun by nomadic peoples the Xianbei from the north some remnants of the Xiongnu from the northwest and the Chiang people of Gansu and Tibet present day China s Xizang Autonomous Region from the west and the southwest Chaos prevailed as these groups warred with each other and repulsed the vain efforts of the fragmented Chinese kingdoms south of the Yangtze River to reconquer the region By the end of the 4th century the region between the Yangtze and the Gobi including much of modern Xinjiang was dominated by the Tuoba Emerging as the partially sinicized state of Dai between AD 338 and 376 in the Shanxi area the Tuoba established control over the region as the Northern Wei Dynasty AD 386 533 Northern Wei armies drove back the Ruruan referred to as Ruanruan or Juan Juan by Chinese chroniclers a newly arising nomadic Mongol people in the steppes north of the Altai Mountains and reconstructed the Great Wall During the 4th century also the Huns left the steppes north of the Aral Sea to invade Europe dubious discuss By the middle of the 5th century Northern Wei had penetrated into the Tarim Basin in Inner Asia as had the Chinese in the 2nd century As the empire grew however Tuoba tribal customs were supplanted by those of the Chinese an evolution not accepted by all Tuoba The Ruruan only temporarily repelled by Northern Wei had driven the Xiongnu toward the Ural Mountains and the Caspian Sea and were making raids into China In the late 5th century the Ruruan established a powerful nomadic empire spreading generally farther north of Northern Wei It was probably the Ruruan who first used the title khan Rise of the Gokturks EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Asia in AD 565 showing Gokturk Khaganate and its neighborsNorthern Wei was disintegrating rapidly because of revolts of semi tribal Tuoba military forces that were opposed to being sinicized when disaster struck the flourishing Rouran Khaganate The Gokturks known as Tujue to Chinese chroniclers revolted against their Ruruan rulers The uprising began in the Altai Mountains where many of the Turk were serfs working the iron mines Thus from the outset of their revolt they had the advantage of controlling what had been one of the major bases of Ruruan power Between 546 and 553 the Gokturks overthrew the Ruruan and established themselves as the most powerful force in North Asia and Inner Asia This was the beginning of a pattern of conquest that was to have a significant effect upon Eurasian history for more than 1 000 years clarification needed The Gokturks were the first people to use this later widespread name They are also the earliest Inner Asian people whose language is known citation needed because they left behind inscriptions in a runic like Orkhon script which was deciphered in 1896 It was not long before the tribes in the region north of the Gobi the Eastern Gokturks were following invasion routes into China proper used in previous centuries by Xiongnu Xianbei Tuoba and Ruruan Like their predecessors who had inhabited the mountains and the steppes the attention of the Gokturks quickly was attracted by the wealth of China proper At first these new raiders encountered little resistance but toward the end of the 6th century as China proper slowly began to recover from centuries of disunity border defenses stiffened The original Gokturk state split into eastern and western parts with some of the Eastern Gokturk acknowledging Sui overlordship For a brief period at the beginning of the 7th century a new consolidation of the Gokturks under the Western Gokturk ruler Tardu again threatened China proper In 601 Tardu s army besieged Chang an modern Xi an then the capital of the Sui dynasty Tardu was turned back however and upon his death two years later the Gokturk state again fragmented The Eastern Gokturk nonetheless continued their depredations occasionally threatening Chang an Tang Dynasty and the Uyghur Empire EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Asia in 800 AD showing the Uyghur Khaganate and its neighborsFrom 629 to 648 a reunited China proper under the Tang dynasty 618 907 destroyed the power of the Eastern Gokturk north of the Gobi established suzerainty over the Khitans a semi nomadic proto Mongol people who lived in areas that became the modern Chinese provinces of Heilongjiang and Jilin and formed an alliance with the Uyghurs who inhabited the region between the Altai Mountains and Lake Balkash Between 641 and 648 the Tang conquered the Western Gokturk reestablishing Chinese control over Xinjiang and exacting tribute from west of the Pamir Mountains The Gokturk empire finally ended in 744 For half a century the Tang retained control of Central Asia and modern day Mongolia and parts of Inner Asia Both sides of the Great Wall came under Tang rule During this period the Tang expanded Chinese control into the Oxus Valley At the same time their allies the Uyghurs conquered much of western and northern Mongolia until by the middle of the 8th century the Uyghur seminomadic empire extended from Lake Balkash to Lake Baykal Despite these crippling losses clarification needed the Tang recovered and with considerable Uyghur assistance held their frontiers Tang dependence upon their northern allies was apparently a source of embarrassment for its rulers who surreptitiously encouraged the Kirghiz and the Karluks to attack the Uyghurs driving them south into the Tarim Basin As a result of the Kirghiz action the Uyghur empire collapsed in 846 Some of the Uyghurs emigrated to the Turpan Depression where they established the Kingdom of Qocho that freely submitted to Genghis Khan several centuries later Ironically this weakening of the Uyghurs undoubtedly hastened the decline and fall of the Tang Dynasty over the next fifty years Khitan and Jurchen EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Asia in 900 AD showing location of the Khitan people and their neighbors The Liao dynasty and main polities in Asia c 1100Free of Uyghur restraint the Para Mongolic Khitan expanded in all directions in the latter half of the 9th century and the early years of the 10th century By 925 the Khitan ruled eastern Mongolia most of Manchuria and the Sixteen Prefectures of northern China By the middle of the 10th century Khitan chieftains had declared themselves as Chinese emperors and chose a dynastic name in the Chinese fashion their rule was known as the Liao dynasty 916 1125 The period of the 11th and 12th centuries was one of consolidation dubious discuss preceding the most momentous era in Mongol history the era of Genghis Khan During those centuries the vast region of deserts mountains and grazing land was inhabited by people resembling each other in racial cultural and linguistic characteristics ethnologically they were essentially Mongol citation needed The similarities citation needed among the Mongols Gokturk and Tatars who inhabited this region cause considerable ethnic and historical confusion Generally the Mongols and the closely related Tatars inhabited the northern and the eastern areas the Gokturk who already had begun to spread over western Asia and Eastern Europe were in the west and the southwest the Tangut who were more closely related to the Tibetans than were the other nomads and who were not a Turkic people were in eastern Xinjiang Gansu and western Inner Mongolia The Liao state was homogeneous and the Khitan had begun to lose their nomadic characteristics The Khitan built cities and exerted dominion over their agricultural subjects as a means of consolidating their empire To the west and the northwest of Liao were many other Mongol tribes linked together in various tenuous alliances and groupings but with little national cohesiveness In Gansu and eastern Xinjiang the Tangut who had taken advantage of the Tang decline had formed a state Western Xia 1038 1227 nominally under Song suzerainty Xinjiang was dominated by the Uyghurs who were loosely allied with the Song dynasty The people of Mongolia at this time were predominantly spirit worshipers with shamans providing spiritual and religious guidance to the people and tribal leaders There had been infusion of Buddhism A Tungusic people the Jurchen ancestors of the Manchu formed an alliance with the Song and reduced the Liao dynasty to vassal status in a seven year war 1115 1122 The Jurchen leader proclaimed himself the founder of a new Chinese dynasty the Jin dynasty Scarcely pausing in their conquests the Tungusic Jurchen subdued neighboring Goryeo Korea in 1226 citation needed and invaded the territory of their former allies the Song to precipitate a series of wars with China that continued through the remainder of the century Meanwhile the defeated Liao ruler had fled with the small remnant of his army to the Tarim Basin where he allied himself with the Uyghurs and established the Qara Khitai state known also as the Western Liao dynasty 1124 1234 which soon controlled both sides of the Pamir Mountains The Jurchen turned their attention to the Mongols who in 1139 and in 1147 warded them off citation needed Shiwei and Menggu EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Some Shiwei tribes though little is known have been considered the ancestors of the Mongols according to ancient Chinese records citation needed Term Shiwei was an umbrella term of the Mongolic and some Tungusic peoples in the 6th to 12th centuries During the 5th century they occupied the area east of the Greater Khingan Range what is the Hulun Buir Ergune Nonni Noon Middle Amur and the Zeya Watersheds They may have been divided into five to twenty tribes They were said to be dressed in fish skins They may have been nomadic staying in the marshy lowlands in the winter and the mountains during the summer The burial was by exposure in trees Their language is described as being similar to Manchu Tungusic languages and Khitan The Turk dynasties 550 740 installed tuduns or governors over the Shiwei and collected tribute Other Shiwei may have stayed and become the Ewenkis The Kitans conquered the Shiwei during the late 9th century One Shiwei tribe living near the Amur and Ergune rivers was called the Menggu Mongol citation needed A few scholars believe they other Shiwei tribes and many other peoples from the area moved west from the forest to the Mongolian proper steppe citation needed States established by proto Mongols EditThe proto Mongols founded many states such as the Xianbei state the Rouran Khaganate and the Liao dynasty 10 11 12 Name Years Area Map CapitalBida state Our state 13 XianbeiXianbei state 93 234 Orda Khangai Mountains MongoliaWestern Qin 385 431 Yongshicheng 385 386 Wanchuan 386 388 400 410 412 Jincheng 388 395 Xicheng 395 400 Dujianshan 409 410 Tanjiao 412 Fuhan 412 429 Dinglian 429 430 Nan an 430 431 Murong XianbeiFormer Yan 337 370 Jicheng 337 341 Longcheng 341 350 Jicheng 350 357 Yecheng 357 370 Western Yan 384 394 Chang an 385 386 Zhangzi 386 394 Later Yan 384 409 Zhongshan 386 397 Longcheng 397 409 Tuyuhun 284 672 FuqiTuoba Xianbei statesSouthern Liang 397 414 Lianchuan 397 399 Ledu 399 402 406 410 414 Xiping 399 402 Guzang 406 410 Dai 315 377 ShengleNorthern Wei 386 535 2 000 000 km2 450 14 Shengle 386 398 capital of formerDai near modern Huhhot Pingcheng 398 493 Luoyang 493 534 Chang an 534 535 Eastern Wei 534 550 1 000 000 km2 550 AD 14 Luoyang 534 Yecheng 534 550 Western Wei 535 557 1 300 000 km2 557 AD 14 Chang anYuwen XianbeiNorthern Zhou 557 581 1 500 000 km2 577 AD 14 Chang anRouranRouran Khaganate 330 555 4 000 000 km2 405 AD 14 15 Mumo City in MongoliaKhitans sometimes considered to be Para Mongolic Liao dynasty 907 1125 2 600 000 km2 947 15 16 4 000 000 km2 1111 ShangjingDongdan Kingdom 926 936Northern Liao 1122 1123Western Liao Qara Khitai 1124 1125 1221 2 500 000 km2 1210 15 BalasagunEastern Liao 1211 1220Later Liao 1216 1219Qutlugh Khanid dynasty 1220s 1306Kumo Xi Tatabi Great Xi 1123See also EditList of Mongol states List of medieval Mongol tribes and clans Mongol Empire Urheimat Ethnic groups in Chinese history Guifang Five BarbariansReferences EditCitations Edit a b Zwyns Nicolas et al August 2019 The Northern Route for Human dispersal in Central and Northeast Asia New evidence from the site of Tolbor 16 Mongolia Scientific Reports 9 1 11759 Bibcode 2019NatSR 911759Z doi 10 1038 s41598 019 47972 1 PMC 6692324 PMID 31409814 Janhunen Juha 2014 Mongolian Amsterdam John Benjamins p 4 ISBN 9789027238252 Kublai Khan a b Dyorfer G 2011 O yazyke gunnov PDF Nauchnyj Tatarstan Gumanitarnye nauki ed Kazan Pechataetsya po Dyorfer G O yazyke gunnov per s nem V G Guzeva 183 190 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Xiongnu People amp History Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2021 03 29 Rashpunstag 1776 The Crystal Beads Ts Baasansuren The scholar who showed the true Mongolia to the world Summer 2010 vol 6 14 Mongolica pp 40 N Ser Odzhav Mongolyn ertnij tүүh 1977 Mongolian traditional folk song UNESCO org Janhunen 2003b pp 391 394 sfn error no target CITEREFJanhunen2003b help Janhunen 2003a pp 1 3 sfn error no target CITEREFJanhunen2003a help Andrews 1999 p 72 sfn error no target CITEREFAndrews1999 help The Blue Chronicle Vanchinbalyn Injinash a b c d e Rein Taagepera Size and Duration of Empires Growth Decline Curves 600 B C to 600 A D Social Science History Vol 3 115 138 1979 a b c Jonathan M Adams Thomas D Hall and Peter Turchin 2006 East West Orientation of Historical Empires Journal of World Systems Research University of Connecticut 12 no 2 219 229 Rein Taagepera September 1997 Expansion and Contraction Patterns of Large Polities Context for Russia International Studies Quarterly 41 3 475 504 Sources Edit Atwood Christopher 2004 The Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Mongolia Country Studies Federal Research Division publication link as of 10 December 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Proto Mongols amp oldid 1146098884, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.