The Yuan Dynasty
(1279-1368) The Mongols were the first of the northern barbarians
to rule all of China. After creating an empire that stretched across
the Eurasian continent and occupying northern China and Korea in
the first half of the 13th century, the Mongols continued their
assault on the Southern Sung. By 1276 the Southern Sung capital
of Hang zhou had fallen, and in 1279 the last of the Sung loyalists
perished.
Before this, Kublai Khan, the fifth "great khan" and grandson
of Genghis Khan, had moved the Mongol capital from Karakorum to
Peking. In 1271 he declared himself emperor of China and named the
dynasty Yuan, meaning "beginning," to signify that this
was the beginning of a long era of Mongol rule. In Asia, Kublai
Khan continued his grandfather's dream of world conquest. Two unsuccessful
naval expeditions were launched against Japan in 1274 and 1281.
Four land expeditions were sent against Annam and five against Burma.
However, the Mongol conquests overseas and in Southeast Asia were
neither spectacular nor were they long enduring.
Mongol rule in China lasted less than a century. The Mongols became
the most hated of the barbarian rulers because they did not allow
the Chinese ruling class to govern. Instead, they gave the task
of governing to foreigners. Distrusting the Chinese, the Mongol
rulers placed the southern Chinese at the lowest level of the four
classes they created. The extent of this distrust was reflected
in their provincial administration. As conquerors, they followed
the Qin example and made the provincial governments into direct
extensions of the central chancellery. This practice was continued
by succeeding dynasties, resulting in a further concentration of
power in the central imperial government. The Chinese despised the
Mongols for refusing to adapt to Chinese culture. The Mongols kept
their own language and customs. The Mongol rulers were tolerant
about religions, however. Kublai Khan reportedly dabbled in many
religions.
The Mongols and the West
The Mongols were regarded with mixed feelings in the West. Although
Westerners dreaded the Mongols, the Crusaders hoped to use them
in their fight against the Muslims and attempted to negotiate an
alliance with them for this purpose. Friar John of Carpini and William
of Rubruck were two of the better known Christian missionaries sent
to establish these negotiations with the Mongol ruler. The best
account of the Mongols was left by a Venetian merchant, Marco Polo,
in his `Marco Polo's Travels'. It is an account of Polo's travels
over the long and perilous land route to China, his experience as
a trusted official of Kublai Khan, and his description of China
under the Mongols. Dictated in the early 14th century, the book
was translated into many languages. Although much of medieval Europe
did not believe Polo's tales, some, like Christopher Columbus, were
influenced by Polo's description of the riches of the Orient. (See
Kublai Khan; Mongol Empire; Polo, Marco) After the death of Kublai
Khan in 1294, successive weak and incompetent khans made the already
hated Mongol rule intolerable. Secret societies became increasingly
active, and a movement known as the Red Turbans spread throughout
the north during the 1350s. In 1356 a rebel leader named Chu Yuan-chang
and his peasant army captured the old capital of Nanjing. Within
a decade he had won control of the economically important middle
and lower reaches of the Yangtze River, driving the Mongols to the
north. In 1368 he declared himself the emperor Hung-wu and established
his capital at Nanjing on the lower Yangtze. Later the same year
he captured the Yuan capital of Peking. (See Kublai Khan; Mongol
Empire)
Kublai Khan (1215-94). The founder of China's Yuan (Mongol) Dynasty
was a brilliant general and statesman named Kublai Khan. He was
the grandson of the great Mongol conqueror, Genghis Khan, and he
was overlord of the vast Mongol Empire. The achievements of Kublai
Khan were first brought to the attention of Western society in the
writings of Marco Polo, the Venetian traveler who lived at the Chinese
court for nearly 20 years (See Polo, Marco). Kublai Khan was born
in 1215, the fourth son of Genghis Khan's fourth son. He began to
play a major role in the consolidation of Mongol power in 1251,
when his brother, the emperor Mongke, resolved to complete the conquest
of China. He therefore vested Kublai with responsibility for keeping
order in conquered territory. After Mongke's death in 1259, Kublai
had himself proclaimed khan. During the next 20 years he completed
the unification of China. He made his capital in what is now Beijing.
Kublai's major achievement was to reconcile China to rule by a foreign
people, the Mongols, who had shown little ability at governing.
His failures were a series of costly wars, including two disastrous
attempts to invade Japan; they brought little benefit to China.
Although he was a magnanimous ruler, Kublai's extravagant administration
slowly impoverished China; and in the 14th century the ineptitude
of his successors provoked rebellions that eventually destroyed
the Mongol dynasty. (See Genghis Khan; Mongol Empire)
Polo, Marco (1254-1323?). In 1298 a Venetian adventurer named Marco
Polo wrote a fascinating book about his travels in the Far East.
Men read his accounts of Oriental riches and became eager to find
sea routes to China, Japan, and the East Indies. Even Columbus,
nearly 200 years later, often consulted his copy of `The Book of
Ser Marco Polo'. In Marco's day the book was translated and copied
by hand in several languages. After printing was introduced in the
1440s, the book was circulated even more widely. Many people thought
that the book was a fable or a gross exaggeration. A few learned
men believed that Marco wrote truly, however, and they spread Marco's
stories of faraway places and unknown peoples. Today geographers
agree that Marco's book is amazingly accurate. Marco Polo was born
in the city-republic of Venice in 1254. His father and uncles were
merchants who traveled to distant lands to trade. In 1269 Marco's
father,
Nicolo, and his uncle Maffeo returned to Venice after being away
many years. On a trading expedition they had traveled overland as
far as Cathay (China). Kublai Khan, the great Mongol emperor of
China, asked them to return with teachers and missionaries for his
people. So they set out again in 1271, and this time they took Marco.
From Venice the Polos sailed to Acre, in Palestine. There two monks,
missionaries to China, joined them. Fearing the hard journey ahead,
however, the monks soon turned back. The Polos crossed the deserts
of Persia (Iran) and Afghanistan. They mounted the heights of the
Pamirs, the "roof of the world," descending to the trading
cities of Kashgar (Shufu) and Yarkand (Soche). They crossed the
dry stretches of The Gobi. Early in 1275 they arrived at Kublai
Khan's court at Cambaluc (Peking). At that time Marco was 21 years
old. Polo at the Court of the Great Khan
Marco quickly became a favorite of Kublai Khan. For three years
he governed busy Yangchow, a city of more than 250,000 people. He
was sent on missions to far places in the empire: to Indochina,
Tibet, Yunnan, and Burma. From these lands Marco brought back stories
of the people and their lives. The Polos became wealthy in Cathay.
But they began to fear that jealous men in the court would destroy
them when the khan died. They asked to return to Venice. Kublai
Khan refused. Then came an envoy from the khan of Persia. He asked
Kublai Khan for a young Mongol princess for a bride. The Polos said
that the princess' journey should be guarded by men of experience
and rank. They added that the mission would enable them to make
the long-desired visit to Venice. The khan reluctantly agreed.
Since there was danger from robbers and enemies of the khan along
the overland trade routes, a great fleet of ships was built for
a journey by sea. In 1292 the fleet sailed, bearing the Polos, the
princess, and 600 noblemen of Cathay. They traveled southward along
Indochina and the Malay Peninsula to Sumatra. Here the voyage was
delayed many months.
The ships then turned westward and visited Ceylon and India. They
touched the East African coast. The voyage was hazardous, and of
the 600 noblemen only 18 lived to reach Persia. The Polos and the
princess were safe. When the Polos landed in Venice, they had been
gone 24 years. The precious stones they brought from Cathay amazed
all Venice. Later Marco served as gentleman-captain of a ship. It
was captured by forces of the rival trading city of Genoa, and he
was thrown into a Genoese prison. There he wrote his book with help
from another prisoner. Marco was released by the Genoese in 1299.
He returned to Venice and engaged in trade. His name appears in
the court records of his time in many lawsuits over property and
money. He married and had three daughters. He died about 1323.
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