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- <text id=94TT1284>
- <title>
- Sep. 26, 1994: Science:The Khan Collection
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 26, 1994 Taking Over Haiti
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SCIENCE, Page 66
- The Khan Collection
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> A trove of archaeological treasures proves the Mongols and their
- monarch were surprisingly civilized
- </p>
- <p>By Michael D. Lemonick--Reported by Andrea Dorfman/New York
- </p>
- <p> "The greatest happiness is to vanquish your enemies, to chase
- them before you, to rob them of their wealth, to see those dear
- to them bathed in tears, to clasp to your bosom their wives
- and daughters." GENGHIS KHAN
- </p>
- <p> Boy, talk about a man who knew what he wanted out of life. He
- also knew how to get it: after the tribal leader known as Temujen
- was crowned in A.D. 1206 as the Mongols' Genghis Khan--"emperor
- of all emperors"--he waged nearly continuous wars of conquest
- against his neighbors. By his death in 1227, Genghis Khan ruled
- most of the lands between the Sea of Japan and the Caspian Sea,
- an empire that encompassed two-thirds of the known world and
- far eclipsed the celebrated realms of Alexander the Great. To
- those who were overrun by the Khan's mounted hordes--and to
- the victims' modern descendants--the Mongols were a barbaric
- people who swept out of the unknown reaches of the Asian steppe,
- a warmongering race whose only talents were for rape, murder
- and pillage.
- </p>
- <p> The Mongols were indeed good at all that. But thanks in part
- to recent archaeological finds in the arid lands of Inner Mongolia,
- now part of China, historians have begun to realize this perception
- of the medieval Mongols is woefully one-dimensional. Genghis
- Khan, their most celebrated leader, was not merely a bloodthirsty
- killer but also a supreme military strategist and talented politician,
- as adept at forging alliances and gathering intelligence as
- he was at wreaking terror and havoc. And the Mongol civilization
- he ruled had a rich cultural and artistic heritage that went
- back at least 6,000 years.
- </p>
- <p> Now the public has an unprecedented chance to peer over the
- shoulders of archaeologists and historians and get a firsthand
- look at the legacy of the Mongols and their Asian predecessors.
- A traveling exhibition called "Empires Beyond the Great Wall:
- The Heritage of Genghis Khan" opened last week at the American
- Museum of Natural History in New York City after a hugely successful
- five-month run at California's Natural History Museum of Los
- Angeles County. The show features more than 200 artifacts dating
- from roughly 2000 B.C. through the dynasty founded by Genghis
- Khan's grandson, Kubilai Khan, in the 13th century A.D. Most
- of the objectshave never before been permitted to leave China.
- Says the show's curator, archaeologist Adam Kessler of the Los
- Angeles museum: "Inner Mongolia is one of the great frontiers
- of archaeology left in the world today."
- </p>
- <p> Before that frontier opened up, scholars had to rely mostly
- on Chinese and Persian manuscripts for their information. The
- newly discovered treasures have helped place those manuscripts
- in context as well as providing valuable clues to the cultural
- development of Eurasia. Everyday items such as bronze vessels,
- weapons, clothing and funerary offerings provide a picture of
- daily life. And the discovery of both Chinese- and Indian-inspired
- imagery on porcelain and sculpture confirm Mongolia's role in
- the cultural exchange between China and Eurasia.
- </p>
- <p> The story researchers have pieced together from these artifacts
- contains plenty of surprises. Says Kessler: "From our knowledge
- of Genghis Khan and the Mongols, we had assumed tribes in this
- region spent most of their time on horseback. But archaeology
- is beginning to show that from 6000 B.C. on, these were agrarian
- societies." The northern peoples had much in common with the
- Chinese to the south: stone altars and pieces of jade carved
- into dragons suggest there was a common origin for the two groups'
- important beliefs, rituals and religious concepts. In addition,
- recent excavations have uncovered the remains of more than 100
- walled cities dating to the 3rd millennium B.C., none of which
- were mentioned in ancient Chinese records.
- </p>
- <p> Around 1500 B.C, Mongolia's climate became colder and drier,
- prompting a shift from a crop-based to a livestock-centered
- society. And by about 200 B.C., a warlike people called the
- Xiongnu had overrun a large part of the region. As part of a
- peace agreement with China's Han dynasty, the Xiongnu demanded
- annual tributes of silk, wine, rice, concubines and other luxuries.
- According to Kessler, the transport of these goods to central
- Asia marked the earliest full-scale use of the Silk Road, the
- fabled network of trade routes that ultimately stretched to
- the Mediterranean Sea; on the Silk Road, bolts of Chinese silk
- were carried all the way to the Roman Empire.
- </p>
- <p> The Xiongnu empire finally collapsed during the 1st century
- A.D., primarily because of disputes over succession rights.
- Some 800 years later, another clan, the Qidan, conquered much
- of northeast China and amassed a formidable empire stretching
- from central Asia to the Sea of Japan. During the Liao dynasty
- they founded, the Qidan built several hundred cities.
- </p>
- <p> The Qidan produced exquisite ceramics, which were commissioned
- from skilled artisans in conquered Chinese states. They also
- developed elaborate funerary trappings, including yurt-shape
- urns, gold burial masks, painted wooden coffins and tomb guardians,
- that seem to indicate a melding of the region's major religions:
- Taoism, Buddhism and shamanism.
- </p>
- <p> In the early 12th century, the Qidan were conquered by a northern
- tribe that founded the Jin dynasty and evidently had many contacts
- with other empires. Specimens of southern Chinese blue-and-white
- porcelain found in Jin settlements--a surprise, since these
- wares are believed to be a 14th century invention--may have
- been gifts from visiting diplomats.
- </p>
- <p> By the time Temujen, the future Genghis Khan, was born in the
- 1160s, the Jin were in decline, and the tribes of the steppe
- were once again at war with one another. When Temujen was nine,
- his father, a clan leader, was poisoned by Tatars; the clan
- then abandoned the rest of the family. Isolated and impoverished,
- mother and children were forced to eat rats and insects to survive.
- Temujen eventually reclaimed his hereditary right to be clan
- leader, and by means of powerful alliances, marriage and a series
- of battles, he began to annex rival tribes. In 1206 tribal leaders
- declared Temujen ruler of all the steppe peoples and gave him
- the title Genghis Khan.
- </p>
- <p> The new emperor proceeded to break apart traditional tribal
- connections, convert his subjects to a feudal system and above
- all organize a rigidly disciplined, well-supplied army. Like
- all Mongol warriors, Genghis' troops were superb horsemen, equipped
- with sturdy mounts that were obedient, even tempered and ideal
- for winter fighting. A soldier might stay in the saddle for
- days, slitting a vein in the neck of his horse to drink its
- blood so he would not have to stop for meals.
- </p>
- <p> The warriors relied primarily on bows, arrows and hand axes
- to slay their foes and may have protected themselves with weatherproofed
- leather armor. To attack fortified cities, they hired Chinese
- and Middle Eastern engineers who knew how to use siege catapults
- and other mechanical innovations. After capturing a city, these
- relentless troops would pretend to withdraw, as a way of determining
- whether a surrender was genuine; if the Mongol representatives
- left behind were killed, the soldiers would return to massacre
- the entire population. They rarely took prisoners, unless they
- needed men to use as shields in the front lines during the next
- siege.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the ruthlessness, says Kessler, "Genghis Khan was a
- very intelligent man and not at all impulsive. He avoided war
- if he could subjugate another tribe with diplomacy. If he had
- to fight, he would use spies to gather all the available information
- and then send in agents to unsettle the situation before attacking."
- </p>
- <p> This combination of cruelty and craftiness was powerfully effective.
- Genghis first took control of the major Mongolian tribes to
- the west and then tried to conquer China. He managed to seize
- power in the northern states but failed to vanquish the entire
- country. (That goal would be accomplished by Kubilai Khan, the
- ruler who founded Beijing, received Marco Polo in his court
- and inspired Samuel Taylor Coleridge's famous poem.) In 1217
- Genghis gave up and instead turned his attention back to central
- Asia, sweeping westward through Bukhara and Samarkand, Azerbaijan
- and Georgia, eventually reaching the Dnieper River in what today
- is Ukraine.
- </p>
- <p> Most signs of these conquests are gone from the outer reaches
- of Genghis Khan's empire, except for lingering impressions of
- barbarian terrorists sweeping in from the east. But that is
- far from the case in Inner Mongolia and in independent Mongolia,
- the ex-Soviet satellite next door, where the great conqueror
- is revered as a folk hero. Every year thousands of Mongols visit
- a shrine in the Ordos region where Genghis is said to have dropped
- a horsewhip during his final campaign and where he reportedly
- wanted to be buried. His actual burial spot is unknown (see
- box). In Ulan Bator, Mongolia's capital, there are hotels, streets
- and even a brand of vodka named for him. His image, says Christopher
- Atwood, professor of Mongolian studies at Indiana University,
- "has become kind of tacky."
- </p>
- <p> Many archaeological sites, especially in Inner Mongolia, have
- hardly been excavated because of limited local resources and
- decades of Chinese xenophobia. This has started to change, however,
- as China has taken part in cooperative digs with several European
- countries. Kessler, who has already made six surveying trips
- to the area, hopes Americans will get their chance to dig as
- well. "There is a fantastic potential there for finding well-preserved
- artifacts," he says. Considering what scientists have learned
- from the pieces they have found so far, the broadening of our
- understanding of Genghis Khan and the Mongols has barely begun.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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