Saturday, July 2, 2011

Tamerlane (1336-1405), Muslim Descendant of Genghis Khan

Forensic facial reconstruction of Timur by M. Gerasimov (1941)


Statue of Timur in his birthplace of Shahrisabz, Uzbekistan


Timur defeats the Sultan of Delhi, Nasir Al-Din Mahmum Tughluq, in the winter of 1397-1398, painting dated 1595-1600


Painting by Stanisław Chlebowski, Sultan Bayezid imprisoned by Timur, 1878


Gur-e Amir, the tomb of Timur


Temur (from Persian: تیمور Timūr, ultimately from Chagatai: Temür "iron"; 8 April 1336 – 18 February 1405), historically known as Tamerlane in English (from Persian: تيمور لنگ , Timūr-e Lang, "Timur the Lame"), was a fourteenth-century conqueror of West, South and Central Asia, and the founder of the Timurid dynasty (1370–1405) in Central Asia, and great, great grandfather of Babur, the founder of the Mughal Dynasty, which survived as the Mughal Empire in India until 1857.

Timur was in his lifetime a controversial figure, and remains so today. He sought to restore the Mongol Empire, yet his heaviest blow was against the Islamized Tatar Golden Horde. He was more at home in an urban environment than on the steppe. He styled himself a ghazi while conducting wars that severely affected some Muslim states, for example the Ottoman Empire. A great patron of the arts, his campaigns also caused vast destruction.

Temür means "iron" in the Chagatai language. According to the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain & Ireland (1972) the term temür is possibly derived from a Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit word *čimara ("iron"). As an adult he was better known as Timūr Gurkānī (تيمور گوركانى), Gurkān being the Persianized form of the original Mongolian word kürügän, "son-in-law". One of Timur's ancestors who was known by the name "kara-sharnoban" converted to Islam and married the daughter of Chagatai Khan (son of Genghis Khan). Timur was thus referred to as the son-in-law of Chagatai Khan. Various Persian sources use a byname, Tīmūr-e Lang (تیمور لنگ) which translates to "Timur the Lame", as he was lame after sustaining an injury to his foot in battle. During his lifetime his enemies taunted him with this name, much to Timur's discomfort. In the West, he is commonly known as Tamerlane, which derives from his Persian byname.

Timur was born in Transoxiana, in the City of Kesh (an area now better known as Shahrisabz, "the green city"), some 50 miles south of Samarkand in modern Uzbekistan, then part of the Chagatai Khanate. His father, Taraqai, was a small-scale landowner and belonged to the Barlas tribe. The Barlas was a Turko-Mongol tribe which was original Mongol tribe and was Turkified and/or became Turkic-speaking or intermingling with the Turkic peoples. According to Gérard Chaliand, Timur was a Muslim Turk but he saw himself as Genghis Khan's heir. Though not a Chinggisid, clearly sought to evoke the legacy of Genghis Khan's conquests during his lifetime.

Timur was a Muslim, but while his chief official religious counsellor & advisor was the Hanafite scholar 'Abdu 'l-Jabbar Khwarazmi, his particular persuasion is not known. In Tirmidh, he had come under the influence of his spiritual mentor Sayyid Barakah, a Shiite leader from Balkh who is buried alongside Timur in Gur-e Amir. Despite his Hanafi background, Timur was known to hold Ali and the Shia Imams in high regard and has been noted by various scholars for his "pro-Alid" stance. Despite this, Timur was noted for attacking Shi’is on Sunni grounds and therefore his own religious inclinations remain unclear.

In about 1360 Timur gained prominence as a military leader whose troops were mostly Turkic tribesmen of the region. He took part in campaigns in Transoxiana with the Khan of Chagatai, a fellow descendant of Genghis Khan. His career for the next ten or eleven years may be thus briefly summarized from the Memoirs. Allying himself both in cause and by family connection with Kurgan, the dethroner and destroyer of Volga Bulgaria, he was to invade Khorasan at the head of a thousand horsemen. This was the second military expedition which he led, and its success led to further operations, among them the subjugation of Khorezm and Urganj.
After the murder of Kurgan the disputes which arose among the many claimants to sovereign power were halted by the invasion of the energetic Jagataite Tughlugh Temur of Kashgar, another descendant of Genghis Khan. Timur was dispatched on a mission to the invader's camp, the result of which was his own appointment to the head of his own tribe, the Barlas, in place of its former leader, Hajji Beg.

The exigencies of Timur's quasi-sovereign position compelled him to have recourse to his formidable patron, whose reappearance on the banks of the Syr Darya created a consternation not easily allayed. The Barlas were taken from Timur and entrusted to a son of Tughluk, along with the rest of Mawarannahr; but he was defeated in battle by the bold warrior he had replaced at the head of a numerically far inferior force.

Tughlugh's death facilitated the work of reconquest, and a few years of perseverance and energy sufficed for its accomplishment, as well as for the addition of a vast extent of territory. It was in this period that Timur reduced the Chagatai khans to the position of figureheads, who were deferred to in theory but in reality ignored, while Timur ruled in their name. During this period Timur and his brother-in-law Husayn, at first fellow fugitives and wanderers in joint adventures full of interest and romance, became rivals and antagonists. At the close of 1369 Husayn was assassinated and Timur, having been formally proclaimed sovereign at Balkh, mounted the throne at Samarkand, the capital of his dominions. This event was recorded by Marlowe in his famous work Tamburlaine the Great:

Then shall my native city, Samarcanda...
Be famous through the furthest continents,
For there my palace-royal shall be placed,
Whose shining turrets shall dismay the heavens,
And cast the fame of lion's tower to hell.

A legendary account of Timur's rise to leadership, recorded among the Tatar descendants of the Qıpchaq Khanate in Tobol, goes as follows:

One day Aksak Temür spoke thusly:
"Khan Züdei (in China) rules over the city. We now number fifty to sixty men, so let us elect a leader." So they drove a stake into the ground and said: "We shall run thither and he who among us is the first to reach the stake, may he become our leader". So they ran and Aksak Timur (since he was lame) lagged behind, but before the others reached the stake he threw his cap onto it. Those who arrived first said: "We are the leaders". (But) Aksak Timur said: "My head came in first, I am the leader". In the meanwhile an old man arrived and said: "The leadership should belong to Aksak Timur; your feet have arrived but, before then, his head reached the goal". So they made Aksak Timur their prince.

It is notable that Timur never claimed for himself the title of khan, styling himself amir and acting in the name of the Chagatai ruler of Transoxania. Timur was a military genius but sometimes lacking in political sense. He tended not to leave a government apparatus behind in lands he conquered, and was often faced with the need to reconquer such lands after inevitable rebellions.

Timur spent the next 35 years in various wars and expeditions. He not only consolidated his rule at home by the subjugation of his foes, but sought extension of territory by encroachments upon the lands of foreign potentates. His conquests to the west and northwest led him to the lands near the Caspian Sea and to the banks of the Ural and the Volga. Conquests in the south and south-West encompassed almost every province in Persia, including Baghdad, Karbala and Northern Iraq.

One of the most formidable of Timur's opponents was another Mongol ruler, a descendant of Genghis Khan named Tokhtamysh. After having been a refugee in Timur's court, Tokhtamysh became ruler both of the eastern Kipchak and the Golden Horde. After his accession, he then quarrelled with Timur over the possession of Khwarizm and Azerbaijan. However, Timur still supported him against the Russians and in 1382 Tokhtamysh invaded the Muscovite dominion and burned Moscow.

After the death of Abu Sa'id, ruler of the Ilkhanid Dynasty, in 1335, there was a power vacuum in Persia. In 1383 Timur started the military conquest of Persia. He captured Herat, Khorasan and all eastern Persia by 1385 and captured almost all of Persia by 1387. These conquests were characterised by exceptional brutality. For example, when Isfahan surrendered to Timur in 1387, he initially treated it with relative mercy as he commonly did with cities that surrendered without resistance. However, after the city revolted against Timur's punitive taxes by killing the tax collectors and some of Timur's soldiers, Timur ordered the complete massacre of the city, killing a reported 70,000 citizens. An eye-witness counted more than 28 towers, each constructed of about 1,500 heads.

In the meantime, Tokhtamysh, now khan of the Golden Horde, turned against his patron and invaded Azerbaijan in 1385. This action would cause a counter by Timur that would become the Tokhtamysh–Timur war. In the initial stage of the war, Timur won a victory at the Battle of the Kondurcha River, however Tokhtamysh and some of his army were allowed to escape. After Tokhtamysh's initial defeat, Timur then invaded Muscovy to the north of Tokhtamysh's holdings. Timur's army burned Raizan and advanced upon Moscow, only to be pulled away before reaching the Oka River by Tokhtamysh's renewed campaign in the south.

In the first phase of the conflict with Tokhtamysh, Timur led an army of over 100,000 men north for more than 700 miles into the uninhabited steppe, then west about 1,000 miles, advancing in a front more than 10 miles wide. The Timurid army almost starved, and Timur organized a great hunt where the army encircled vast areas of steppe to get food. It was then that Tokhtamysh's army was boxed in against the east bank of the Volga River in the Orenburg region and destroyed at the previously mentioned Battle of the Kondurcha River. During this march, Timur's army got far enough north to be in a region of very long summer days, causing complaints by his Muslim soldiers about keeping a long schedule of prayers in such northern regions.

It was in the second phase of the conflict that Timur took an easier route against the enemy, invading the realm of Tokhtamysh via the Caucasus region. The year 1395, saw the Battle of the Terek River, when Tokhtamysh's power was finally broken, concluding the titanic struggle between the two monarchs.

Tokhtamysh was not able to restore his power or prestige. He was killed about a decade after the Terek River battle in the area of present day Tyumen, by agents of an emir named Edigu.
Timur during the course of his campaigns destroyed Sarai, the capital of the Golden Horde, and Astrakhan, subsequently wrecking the Golden Horde's economy based on Silk Road trade. The Golden Horde saw political disintegration after such losses, with Mongol unity in the region shattered permanently.

In May 1393 Timur invaded the Anjudan, crippling the Ismaili village only one year after his assault on the Ismailis in Mazandaran. The village appears to have been prepared for attack, as it contained a fortress and an intricate system of underground tunnels. These devices were, however, unsuccessful in thwarting Timur’s soldiers, who flooded the tunnels by cutting into a channel overhead. Timur’s reasons for attacking this village are not yet well-understood, however it has been suggested that his religious persuasions and view of himself as an executor of divine will may have contributed to his motivations.[28] The Persian historian Khwandamir explains that an Ismaili presence was growing more politically powerful in Persian Iraq. A group among the locals in this region was dissatisfied with this. Khwandamir writes that some of these locals assembled and brought up their complaint with Timur, possibly provoking his attack on the Ismailis there.

In 1398 Timur invaded northern India, attacking the Delhi Sultanate ruled by Sultan Nasir-u Din Mehmud of the Tughlaq Dynasty. The cambridge history says that he was opposed by Ahirs and Jats but Delhi Government did nothing to stop him. He crossed Indus river on September 30, 1398 and captured Multan by October.

His campaign was officially justified by claims that the Muslim Delhi Sultanate was too tolerant toward its Hindu subjects, but was motivated greatly by the considerable wealth to be gained. By all accounts, Timur's campaigns in India were marked by systematic slaughter and other atrocities on a truly massive scale inflicted mainly on the subcontinent's Hindu population.

Timur crossed the Indus River at Attock (now Pakistan) on September 24, 1398, but Timur's invasion did not go unopposed and he did meet some resistance during his march to Delhi, by the Governor of Meerut. Timur was able to continue his relentless approach to Delhi, arriving in 1398 to combat the armies of Sultan Mehmud, already weakened by a succession struggle within the royal family.

The Sultan's army was easily defeated on December 17, 1398. On this day the army of Sultan Mahmud Khan had prepared 120 war elephants armored with chain mail. He had put poison on the tusks, which put fright into the Tatar lines. Timur took action and the Tatars dug out a trench in front of their positions. Timur then took his camels and placed all the wood and hay he could on their backs. When the war elephants charged he lit the camels on fire and then prodded them with iron sticks. They charged at the elephants howling in pain: Timur had understood that elephants were easily panicked. Faced with the strange spectacle of the burning camels flying straight at them with flames leaping from their backs, the elephants turned around and stampeded back toward their own lines. Timur entered Delhi and the city was sacked, destroyed, and left in ruins. Before the battle for Delhi, Timur executed 100,000 captives, mostly Hindus:

"At this Court Amír Jahán Sháh and Amír Sulaimán Sháh, and other amírs of experience, brought to my notice that, from the time of entering Hindustán up to the present time, we had taken more than 100,000 infidels and Hindus prisoners, and that they were all in my camp. On the previous day, when the enemy's forces made the attack upon us, the prisoners made signs of rejoicing, uttered imprecations against us, and were ready, as soon as they heard of the enemy's success, to form themselves into a body, break their bonds, plunder our tents, and then to go and join the enemy, and so increase his numbers and strength. I asked their advice about the prisoners, and they said that on the great day of battle these 100,000 prisoners could not be left with the baggage, and that it would be entirely opposed to the rules of war to set these idolaters and foes of Islám at liberty. In fact, no other course remained but that of making them all food for the sword. When I heard these words I found them in accordance with the rules of war, and I directly gave my command for the Tawáchís to proclaim throughout the camp that every man who had infidel prisoners was to put them to death, and whoever neglected to do so should himself be executed and his property given to the informer. When this order became known to the gházís of Islám, they drew their swords and put their prisoners to death. 100,000 infidels, impious idolaters, were on that day slain. Mauláná Násiru-d dín 'Umar, a counsellor and man of learning, who, in all his life, had never killed a sparrow, now, in execution of my order, slew with his sword fifteen idolatrous Hindus, who were his captives."

The alleged "Memoirs" of Timur, or Tuzk-e-Taimuri, relate the sack of Delhi:

"On the 16th of the month some incidents occurred which led to the sack of the city of Delhí, and to the slaughter of many of the infidel inhabitants. One was this. A party of fierce Turk soldiers had assembled at one of the gates of the city to look about them and enjoy themselves, and some of them laid violent hands upon the goods of the inhabitants. When I heard of this violence, I sent some amírs, who were present in the city, to restrain the Turks. A party of soldiers accompanied these amírs into the city. Another reason was that some of the ladies of my harem expressed a wish to go into the city and see the palace of Hazár-sutún (thousand columns) which Malik Jauná built in the fort called Jahán-panáh. I granted this request, and I sent a party of soldiers to escort the litters of the ladies. Another reason was that Jalál Islám and other díwáns had gone into the city with a party of soldiers to collect the contribution laid upon the city. Another reason was that some thousand troopers with orders for grain, oil, sugar, and flour, had gone into the city to collect these supplies. Another reason was that it had come to my knowledge that great numbers of Hindus and gabrs, with their wives and children, and goods, and valuables, had come into the city from all the country round, and consequently I had sent some amírs with their regiments (kushún) into the city and directed them to pay no attention to the remonstrances of the inhabitants, but to seize and bring out these fugitives. For these several reasons a great number of fierce Turkí soldiers were in the city. When the soldiers proceeded to apprehend the Hindus and gabrs who had fled to the city, many of them drew their swords and offered resistance. The flames of strife were thus lighted and spread through the whole city from Jahán-panáh and Sírí to Old Dehlí, burning up all it reached. The savage Turks fell to killing and plundering. The Hindus set fire to their houses with their own hands, burned their wives and children in them, and rushed into the fight and were killed. The Hindus and gabrs of the city showed much alacrity and boldness in fighting. The amírs who were in charge of the gates prevented any more soldiers from going into the place, but the flames of war had risen too high for this precaution to be of any avail in extinguishing them. On that day, Thursday, and all the night of Friday, nearly 15,000 Turks were engaged in slaying, plundering, and destroying. When morning broke on the Friday, all my army, no longer under control, went off to the city and thought of nothing but killing, plundering, and making prisoners. All that day the sack was general. The following day, Saturday, the 17th, all passed in the same way, and the spoil was so great that each man secured from fifty to a hundred prisoners, men, women, and children. There was no man who took less than twenty. The other booty was immense in rubies, diamonds, garnets, pearls, and other gems; jewels of gold and silver; ashrafís, tankas of gold and silver of the celebrated 'Aláí coinage; vessels of gold and silver; and brocades and silks of great value. Gold and silver ornaments of the Hindu women were obtained in such quantities as to exceed all account. Excepting the quarter of the saiyids, the 'ulamá, and the other Musulmáns, the whole city was sacked. The pen of fate had written down this destiny for the people of this city. Although I was desirous of sparing them I could not succeed, for it was the will of Allah that this calamity should fall upon the city."

Timur left Delhi in December 1398 and marched on Meerut. Then he rode up to Haridwar and sacked the holy city on January 23, 1399. Before he crossed the Ganges, he faced stiff resistance from Hindus at Bhokarhedi. In April he had returned to his own capital beyond the Oxus (Amu Darya). Immense quantities of spoils and slaves were taken from India. According to Ruy Gonzáles de Clavijo, 90 captured elephants were employed merely to carry precious stones looted from his conquest, so as to erect a mosque at Samarkand – what historians today believe is the enormous Bibi-Khanym Mosque!

Before the end of 1399, Timur started a war with Bayezid I, sultan of the Ottoman Empire, and the Mamluk sultan of Egypt. Bayezid began annexing the territory of Turkmen and Muslim rulers in Anatolia. As Timur claimed sovereignty over the Turkmen rulers, they took refuge behind him. Timur invaded Syria, sacked Aleppo and captured Damascus after defeating the Mamluk army. The city's inhabitants were massacred, except for the artisans, who were deported to Samarkand. This led to Timur's being publicly declared an enemy of Islam, as he was no longer only killing non-Muslims.

In a form of rectification, in 1400 Timur invaded Christian Armenia and Georgia. Of the surviving population, more than 60,000 of the local people were captured as slaves, and many districts were depopulated.

He invaded Baghdad in June 1401. After the capture of the city, 20,000 of its citizens - even Muslims - were massacred. Timur ordered that every soldier should return with at least two severed human heads to show him (many warriors were so scared they killed prisoners captured earlier in the campaign just to ensure they had heads to present to Timur)!

In the meantime, years of insulting letters had passed between Timur and Bayezid. Finally, Timur invaded Anatolia and defeated Bayezid in the Battle of Ankara on July 20, 1402. Bayezid was captured in battle and subsequently died in captivity, initiating the 12-year Ottoman Interregnum period. Timur's stated motivation for attacking Bayezid and the Ottoman Empire was the restoration of Seljuq authority. Timur saw the Seljuks as the rightful rulers of Anatolia as they had been granted rule by Mongol conquerors, illustrating again Timur's interest with Genghizid legitimacy.

After the Ankara victory, Timur's army ravaged Western Anatolia, with Muslim writers complaining that the Timurid army acted more like a horde of savages than that of a civilized conqueror. But Timur did take the city of Smyrna, a stronghold of the Christian Knights Hospitalers, thus he referred to himself as ghazi or "Warrior of Islam".

Timur was furious at the Genoese and Venetians whose ships ferried the Ottoman army to safety in Thrace. As Lord Kinross reported in The Ottoman Centuries, the Italians preferred the enemy they could handle to the one they could not.

By 1368, the new Chinese Ming Dynasty had driven the Mongols out of China. The first Ming Emperor Hongwu, and his successor Yongle demanded, and received, homage from many Central Asian states as the political heirs to the former House of Kublai. The Ming emperor's attempts to treat the Timur himself as a vassal did not go well: when in 1394 Hongwu's ambassadors presented Timur with a letter addressing him in this way, he had the ambassadors Fu An, Guo Ji, and Liu Wei detained, and their 1,500 guards executed. Neither Hongwu's next ambassador, Chen Dewen (1397) nor the delegation announcing the accession of the Yongle Emperor fared any better.

Timur eventually planned to conquer China. To this end, Timur made an alliance with the Mongols of the Northern Yuan Dynasty and prepared all the way to Bukhara. The Mongol leader Enkhe Khan sent his grandson Öljei Temür, also known as Buyanshir Khan. In December 1404, Timur started military campaigns against the Ming Dynasty and detained the Ming envoy, but he was attacked by fever and plague when encamped on the farther side of the Sihon (Syr-Daria) and died at Atrar (Otrar) on February 17, 1405, without ever reaching the Chinese border. Only after that were the Ming envoys released.

Although he preferred to fight his battles in the spring, Timur died enroute during an uncharacteristic winter campaign against the ruling Chinese Ming Dynasty. It was one of the bitterest winters on record; his troops are recorded as having to dig through five feet of ice to reach drinking water. Records indicate though, that for part of his life at least, he was a surreptitious Ming vassal and that his son Shah Rukh visited China in 1420. He ruled over an empire that, in modern times, extends from southeastern Turkey, Syria, Iraq, Kuwait and Iran, through Central Asia encompassing part of Kazakhstan, Afghanistan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, North-Western India, and even approaches Kashgar in China. The conquests of Timur are claimed to have caused the deaths of up to 17 million people; an opinion impossible to verify. Timur's campaigns sometimes caused large and permanent demographic changes, northern Iraq remained predominantly Assyrian Christian until attacked, looted, plundered and destroyed by Timur leaving its population decimated by systematic mass slaughter. All churches were destroyed and any survivors forcefully converted to Islam by the sword.

Of Timur's four sons, two (Jahangir and Umar Shaykh) predeceased him. His third son, Miran Shah, died soon after Timur, leaving the youngest son, Shah Rukh. Although his designated successor was his grandson Pir Muhammad b. Jahangir, Timur was ultimately succeeded in power by his son Shah Rukh. His most illustrious descendant Babur founded the Islamic Mughal Empire and ruled over most of Afghanistan and North India. Babur's descendants Humayun, Akbar, Jahangir, Shah Jahan and Aurangzeb, expanded the Mughal Empire to most of the Indian subcontinent.

Markham, in his introduction to the narrative of Clavijo's embassy, states that his body "was embalmed with musk and rose water, wrapped in linen, laid in an ebony coffin and sent to Samarkand, where it was buried." His tomb, the Gur-e Amir, still stands in Samarkand, though it has been heavily restored in recent years.

Timur became widely known as a patron to the arts. Much of the architecture he commissioned still stands in Samarkand, now in present-day Uzbekistan. He was known to bring the most talented artisans from the lands he conquered back to Samarkand, and is credited with often giving them a wide latitude of artistic freedom to express themselves. He also constructed one of his finest buildings at the tomb of Ahmed Yesevi, an influential Turkic Sufi saint who spread Sufi Islam among the nomads.

According to legend, Omar Aqta, Timur's court calligrapher, transcribed the Qur'an using letters so small that the entire text of the book fit on a signet ring! Omar also is said to have created a Qur'an so large that a wheelbarrow was required to transport it! Folios of what is probably this larger Qur'an have been found, written in gold lettering on huge pages.

Timur was also said to have created Tamerlane Chess, a variant of shatranj (also known as medieval chess) played on a larger board with several additional pieces and an original method of pawn promotion. These pieces included the camel, siege-weapon, giraffe, and several others as well as boasting a complicated system involving the ability to exchange pawns for certain pieces should they reach the other side of the board.

Timur's mandating of Kurash wrestling for his soldiers ensured for it a lasting and legendary legacy. Kurash is now a popular international sport and part of the Asian Games.

Timur had numerous epistolary and diplomatic exchanges with Western, especially Spanish and French, rulers. There was the possibility of an alliance between Timur and the European states, against the Ottoman Turks that were attacking Europe. Therefore, there was a clear motive for Timur, who wanted to surround his Ottoman and Mamluk enemies in this offensive alliance.
The relations between the courts of Henry III of Castile and that of Timur constituted the most important episode of the medieval Spanish Castilian diplomacy. In 1402, the time of the Battle of Ankara, two Spanish ambassadors were already with Timur: Pelayo de Sotomayor and Fernando de Palazuelos. Later, Timur sent to the court of Castile and León a Chagatay ambassador named Hajji Muhammad al-Qazi with letters and gifts.

In return, the King Henry III of Castile sent a famous embassy to Timur's court in Samarqand in 1403-06, led by Ruy Gonzales de Clavijo, with two other ambassadors, Alfonso Paez and Gomez de Salazar. On their return, Timur affirmed that he regarded the king of Castile "as his very own son".

According to Clavijo, Timur's good treatment of the Spanish delegation contrasted with the disdain shown by his host toward the envoys of the "lord of Cathay" (i.e., the Ming Dynasty Yongle Emperor), the Chinese ruler. Clavijo's visit to Samarkand allowed him to report to the European audience on the news from Cathay (China), which few Europeans had been able to visit directly in the century that had passed since the travels of Marco Polo.

On the other hand, the French archives preserve:
  • A July 30, 1402, letter from Timur to Charles VI, king of France, suggesting him to send traders to the Orient. It was written in Persian.
  • A May 1403 letter. This is a Latin transcription of a letter from Timur to Charles VI, and another from Amiza Miranchah, his son, to the Christian princes, announcing their victory over Bayezid, in Smyrna.
  • A copy has been kept of the answer of Charles VI to Timur, dated June 15, 1403.
I am not a man of blood; and God is my witness that in all my wars I have never been the aggressor, and that my enemies have always been the authors of their own calamity.
—Timur, after the conquest of Aleppo

Timur's legacy is a mixed one. While Central Asia blossomed under his reign, other places such as Baghdad, Damascus, Delhi and other Arab, Persian and Indian cities were sacked and destroyed and their populations massacred. He was responsible for the effective destruction of the Christian Church in much of Asia. Thus, while Timur still retains a positive image in Muslim Central Asia, Persia, and Arab countries, he is vilified by many in India, where some of his greatest atrocities were carried out. In the Islamic world at the time, he was variously considered both as a ghazi (or "Warrior for Islam") by some, and as an enemy of Islam by others.

Timur's military talents were unique. He planned all his campaigns years in advance, even planting barley for horse feed two-years ahead of his campaigns. He used propaganda, in what is now called information warfare, as part of his tactics. His campaigns were preceded by the deployment of spies whose tasks included collecting information and spreading horrifying reports about the cruelty, size, and might of Timur’s armies. Such psychological warfare eventually weakened the morale of threatened populations and caused panic in the regions that he intended to invade.

Whilst Timur's uncharacteristic (for the time) concern for his troops inspired fierce loyalty, he did not pay them. Their only incentives were from looting captured territory — a bounty that included horses, women, precious metals and stones; in other words whatever they, or their newly captured slaves, could carry away from the conquered lands.

Timur's short-lived empire also melded the Turko-Persian tradition in Transoxiania, and in most of the territories which he incorporated into his fiefdom, Persian became the primary language of administration and literary culture (diwan), regardless of ethnicity. In addition, during his reign, some contributions to Turkic literature were penned, with Turkic cultural influence expanding and flourishing as a result. A literary form of Chagatai Turkic came into use alongside Persian as both a cultural and an official language.

Timur became a relatively popular figure in Europe for centuries after his death, mainly because of his victory over the Ottoman Sultan Bayezid. The Ottoman armies were at the time invading Eastern Europe and Timur was ironically seen as a sort of ally.

Timur has now been officially recognized as a national hero of newly independent Uzbekistan. His monument in Tashkent now occupies the place where Marx's statue once stood.

Timur's generally recognized biographers are Ali Yazdi, commonly called Sharaf ud-Din, author of the Zafarnāmeh in Persian (ظفرنامه), translated by Petis de la Croix in 1722 , and from French into English by J. Darby in the following year; and Ahmad ibn Muhammad ibn Abdallah, al-Dimashiqi, al-Ajami (commonly called Ahmad Ibn Arabshah) translated by the Dutch Orientalist Colitis in 1636. In the work of the former, as Sir William Jones remarks, "the Tatarian conqueror is represented as a liberal, benevolent and illustrious prince", in that of the latter he is "deformed and impious, of a low birth and detestable principles." But the favourable account was written under the personal supervision of Timur's grandson, Ibrahim, while the other was the production of his direst enemy.

Among less reputed biographies or materials for biography may be mentioned a second Zafarnāmeh, by Nizam al-Din Shami, stated to be the earliest known history of Timur, and the only one written in his lifetime. Timur's purported autobiography, the Tuzk-e-Taimuri ("Memoirs of Temur") is a later fabrication, although most of the historical facts are accurate.
More recent biographies include Justin Marozzi's Tamerlane: Sword of Islam, Conqueror of the World (2006) and Roy Stier's Tamerlane: The Ultimate Warrior (1998).

Timur's body was exhumed from his tomb in 1941 by the Soviet anthropologist Mikhail M. Gerasimov. From his bones it was clear that Timur was a tall and broad chested man with strong cheek bones. Gerasimov reconstructed the likeness of Timur from his skull. His height was 5 feet 8 inches (1.73 meters), tall for his era. He also confirmed Timur's lameness due to a hip injury.
It is alleged that Timur's tomb was inscribed with the words: "When I rise from the dead, the world shall tremble." It is also said that when Gerasimov exhumed the body, an additional inscription inside the casket was found reading: "Who ever opens my tomb, shall unleash an invader more terrible than I". In any case, two days after Gerasimov had begun the exhumation, Nazi Germany launched Operation Barbarossa, its invasion of the U.S.S.R! Timur was re-buried with full Islamic ritual in November 1942 just before the Soviet victory at the Battle of Stalingrad (ref Marozzi 2004).

In the arts:
  • Tamerlano (1724) - opera by George Frideric Handel, in Italian, based on the 1675 play Tamerlan ou la mort de Bajazet by Jacques Pradon.
  • Bajazet (1735) - opera by Antonio Vivaldi, portrays the capture of Bayezid I by Timur
  • Il gran Tamerlano (1772) - opera by Josef Mysliveček that also portrays the capture of Bayezid I by Timur
  • Tamburlaine the Great, Parts I and II - play by Christopher Marlowe (English, 1563–1594).
  • Tamerlane - first published poem of Edgar Allan Poe (American, 1809–1849).
  • Timur is the deposed, blind former King of Tartary and father of the protagonist Calaf in the opera Turandot (1924) by Giacomo Puccini, libretto by Giuseppe Adami and Renato Simoni.
  • Timour appears in the story Lord of Samarkand by Robert E. Howard.
  • Tamerlan - novel by Colombian writer Enrique Serrano (ISBN 978-958-42-0540-7) in Spanish
  • Timur Lang is also the name of the warlord that shall be defeated in the game Might and Magic IX, a sort of joke using the names of Timur Leng and this game's designer's one, Timothy Lang.
  • Tamerlan appears in the Russian movie Dnevnoy Dozor (Day Watch), in which he steals the chalk of fate.
  • Tamerlane is the name of the corporation which is taking over Central Asia in the 2008 satire War, Inc..
  • Tamerlane is the chosen name of a supposed real life super-villain within the Real Life Super-Hero community.
Tamerlane was the greatest political Central Asian. His reign from 1370 to 1405, initiated the most active period of Central Asian history. This period, thanks to the impetus imparted by him, was to last to the beginning of the sixteenth century. The name Tamerlane is the sixteenth century European form of the Turkish Timur or Temur-i-link, Temur the lame, a name given him because of a slight limp, variously explained by injury in an early battle or a tubercular infection. Tamerlane was a politician turned soldier. Inside Central Asia, he created a new kind of composite army, his impact on the surrounding homelands was that of an enemy, and his contribution to world history was to what may be called the global arsenal: a new pool of military technology on which all states increasingly drew. This pool remained in much the form left by Tamerlane till the transformations produced by the industrialized warfare of the nineteenth century. Tamerlane and Napoleon were essentially contemporaries.

Tamerlane was primarily a conqueror. Except for Alexander he conquered more than anyone else, more than Chinggis, and did a horrifying amount of destruction. Living in a harsh and grim century, the worst for civilization since the Dark Ages, he was himself perforce harsh and grim. Yet, unlike Chinggis, there was a gleam of enlightenment about him. Although illiterate, he promoted a form of culture which dominated the Islamic world for three centuries and influenced the European Renaissance. Although a nomad, who preferred to live in a tent, and be on the move, he was a Muslim (of a kind), spoke two if not three languages, played chess, liked to be read history at mealtimes, loved buildings, appreciated porcelain, and carried round a portable bath. Although beginning with light cavalry, he ended the supremacy of the steppe horseman initiated by Chinggis. Tamerlane was a second Chinggis but also an ant-Chinggis. Eclecticism and intellectual curiosity were his hallmarks. It is these, rather than his conquests, which make him interesting. Ibn Khaldun, who met him outside Damascus in 1401 wrote: "This king Timur is one of the greatest and mightiest kings . . . he is highly intelligent and very perspicacious, addicted to debate and argument about what he knows and also about what he does not know."

TAMERLANE IN CENTRAL ASIA

Between 1360 and 1370 Tamerlane created a political machine and a new kind of army. Both were rooted in the political background of the Chaghatai khanate and the circumstances of their creation, but in the grand design which guided Tamerlane's efforts to make them permanent, they went beyond past and present toward a different future.

The Chaghatai khanate lacked stability. The "inju" state satisfied neither the nomads nor the sedentarists. Oboghs (nomadic tribes) and sarbadars (urban mafias: the word literally meant a head on a gibbet) pulled in different directions. Even when the khanate was divided in 1334 into nomadic and sedentary halves, stability was not achieved. On the contrary volatility increased. In the east, in Semirechie, Zungharia and the Tarim basin, the khans of Moghulistan could maintain a nomadic state only for a generation, but then converted to Islam, and fell under the control of the half sedentarized oboghs of the southwest, notably the Dughlat of Kashgaria. In the west, in Transoxania and Afghan Turkestan, the Muslim khans failed to establish a normal Islamic state based on bureaucrats, slave soldiers and the ulema (law doctors). Instead, they fell under the control of semi-nomadic oboghs: the Arlat in the west, the Barlas in the centre, and theJalayir in the north, and two non-tribal military groups, the Qaraunas and the Qa-uchin. Moreover, despite their increasing institutional similarity, Moghulistan and Transoxania remained ideological enemies. The westerners referred to the easterners as Jats, or robbers. The easterners referred to the westerners as Qaraunas, literally mongrels.

It was in this unstable world that Temur Barlas built up his political machine. He was born in 1336, not far from Samarkand, the son of a lesser chief of the Barlas obogh. The Barlas were one of a group of five or six ex-Mongol, now Turkish, oboghs or pseudo oboghs which provided the four qarac beys or regents who constituted an informal council of state with or against the khans. The Barlas held the area between the Oxus and the Jaxartes around Samarkand. The Qaraunas and the Arlat held the middle Oxus and points south into Khorasan and Afghan Turkestan. TheJalayir held theJaxartes and Ferghana. The Qa-uchin, military professionals rather than a tribe, held scattered positions all over the ulus. By 'hold' was meant, in the oases, the exercise of taxing rights for the tribe in accordance with Kebek's assignment of tumen to particular pieces of sedentary territory, and for the chiefs, ownership of some agricultural or meadow land. In 1346 Qazan, the last even minimally effective khan, was assassinated by Qazaghan, amir of the Qaraunas, supported by the Arlat obogh. Strictly, the Qaraunas were not an obogh. The name meant mixed or mongrel. It referred originally to Mongol task forces or garrisons, drawn from more than one obogh or even ulus, or from Turkish auxiliaries outside the Mongol tribal system altogether, but whose descendants, hereditary soldiers, had by the middle of the fourteenth century become the main fighting force of the khanate. Qazan, in other words was eliminated by his own commander in chief who, under a puppet Chaghatid, established a federation under the ascendancy of the Qaraunas. Of this federation the Barlas were members. In 1358, however, Qazaghan was assassinated, his son was less forceful, the Barlas, the Jalayir, the more aristocratic oboghs, seceded, arld the federation collapsed.

In 1360, the weakness of Western Chaghatai attracted invasion from the khan of Moghulistan, Tughluq Temur, who, despite his nomad background, was a recent convert to Islam. A strong ruler, he aimed to give his nomads booty, acquire more sedentary suyects and reunite the ulus. With the Moghul invasion, the Qarauna ascendancy failed and Temur Barlas, who since 1356 had been an officer in the amir's army, went over to the khan. But Moghul rule proved unpopular. TheJats seemed barbarians and resistance was continued by Qaraunas from northern Afghanistan led by Qazaghan's grandson, Husayn. In 1362 Tamerlane changed sides again and rejoined the Qaraunas. But the move was premature. The main Moghul army returned and Husayn and Tamerlane had to flee to Khorasan. In 1363, however, Tughluq Temur died, the next khan was less able, and the amirs of Kashgar were taking over Moghulistan, so the freedom fighters returned to Transoxania, with Husayn becoming chief amir like his grandfather. It looked like a resurrection of Qarauna ascendancy with the Barlas as their deputies. But in 1365 the Moghuls invaded again. The Qarauna and Barlas forces were defeated at the battle of the mire, fought during a thunderstorm when the ground was bad for big, shod, sedentary horses, but good for small, unshod, steppe ponies.

The Moghuls, no doubt, expected an easy conquest now, but again something unexpected happened. The sarbadars of Samarkand closed the gates and refused to surrender. Moreover they organized ambushes and withstood a siege until epidemic broke out among the Moghul horses. The Moghuls retreated not only from Samarkand but from all Transoxania, since they now had nomad versus sedentarist troubles back home. Husayn returned from Afghanistan, but his prestige was weak. The Moghuls had been defeated, not by the warriors, the oboghs, but by the artisans, the sarbadars. To reestablish himself, Husayn therefore seized control of Samarkand and put the sarbadarleaders to death, except for one whose life was pleaded for by his right hand man Temur Barlas, who also paid the fine he imposed on the city. Now that the Moghuls had gone, a struggle for power between Husayn and Tamerlane was inherently probable in accordance with the rules of blood tanistry. To court the sarbadars, therefore, was good policy, though Tamerlane seems to have been the first nomad politician sufficiently unsnobbish to do so.

As Tamerlane may have calculated, Husayn replied with a countermove which cost him the support of the other element in politics, the nomads, particularly non-territorial military professionals such as the Qa-uchin. Husayn decided to build himself a permanent capital and urban base on the site of Balkh in Afghan Turkestan, ruined since the time of Chinggis, but now to be developed as an anti Samarkand. The move to a fixed capital annoyed the nomads in general, while the economies which the building of the new capital entailed, made Husayn appear stingy to the army officers - a bad image for a nomad ruler. Tamerlane played on this, spent freely himself, and suggested that Husayn had behaved in cowardly fashion in the battle of the mire. Soon he was the hero, not only of city guilds and dervishes, but also of the swordsmen, the young blades of the army, the bahadurs. At the same time, he kept the support of the non Qarauna obogh chiefs, especially the Barlas and the Jalayir, obtaining some support even from the Arlat, Husayn had to do all the unpleasant post-war things: Tamerlane did his best to do all the pleasant ones. When he finally revolted in 1370 at the head of his coalition, Husayn had little support left and he was easily defeated and killed.

Tamerlane now had the task of constructing a regime which should be more than a Barlas ascendancy. What he constructed was both a political machine and an army, an army resting upon a political machine. For war was not only the means by which power had been acquired, but also one of the ends for which it was to be exercised.

The political machine has been analyzed by Beatrice Forbes Manz. It may be seen as consisting of six concentric circles. First, at its core, was Tamerlane himself, his wives, his children, their spouses, grandchildren, closest supporters, and personal retinue. After 1370, some of the latter became Tamerlane's marshals. They were placed in charge of tumen, military units of a nominal 10,000 or, in the conquered territories, of major garrisons drawn from a number of tumen or oboghs, in effect new mixed units or Qaraunas. At this level, Tamerlane's regime was a more personal one than had existed before. There were no ex-officio qaranc beys or council of state. Next, there were the loyal tribes, particularly the Barlas and Jalayir oboghs. Tamerlane, however, had no wish to be the prisoner of his natural supporters. The obogh chiefs therefore were either taken out of their tribal context or replaced by the marshals or people taken from the third circle. Politics were substantially detribalized under Tamerlane. Third, there were the Qaraunas, the defeated supporters of Amir Husayn, whom Tamerlane inherited and was careful not to dissolve. Instead he put them under his closest associate and high constable Cheku Barlas and used them as a counterweight against his own tribal supporters. Fourth, Tamerlane was consistently supported by the Qa-uchin, the extra-tribal, non-territorial, hereditary professionals who, after 1370, provided reliable servitors in garrisons and acted as a military provostcorps. Fifth, Tamerlane and his marshals recruiLed soldiers lrom the nomadic population of the empire outside Transoxania: in the east from the Moghuls, in the north from the Kipchaks and Golden Horde, in the west from the Azeris and Turks of eastern Anatolia. Finally, sedentarists, generally Persian speaking, were incorporated as infantry auxiliaries, sometimes under local dynasties, or in the siege train, which the army came to require. Thus politically the Chaghatai ulus was restructured by Tamerlane on more personal, dynastic and meritocratic lines.

The army resting upon this political machine was increasingly a composite force of horse, foot and artillery rather than a nomad people in arms. Its centrepiece was the heavy cavalry of armoured knights so frequently portrayed in Timurid art. This was provided by Tamerlane's personal supporters and retinue to whom he made grants of sedentary land for the upkeep of their chargers. Tamerlane, however, continued to use nomadic light cavalry from the Chaghatai oboghs and went to war accompanied by a vast tent city. Sedentary infantry formed part of the expedition against Toktamish in 1391 and fought in the great battle of Kanduzcha on June 18, though this was primarily a victory of heavy cavalry over light. Following his campaign in India, Tamerlane acquired an elephant corps. They led the attack on the Ottoman army in the battle of Ankara on July 28 1402, though this too was primarily a heavy cavalry victory, this time over Janissary infantry. Tamerlane made use of sophisticated artillery weapons in the sieges of Aleppo and Smyrna and even evinced some interest in seapower. In military technology, as in state building, Tamerlane was eclectic and effective.

There remained the problem of permanence. In 1370 Tamerlane had come to power as the candidate of both the swordsmen and the sarbadars, though the fundamental interests of the two, as nomads and sedentarists, were still opposed. Both, however, were demoralized after ten years of war and needed leadership. Tamerlane became Great Amir, but kept a tame Chinggisid as khan to reassure the nomads and secure Mongolian legitimation. He married Husayn's widow, Sarai Khanum, a daughter of the Chaghatai khan Qazan, to gratify the Qaraunas and to consolidate his position as imperial son-in-law, guregen, the highest title to which a non-Chinggisid and Turk could aspire. But it was all temporary and precarious. Tamerlane's basis of support would split, crumble and desert him, as Husayn's had done, unless he could find some way not just of juxtaposing but of uniting nomads and sedentarists. This was the problem which had baffled all governments in the inju states, and particularly in the Chaghatai khanate, since the death of Chinggis.

Tamerlane's originality lay in going beyond improvisations, such as those of Tuva and Kebek, to the construction of a system which would give both halves of the population what they wanted, not just temporarily, but permanently in institutional arrangements. At its simplest, this system can be described as peace at home and war abroad, peace for the oases, war for the steppe. Specifically, it meant externalizing the violence of the oboghs and swordsmen and making it serve the interests of the townspeople and merchants. A key element in this scheme was a conscious design to reactivate the silk road, the central land route, and make it the monopoly link between Europe and China. Monopolization was to be achieved by war: primarily, against the Golden Horde, the master of the principal rival, the northern land route; secondarily, against the states of western Persia and against the Moghuls to the east in order to place the silk road under unified control politically; and finally, against India, Egypt and China in order to cripple the second rival, the southern sea route, as far as this was possible without a navy.

Tamerlane's grand design and the campaigns which put it into effect were an illustration of what Sir Halford Mackinder called the power of the heartland: Central Asia dominating the homeland peninsulas of Europe, Arabia, India and China. Such a dominance, Tamerlane believed, would satisfy the contradictory demands of his subjects for peace and war. The sedentary population would get peace at home, trade and the capacity to pay the tamgha or capital levy on business. The nomads, especially the rank and file outside the tribal oligarchies, would get war beyond the frontier: the kind of mobile, destructive, booty gathering war they liked. For Tamerlane, unlike Chinggis' successors, did not aim at permanent occupation or the creation of new inju states, but simply at devastation. The programme was not entirely new. Khubilai had been a Confucian emperor at home, while sending Mongol armadas against Japan and South-east Asia. Tuva had invaded India and Kebek had developed Andijan on the central land route. The Il-khans had been promoters of trade, and it was their route resting on Tabriz and Sultaniya that Tamerlane sought to unify and reactivate. Admittedly too, Tamerlane probably partly stumbled on his policy because of its immediate political advantages.

Yet it is likely that Tamerlane grasped the problem as a whole and worked out its general answer, though obviously not in modern terms. Early in his career, he took the title or epithet Sahib Qiran symbolized by three circlets forming a triangle. It was an astrological term which meant 'Lord of the Fortunate Conjuncture'. It expressed his sense not just of balancing or juggling ruler, nomads and sedentarists, as his predecessors had done, but of integrating them into a dynamic institutional system. The Castilian ambassador Clavijo who was in Samarkand in 1404 noted the conqueror's unusual interest in trade: 'Thus trade has always been fostered by Timur with the view of making his capital the noblest of cities', and stressed the immense revenue he received from it.' It was an immensely destructive system for those outside it. Bishop Jewel in his Apology compared the Pope, the forerunner of Antichrist, to 'Tamerlane the king of Scythia, a wild and barbarous creature. Similarly, Botero in The Greatness of Cities compared Tamerlane to Attila and Chinggis as scourges of God in Asia, 'where like a horrible tempest or deadly raging flood he threw down to the ground the most ancient and worthiest cities and carried from thence their wealth and riches'. Yet, as Botero saw, in the eye of the storm, in Samarkand itself, there was a possibility of civilization, which Tamerlane sought to realize. For his grand design included, not only conquest and commerce, but also culture to serve as the lingua franca of the top elite. This culture was both Islamic and secular.

Within the spectrum of Islam, Tamerlane was eclectic, but with a bias to modernism rather than fundamentalism. Among sedentarists and most nomads, Islam could now be taken for granted. Tamerlane coexisted with an ulema of the Hanafite law school. On his return from India, possibly inspired by what he had seen in Delhi, he built the colossal Friday mosque known as Bibi Khanum, a structure the size of Milan cathedral, whose dome imitated that of the Ommayad mosque in Damascus. Yet Tamerlane founded no madrasa, or higher Islamic college in his own name, and did not incorporate the ulema into his machinery of government. With the folk Islam of the dervish orders, who now dominated the oases and were making progress on the steppe, Tamerlane's relations were likewise ambivalent. He avowed himself the disciple of Sayyid Baraka, the holy man of the commercial city of Tirmidh, and on his death buried him in the tomb he had built for himself and the imperial family, the Gur Amir. He constructed one of his finest buildings at the tomb of Ahmad Yassawi, whose order, the Yassawiya, was doing most to spread Folk Islam among the nomads. In Samarkand, Tamerlane developed the cemetery complex of Shah Zindeh north of the walls, a centre of popular religion focused on the shrine of the legendary Kusam ibn Abbas, cousin of Muhammed. Yet Tamerlane kept his distance from Baha ad-Din Naqshband, the founder of the most traditionalist, popular and later most powerful order, the Naqshbndiyya. His leading theological adviser, the Hanafite cadi Abd alJabbar Khwarazmi, was reputed to be a Mutazilite or modernist while he himself, at one time at least, was regarded as a Shiite. Some scholars have queried this but it makes sense in that Shiite authoritarianism was frequently allied with Mutazilite modernism against Koranic fundamentalism and shara traditionalism. Tamerlane's Islam was eclectic but consistent.

Tamerlane's secular culture was aesthetic rather than literary or scientific. He loved buildings, gardens, bibelots, displays, objets d 'art. Indeed, it has been said of Tamerlane, as of Goering, that he loved art so much that he could not help stealing it! Thus foreign buildings, such as the Ommayad mosque at Damascus, were sketched by official artists even as they went up in flames. The Byzantine palace gates of the Ottoman capital of Brusa were carried off to Samarkand, where they were much admired by Clavijo. Thousands of craftsmen and artisans were deported to Samarkand from Sultaniya, Shiraz, Baghdad and Damascus to new industrial suburbs named after those cities. Yet Tamerlane also established a kitabkhana for the copying, illustration, binding and storage of books. He employed historians to chronicle his deeds and his questions to Ibn Khaldun about the Maghreb suggest scientific as well as strategic interest. Moreover, his secular culture was couched in terms of the Shah-nama, the prompt-book of a heroic but cultivated military aristocracy. In the war against the Golden Horde, Tamerlane saw himself as Rustum defeating the hosts of Turan and coming to the aid of his son in the heat of battle. Against western enemies, he figured as an eastern Alexander, of Alid and Fatimid descent as in the Shah-nama Alexander had been of Achaemenid descent, revivifying Iran at the same time as purging its leadership. Yet Tamerlane was also the successor of Chinggis who died on his way to China to prove himself his equal by restoring the Yuan to Peking. Alternatively, he was again Rustum who fought the Khaqan of China in Khotan or Alexander who built the Great Wall of Gog and Magog. In culture, as in religion, politics and war, Tamerlane was eclectic. Like Chinggis he died on campaign, but his body, like Alexander's, rested in a splendid tomb in an imperial city.

TAMERLANE IN THE HOMELANDS

In the light of his grand design, Tamerlane's campaigns, bewildering at first sight and apparently purely reactive, became coherent. First between 1370 and 1385, following a period of internal reform to complete his restructuring of the political system, there were campaigns east to overawe Moghulistan, north to recover Khiva, and west against the successor states of the Il-khanate in Persia and Iran. All these had the implied aim of asserting Chaghatai control of the central land route from Tabriz to Turfan. In these campaigns, Tamerlane did not display striking military genius or achieve signal political success, especially against the Moghuls whose light cavalry retained a tactical edge. Second, between 1385 and 1395, campaigns were directed north against the Golden Horde, the master of the currently predominant northern land route, an operation explicitly destructive in its aims. This was the most difficult of Tamerlane's campaigns and the only one in which, his combination of strike power and logistics, he showed strategic genius. It produced the victories of Kanduzcha inJune 1391 and of the Terek river in April 1395 and led to the destruction of the trading cities of the Horde, Astrakhan, Tana and Sarai. Third, in 1398-9, Tamerlane raided India. This was a looting expedition primarily, but also a blow against the southern sea route, and ideological display: a jihad, an imitation of Alexander, and doing what even Chinggis had not done. Fourth, between 1400 and 1404, there was the campaign against the Islamic Far West, the Mamluks and the Ottomans, and to some extent Christendom in the guise of Eastern heterodoxy and the Knights of St. John. This too had both commercial and ideological dimensions: to secure the Western terminus of the central land route in Aleppo, to hit the southern sea route in its Egyptian outlet, to conquer infidels and to repress heretics. Finally, in 1405, there was the unfinished campaign against China: to secure the silk road's eastern terminus in Peking, to equal Chinggis, and to outdo even the legendary Alexander by going beyond the Wall. Through these campaigns Tamerlane became part of the history of the homelands.

The Golden Horde and the Russias

In the period following Tamerlane, the Golden Horde fragmented. From the main body in Sarai, there seceded to the west, three Turkish city states, Astrakhan, Kazan and the Crimea, and to the east, three Turkish nomadic hordes, Nogai, Sibir and Uzbek. As a result, it is said, the princes of Russia in Lithuania, Novgorod and Moscow were able to assert their full independence, and Moscow, by its annexation of Novgorod in 1482, could claim the succession to the khans. It is tempting to ascribe these developments to Tamerlane's defeat of Toktamish, and in particular to his devastation of the central Horde cities and the northern land route on which their prosperity and its stability depended. While Tamerlane's impact was real, this view requires nuancing.

The Golden Horde was an inju state with a difference. Its relations to its sedentarists, the Russians, were less close than those of the Il-khanate to the Persians, Chaghatai to the Iranians of Central Asia, or the Yuan to the Chinese. The cities in which its oligarchies had their arsenals and turned Muslim were either its own creation, as with the two Sarais, or were the creation of non-Russians: the Genoese and the Venetians in the Crimea and Tana, the Bulgar Turks and Finno-Ugrians in Kazan. The conflicts which afflicted the Horde, during the co-reign of Nogai in the thirteenth century, during the Great Trouble before Tamerlane in the fourteenth century, and in the city and nomad secessions in fifteenth century after him, were political rather than social or ecological, violence within the inju consortium rather than against it. Though Tamerlane exacerbated these conflicts by his blows against the northern land route, which reduced the dividend to be distributed, it is arguable that the ulus of Jochi died by its own hand rather than by that of Tamerlane.

The immediate result of Tamerlane's intervention, indeed, was a strengthening of the Horde, at least externally. On the defeat of Toktamish, Tamerlane replaced him with Timur-Kutlugh, grandson of Urus Khan, a former ruler of the Blue Horde or eastern half of the ulus of Jochi. He partnered him (perhaps in imitation of his own position as Great Amir) with the amir Edigei, a member of the Manghit obogh from Magyshlak in the Nogai confederation, as co-ruler. This move represented a strengthening of the nomadic element in the now partly deurbanized Horde. Timur-Kutlugh and Edigei proved anything but puppets. In August 1399 they defeated Vytautas of Lithuania, Belorussia and the Ukraine, the strongest prince in Russia of his day, at the battle of the Vorskla river near Poltava. By 1405 they were sufficiently independent of and threatening to Tamerlane for him to receive an embassy at Otrar from Toktamish, in exile in Siberia but still hoping to regain power in the Horde. Edigei recovered Khiva from the Timurids in 1406, raided Muscovy in 1408, and renewed the traditional alliance with the Mamluks in 1409. He was unable to maintain his position, however, against the Khan and the house of Toktamish, and was driven from power in 1411. Yet his career suggests that Tamerlane was not the only, or the chief, factor in decline of the Golden Horde.

Similarly, it is not clear that Tamerlane made the fortune of Moscow. Though Vytautas lost the battle of the Vorskla river, he remained the strongest ruler in Russia till his death in 1430. If Lithuania did not retain its leading position among the principalities of Rus, it was less because of the Vorskla than because of the union of Krevo with Poland in 1386 which re-oriented Lithuania west rather than east, and the subsequent conversion of the pagan Lithuanians - the last Europeans to Christianize - to Catholicism rather than Orthodoxy. The grand dukes thereby made it more difficult to rule Belorussia and the Ukraine. They gave Moscow the chance to assert its claim to be, not so much the Third Rome, as the Second Kiev, the centre of all-Rus Orthodoxy. This claim was reinforced by the acquisition of Novgorod and the new Russia of the northeast in 1482. Yet the Vorskla may have made a difference. If it had gone the other way, Vytautas might have separated from his cousin Wradyslaw of Poland, undone the union of Krevo, and reunited the Russians round Vilnius or Kiev rather than round Moscow. Tamerlane was not the only factor in the development of fifteenth century Russia, but his impact cannot be ignored.

India

Tamerlane's campaign in India is usually regarded as a mere looting expedition like those of Tuva or a pure mission of destruction. In fact, it was more than this in both intention and impact. In intent, it may be associated ideologically with Tamerlane's desire to imitate Alexander and surpass Chinggis. Historically, it looked back to Mahmud of Ghazna, the patron of Firdausi, on whose Turco-Iranian court Tamerlane modelled his own, and who was best known in Islam as a conqueror of India. Politically, it looked forward to the conflict with the Ottomans. The Ottoman sultan had defeated the Serbs in 1389 at Kossovo, the combined princes of Christendom under Sigismund of Hungary and John of Burgundy in 1396 at Nikopolis. He was a gazi, a warrior for the faith and conqueror of infidels. Except marginally in the Caucasus, all Tamerlane's victories to date had been over Muslim princes. A campaign in India, where the Tughluq dynasty could be represented as falling down on the jihad was a convenient way of acquiring Islamic prestige. It was also a way for acquiring appanages and military experience for Tamerlane's grandsons, Muhammed Sultan and Pir Muhammed, the children of his eldest son (at least by a free-born Muslim) Jahangir. Jahangir had died in 1375 and the ageing Tamerlane envisaged his sons as his heirs.

The impact of the campaign was considerable. Where Tuva's raids had strengthened the Tughluq dynasty by forcing it to centralization and firearms, Tamerlane's expedition fatally weakened it by the sack of Delhi. Moreover, it re-opened India to the Pushtun hill people of what was to become Afghanistan, as formerly in the days of the Ghorids. India was not to be closed again till Tamerlane's clescendants, Babur, Humayun and Akbar, took charge of it and reconfined the Afghans to their hills. The Afghan Lodi dynasty, which had succeeded the Tughluq, had not been effective rulers of India. They brought too many of their tribal conflicts with them, so that the Muslim drive to the south against Vijayanagar lacked leadership and cutting edge. Paradoxically, Tamerlane the gazi contributed to the survival of the Hindu community, and hence, in the long run, to its resurgence in the days of the raj. A similar paradox has sometimes been suggested in Tamerlane's relations with Western Islam and Christendom, though here with less justification.

Western Islam and Christendom

Tamerlane's campaign in the west was directed against two enemies: the Ottomans and the Mamluks. In Tamerlane's eyes, which of the two was the more significant? Here a distinction must be made between military and political priorities. In military terms, Tamerlane will have recognized that the Ottoman composite army was, potentially at least, the more dangerous opponent. Though Tamerlane had a high regard for its quality, the Mamluk army had not developed beyond the heavy cavalry, which had frustrated the Il-khanate, whereas the Ottomans, since Kossovo, combined Janissary infantry, Serbian knights, Anatolian spahis, and Turcoman light cavalry. Moreover, the Mamluk command was divided and irresolute, whereas the Ottoman leadership was centralized and Tamerlane regarded Bayezit as an excellent general. His first moves west therefore were directed against the Ottomans: the securing of his own rear area at Tabriz and in the winter pastures of Karabagh, the closing of the door to Bayezit through the occupation of Konia, Sivas and Samsun. In political terms, however, the Mamluks had the higher priority. For Tamerlane's grand design, Aleppo, the Western terminus of the central land route, was an essential part of his empire. So too was the land corridor from the Tigris to the sea, the old classical route from one Seleucia to the other. It was along this route that Tamerlane marched to take Aleppo in 1400, Damascus in January 1401 from the Mamluks, Baghdad in July from theJalayir sultans, before returning to the Anatolian front to defeat Bayezit at the battle of Ankara in July 1402. After Kanduzcha, Ankara was Tamerlane's greatest victory, but it was really won by manoeuvre before being won on the battlefield, when Tamerlane placed himself between the Ottomans and their base. Bayezit was an excellent general, but an essentially European one, and neither he nor his troops were used to the Asiatic war of movement conducted by Tamerlane. Clavijo reports that after Ankara, Tamerlane was expected to return to the attack on the Mamluks, but in fact, his main objectives accomplished, after a brief stay on the plains of Karabagh, he returned to the east to prepare the final campaign against China.

The impact of the campaign needs careful assessment. It is sometimes argued that the battle of Ankara deferred the fall of Constantinople for fifty years and saved Christendom from deeper penetration by an earlier and more dynamic Ottoman empire. The first argument may be accepted, though the loss of Anatolia might have led to more interest in Rumelia, but not the second. Ankara was a serious defeat for the Ottoman army and produced a leadership crisis, but nothing more. The strength of the Ottoman state lay not in any particular army or sultan, but in its institutions: the dyhasty, the kapikulari meritocracy, the devsirme career open to the talents, the Janissary infantry, the associated timariots. These were consolidated rather than subverted by Ankara. Moreover neither Constantinople nor Christendom generally, absorbed in schism and the Hundred Years War, used the respite from the Ottomans to strengthen themselves. From the Ottoman perspective, Ankara was a defaite sans landemain. Tamerlane would not have had it otherwise. He had no wish to to destroy the Ottoman state, and were it not for its threat to his flank in eastern Anatolia might not have fought it. In 1395 Tamerlane wrote to Bayezit, whom he addressed as the Sultan of Edirne, proposing a partition of the Golden Horde along the line of the Dnieper, i.e. a deflection of Ottoman interest to the north rather than to the east. In this the Great Amir may have perceived Ottoman interests more clearly than the sultan.

If Orthodox and Catholic Christendom gained little from Tamerlane, Eastern heterodoxy lost much. Tamerlane planned to restore the North Syrian corridor, long a military frontier between north and south, as an east-west commercial thoroughfare. But it was to be a Muslim thoroughfare and he systematically destroyed Christian institutions in the area, monastic, episcopal and mercantile.l5 Clavijo reports demolition of Armenian churches in eastern Anatolia. The Jacobites were not able to elect a maphnan between 1379 and 1404. Though the Eastern Christian communities had been under increasing pressure from their Muslim neighbours ever since the Il-khans threatened a Christian revanche, Atiya argues that it was Tamerlane who destroyed the Nestorians as a national and international organization in northern Iraq and gravely weakened the Jacobites in Kurdistan and northern Syria. The long survival of these rival Christian communities has been largely forgotten because Tamerlane so thoroughly suppressed them. Tamerlane might be polite to the Castilian ambassador Clavijo and give him precedence over the representatives of the Ming emperor, but his Islamic commitment, whether Mutazilite or Shiite, was real.

If Eastern heterodoxy lost much through Tamerlane, the Mamluks, his other Muslim enemy in the west, lost something. The Mamluk state was a foreign military oligarchy of slaves without masters, the culmination of the Islamic tradition of slave soldiers and an adaptation of the Mongols' ordo the better to resist them. As foreign, as needing constant immigration, the Mamluks lived in alliance and symbiosis with the Golden Horde. Tamerlane's weakening of the Horde, therefore, weakened the Mamluks, and consolidated the transition from Kipchak to Circassia as their recruiting area. Circassia, neither Indo-European nor Turkish in language, was a highly provincial background for a successful ruling class. Though the Mamluks recovered Damascus and Aleppo after 1405, and retained them till their defeat by the Ottomans in 1516, their power was less. Ayn Jalut had been avenged.

China

Tamerlane never invaded Ming China, but this threat to do so had a profound impact there. The first Ming ruler, the Hung-wu emperor (1368-1398), was not particularly interested in foreign policy. He was primarily an internal revolutionary and though he allowed his generals to fight campaigns against the Mongols or their associates, his purposes were basically defensive. He contented himself with sending embassies to former Yuan tributaries asking that the Ming be recognized as the new overlords. One of these reached Samarkand in 1395 and was promptly imprisoned by Tamerlane who was already planning his campaign to control the trade route, restore the Yuan, equal Chinggis and surpass Alexander.

Hung-wu died in 1398. After a period of civil war, in 1402 he was succeeded by his son the Yung-lo emperor (1402-1424), who had been concerned with China's Inner Asian frontier and in particular with its shortage of good cavalry horses. He at once began a crash programme of horse breeding and buying, no doubt in anticipation of an invasion from Tamerlane, and in the meantime sent another embassy to Samarkand. This was the embassy encountered by Clavijo. Its terms of reference annoyed Tamerlane and it too was imprisoned, though probably some word of what was going on reached Peking. Yunglo took no immediate action, but in 1405 the first of his great naval expeditions to the west under the eunuch admiral Cheng Ho set sail, paralleled by a flurry of diplomatic activity by land. The primary purpose of these missions was to end China's isolation in the face of an attack from Tamerlane. Unlike his father, Yung-lo was interested in foreign policy. Indeed, unique among Chinese emperors, he made it a top priority. He was an external revolutionary. He planned to restructure China's place in the world by giving it a new oceanic dimension. Yunglo was promoted to this remarkable innovation by Tamerlane, though this could not be adrnitted in the record. He saw that the answer to the power of the heartland was seapower, the power of the circumference as represented by Cheng Ho's fleet. Here Yunglo was reacting not just to Tamerlane's threat but to his contribution to the world order in the institution of the global arsenal.

THE GLOBAL ARSENAL

Down to the Mongolian explosion, styles of warfare were disparate. The steppe with its innumerable ponies, mobile rear-area, people in arms, projectile preference, guerre a l'outrance contrasted with Iran with its big horses, armoured knights, support services, professionalism, impact preference, chivalrous welfare. Iran contrasted with an earlier, 'democratic' tradition of massed heavy industry and brutal, enslaving war, dormant in Europe since Classical antiquity, but in China revived by the Sung. In 1200 gunpowder was confined to China, war galleys to the Mediterranean, paddle wheelers to the Yangtze lakes, war elephants to India, the horse to the Old World. Everywhere generals and admirals acted within traditions and operations were less competition between equals than trials between different systems. From the Mongolian explosion, however, there began a process of osmosis which produced a standardized global arsenal in cavalry, artillery and seapower. Military intelligence travels fast and enemies are quick to imitate. Like the microbian common market, the global arsenal was rooted in the basic information circuit, but as a voluntary, not an involuntary part of this process. Tamerlane was both effect and cause, expression and agent.

Cavalry

The Mongolian explosion was based on the temporary superiority of light cavalry. From the middle of the thirteenth century, beginning with the battle of Ayn Jalut, heavy cavalry began to regain the advantage. To reduce inferiority in numbers, more big horses were bred in studs. Professionalism, where the Iranian knight had always had the advantage over the Turco-Mongolian herdsman, was promoted. Advantages with armour, bows and equipment were extended. Knights were better coordinated with other units - infantry, light cavalry, and artillery- in what became for the first time composite armies. Organization, the factor which had surcharged the steppe, was brought up to Chinggisid standards. The Ottoman party state, the Mamluk military brotherhood, Tamerlane's political machine, all borrowed from the ordo. Defeats, like Ankara, no longer caused states to dissolve, as the tribal and city polity of the Khwarazmshah had dissolved. Ayn Jalut was followed by the success of the Il-khanate against the Golden Horde, the defeat of first Arigh Boke and then Qaidu by the Alan heavy cavalry of Khubilai, the ascendancy within the Golden Horde of Nogai, again in association with the Alans, and the inability of the Moghuls to reunite the Chaghatai khanate. Historians have been quick to document the superiority of the steppe. They have been much less so to document its reversal.

Of this reversal, Tamerlane's campaigns against the Golden Horde, culminating in the battles of Kanduzcha and the Terek river, were the climax. It is clear from contemporary illustrations that the core of Tamerlane's army consisted of armoured knights, taken out of their tribal structure, attached to the Timurid courts, and provided with grants of sedentary land known as soyurghal on which to maintain their large horses. From literary sources, especially Clavijo who was interested in nomads, it is also clear that Tamerlane continued to make use of steppe light cavalry accompanied on campaign by its civilian population. To this mixture of heavy and light cavalry, Tamerlane later added the super-heavy cavalry of his elephants. His army, indeed was the most composite of the fourteenth century. The Golden Horde, on the other hand, never made the transition from a simple to a composite force. The failure of Nogai to consolidate, the subsequent dominance within his horde of the Manghit obogh of Magyshlak, and the ascendancy of the eastern Blue Horde over the western White Horde, all spelt the continued preponderance of light cavalry. It was this which was defeated in the campaigns against Tamerlane. Here he was a true anti Chinggis. By contrast, the Ottomans made their way increasingly composite. In the Balkans they combined Janissary infantry and artillery with their own timariot heavy horse and with light cavalry supplied by their satellite the Crimean khanate. It was in the Balkan-Ukraine region too that there developed the intermediate horseman: the hussar, Cossack or Uhlan, mounted on a big horse, but with the saddle, short stirrups, weapons and absence of body armour of the light horseman.

Artillery

Tamerlane's role in the rise of artillery and firearms, as an essential part of composite armies, has not been sufficiently appreciated. One reason for this is that their history is too completely identified with that of gunpowder and the gun.

The earliest successful firearm was based not on gunpowder, but on naphtha. This was the famous Greek fire, essentially a flame thrower operated by bellows, supposedly invented by Callinicus of Heliopolis (Egypt or Syria, it is not clear) c.650 AD. It was certainly used against the Muslim sieges between 671 and 678, against the Rus in 941, and against the Pisans off Rhodes in 1103. Greek fire came to China c.900, probably via the southern sea route. It is first mentioned in 917 as a gift from Ch'ien Liu, king of the Hangchow city state of Wu-yueh, to A-pao-chi, founder of the northern Khitan kingdom of Liao, doubtless with a view to common defence against the expanding ernpire of the Five Dynasties in Honan, Hopei and Shansi. A reference for 919 specifies that the meng-huo yu (fiercely-burning oil) and its siphon-like projector pump came from the Arab world, Ta-Shih kuo. Gunpowder, the formula for which is first mentioned in a Taoist text c.850 AD, found its first military use, in a low nitrate form, as ignition for naphtha based flame throwers. Its use in this way is first mentioned in the Wu-ching tsungyao (complete essentials of military science) of 1044, but as an already established practice, which probably went back to the tenth century. Naphtha, however, was never wholly satisfactory. In 975, for example, the Southern T'ang admiral Chu Ling-pin was defeated by the Northern Sung, when the wind turned his flame throwers back on his own ships. It was therefore increasingly replaced by gunpowder. Indeed in Arabic, naft, which had originally referred to Greek fire, came to denote first deflagrating low nitrate gunpowder and then explosive high nitrate gunpowder. Nevertheless, naphtha continued in use, especially in Middle Eastern armies to whom oil was readily available, and in the form of napalm still does. There are a number of indications that Tamerlane used such weap- ons: against elephants in India, mounted on elephants against Aleppo, and against ships in the siege of Smyrna.

When gunpowder replaced naphtha it did so first in the form of the back-firing rocket rather than the forward-firing gun. The military rocket, or fire arrow huo-chien originated in the civilian firecrackers known as 'ground rats' ti lao-shu which made their appearance in China in the twelfth century. Arounci 1200, 'ground rats' were used to power incendiary arrows instead of the crossbow and in 1245 rocket-propelled fire arrows were being used in units of the Sung navy exercising in the Ch'ien-t'ang estuary. These rockets were propelled by middle nitrate, 'whoosh', gunpowder. Rockets, however, did not long retain their predominance. Though they continued to be used in the Chinese navy down to the Opium War, in the army, from the late thirteenth century, that is under the Yuan dynasty, they were increasingly replaced by hand guns and cannon using explosive, high nitrate and forward-firing gunpowder. These were developed out of the metal barrels employed when co-viative projectiles were added to naphtha-based and gunpow-der-ignited flame throwers. The earliest representation of a hand gun is in a Buddhist cave temple, dated 1250-80, Ta-tsu in Szechwan, first recognized as such by Robin Yates in June 1983. An actual gun dated to 1288 is in the Heilungkiang museum and several cannon survive from the mid-fourteenth century. Cannon first played a decisive role in naval actions on the Yangtze cluring the interregnum between Yuan and Ming.

In the West, references to gunpowder rockets appear in the late thirteenth century, especially in works ascribed to St. Albert Magnus, and they were in military use at Ghent in 1314. They were soon, however, superseded by gunpowder cannon. The earliest European picture of a cannon is in a manuscript of Walter Demilametes' De Nooilitatis . . . Regum of 1327 and they were employed at Crecy in 1346. Where rockets had their longest ascendancy was India and India was the inspiration for their revival in Europe initiated by William Congreve. According to Alam Khan, gunpowder weapons, presumably rockets, were introduced to India by the Chaghatai invasions of the early fourteenth century. Here they led to modifications in military architecture and were adopted by governments, Muslim and Hindu, in both north and south. In the north, the cost of firearms was a factor in the development of the more centralized regimes of Lhe Khalji and Tughluq Delhi sulltanates, which was one result of the Chaghatai invasions.

Flame throwers and rockets formed part of Tamerlane's military inheritance. He also took steps to acquire hand guns and cannon. Clavijo noted that, 'From Turkey he had brought their gun-smiths who made the arquebus . . . Again he had gathered here in Samarqand artillery men, both engineers and bombardiers, besides those who make the ropes by which these engines work.' While Clavijo does not give details and various translations are possible, the true arquebus is the Hackeniichse, the German hand gun with steadying rests, the immediate ancestor of the musket, while bombardiers and tow suggest some kind of cannon which the Ottomans had used at Kossovo in 1389. Hand guns and cannon were thus probably introduced to Central Asia from the west by Tamerlane. The Chinese already had cannon, but it was from Central Asia, most likely from the Moghul khanate of Turfan, that matchlock muskets were intro- duced to China, possibly in the time of Yung-lo, certainly by 1520. The Chinese account of the war with Turfan between 1505 and 1524 states that the Moghuls had learnt the use of firearms from Rum, i.e. the Ottoman empire. Tamerlane, therefore, by his commitment to a composite army, contributed to the diffusion of artillery technology as part of a single global arsenal. Subsequently, his descendants, the Mughals, were to make hand guns and cannon more widely used in India, just as his predecessors, the Chaghatai khans, had introduced rockets.

Seapower

Tamerlane and seapower appear a paradox. Most likely Tamerlane never saw the sea. He was the incarnation of the heartland - Braudel 's fortune monstrueuse des terres, Bernard Shaw's war god of Turania - and seapower, and more specifically oceanic power, is its antithesis. Yet Tamerlane did play a role in the genesis of seapower as an ingredient in the global arsenal. First, by his threatening accumulation of military power in the heartland, he provoked the first manifestation of oceanic power in Cheng Ho's voyages. Second, although Tamerlane did not live to see these voyages, he may have heard of the preparations for them, and even before, showed interest in the oceanic margins of his world. Third, Tamerlane's interest in the Far West, his invitation to the Castilian king, the information acquired by Clavijo, came closely upon the beginnings of Iberian seapower: the Castilian expeditions to Tetuan in 1400, to the Canary islands in 1402, the Portuguese expedition to Ceuta in 1415. Tamerlane both contributed to global consciousness and provided a further input to the basic information circuit.

Historians, like contemporaries, have been puzzled by the purpose of the six Chinese maritime expeditions between 1405 and 1433. The official explanation, a search among the Chinese communities of Southeast Asia for Yung-lo's predecessor the Chien-wen emperor, who was supposed to have survived the storming of Nanking by his uncle in 1402, seems among the least plausible. Other explanations: immediatization of relations with new states like Malacca, recanalization of private Chinese overseas trade into official, non-Chinese tributary channels, exotica to ornament and legitimize an usurped throne, scientific curiosity and a search for drugs in a time of new diseases, apply to some of the voyages, but not to all of them in detail. In Ma Huan's account, the climax of the voyages was Mecca. It may be inferred, therefore, that their primary purpose was to make contact with the Muslim world beyond Tamerlane as a potential ally for China in case the great invasion eventuated. This would explain the voyages as far as Ormuz and Aden, but not, it might be supposed, the tentatives southward toward the Madagascar channel and perhaps the Cape of Good Hope. But here too a strategic purpose may be conjectured. Yunglo will have heard of the precedence given over his ambassadors to Samarkand to those of Henry III of Castile. If the Franks of the Far West were so significant, should not China have direct contact with them? Yung-lo's death in 1424 inter rupted the series of voyages, so that the last in 1431 was only a reprise to compensate the military for the withdrawal from Vietnam, but if they had been pursued, Cheng Ho's armada might have appeared in the Tagus or the Guadalquivir. Such a thing was not inconceivable to contemporaries. Cheng Ho was a Muslim and Joanot Martorell has a Muslim fleet from the Canaries invade the England of Henry VI. Tamerlane provoked a new awareness of sea, indeed, oceanic, power.

Tamerlane himself was not without some perception of seapower. He may never have seen the sea, but he will most likely have seen the Caspian, whose trade in salt, sturgeon and caviare was a significant link between the Golden Horde and the Il-khanate. Moreover its strategic role on the flank of the central land route will not have escaped him. In his meeting with Ibn lKhaldun outside Damascus in 1401, Tamerlane asked the historian for a report - within 24 hours - on 'the whole country of the Maghrib.' In particular, Tamerlane asked about the exact locations of Tangier and Ceuta, i.e. the keys to the straits of Gilbraltar and the Atlantic. It is difficult to believe that Tamerlane's interest was purely academic. Indeed, Ibn Khaldun was sufficiently worried by Tamerlane's interest to write a letter to the authorities in the Maghreb telling them what had tran- spired between him and the conqueror. Conquests in the Far West would not have formed part of Tamerlane's grand design, but it should be remembered that Alexander the Great in his famous last plans had envisaged a circumnavigation of Africa. At the lowest, Tamerlane's question indicates an awareness of the oceanic periphery of his world and hence of seapower. It may have been the conversation with Ibn Khaldun too which gave Tamerlane an interest in Castile and led to the invitation to Clavijo.

Clavijo returned to Seville in March 1406. Henry III died in 1407, but his interest in the basic information circuit did not die with him. His nephew by marriage was Henry the Navigator and his grandaughter was Isabella the Catholic. Clavijo's report was not printed till 1582, but it was widely copied in Spain and will have had its subterranean effect. In it he noted the difficulties of land communication with China.

"Now from the city of Samarqand it is six months' march to the capital of China, which is called Cambaluc . . . and of this six months' journey two are passed going across a desert country entirely uninhabited, except by nomad herdsmen."

However, there was another possibility. In Samarkand, Clavijo talked to a Central Asian merchant, 'who had been allowed to reside in Cambaluc during six whole months. He described that great city as lying not far from the sea coast, and for its size he said it was certainly twenty times larger than Tabriz.' Clavijo commented:

" If so it must indeed be the greatest city in all the world, for Tabriz measures a great league and more across and therefore this city of Cambaluc must extend to twenty leagues from one side to the other."

Tabriz was the easternmost outlet for Western, especially Genoese, trade and on his visit Clavijo had noted 'There is indeed an immense concourse of merchants and merchandise here. If Peking was a bigger mart than Tabriz and close to the sea, it would not be difficult for someone in Seville, especially if they were Genoese and had read Peter diAilly's Imago Mundi and the Latin version of Ptolemy's Gography, both published in 1410, to conceive an even bolder voyage than those of Cheng Ho.


Sources :


Hulagu Khan (1217-1265), The Man Who Sacked Baghdad


Statue of Hulagu Khan in Mogolia


Hulagu with his Kerait queen Doquz Khatun


Hulagu and Queen Doquz Qatun depicted as the new "Constantine and Helen", in a Syriac Bible


Hulagu Khan at the siege of Baghdad


Hulagu (left) imprisons the Calif among his treasures to starve him to death. Medieval depiction from "Le livre des merveilles", 15th century


Hulagu Khan, also known as Hülegü, Hulegu (Mongolian: Hülegü Khaan, "Warrior"; Mongolian Cyrillic: Хүлэг хаан; Chagatai/Urdu:ہلاکو - Hulaku; Persian/Arabic: هولاكو‎; c. 1217 – 8 February 1265), was a Mongol ruler who conquered much of Southwest Asia. Son of Tolui and the Kerait princess Sorghaghtani Beki, he was a grandson of Genghis Khan, and the brother of Arik Boke, Möngke Khan and Kublai Khan. Hulagu's army greatly expanded the southwestern portion of the Mongol Empire, founding the Ilkhanate of Persia, a precursor to the eventual Safavid dynasty, and then the modern state of Iran. Under Hulagu's leadership, the Mongols destroyed the greatest center of Islamic power, Baghdad, and also weakened Damascus, causing a shift of Islamic influence to the Mamluks in Cairo. It was also in Hulagu's reign that historians switched from writing in Arabic to writing in Persian.

Hulagu was born to Tolui, one of Genghis Khan's sons, and Sorghaghtani Beki, an influential Kerait princess. Sorghaghtani successfully navigated Mongol politics, arranging for all of her sons to become Mongol leaders. Hulagu was friendly to Christianity, as his mother was a Nestorian Christian. Hulagu's favorite wife, Dokuz Khatun, was also a Christian, as was Hulagu's closest friend and general, Kitbuqa. It is recorded however that he was a Buddhist as he neared his death, against the will of his Christian wife Dokuz Khatun.

Hulagu had at least three children: Abaqa, second Ilkhan of Persia from 1265–1282, Taraqai, whose son Baydu became Ilkhan in 1295, and Teguder Ahmad, third Ilkhan from 1282-1284.

Hulagu's brother Mongke had been installed as Great Khan in 1251. In 1255, Mongke charged his brother Hulagu with leading a massive Mongol army to conquer or destroy the remaining Muslim states in southwestern Asia. Hulagu's campaign sought the subjugation of the Lurs, a people of southern Iran; the destruction of the Hashshashin sect; the submission or destruction of the Abbasid caliphate based in Baghdad; the submission or destruction of the Ayyubid states in Syria, based in Damascus; and finally, the submission or destruction of the Bahri Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt. Mongke ordered Hulagu to treat kindly those who submitted, and utterly destroy those who did not. Hulagu vigorously carried out the latter part of these instructions.

Hulagu marched out with perhaps the largest Mongol army ever assembled – by order of Mongke, two in ten fighting men in the entire empire were gathered for Hulagu's army. He easily destroyed the Lurs, and the Assassins (also known as the Hashshashin) surrendered their impregnable fortress of Alamut to him without a fight, accepting a deal that spared the lives of their people.

The Mongol army, led by Hulagu, set out for Baghdad in November of 1257. Once near the city, Hulagu divided his forces, so that they threatened both sides of the city, on the east and west banks of the Tigris. Hulagu demanded surrender; the caliph refused.

The caliph's army repulsed some of the forces attacking from the west, but were defeated in the next battle. The attacking Mongols broke some dikes and flooded the ground behind the caliph’s army, trapping them. Much of the army was slaughtered or drowned.

The Mongols under Chinese general Guo Kan then laid siege to the city, constructing a palisade and ditch, wheeling up siege engines and catapults. The siege started on January 29. The battle was swift, by siege standards. By February 5 the Mongols controlled a stretch of the wall. Al-Musta'sim then tried to negotiate, but was refused.

On February 10 Baghdad surrendered. The Mongols swept into the city on February 13 and began a week of massacre, looting, rape, and destruction.

The Grand Library of Baghdad, containing countless precious historical documents and books on subjects ranging from medicine to astronomy, was destroyed. Survivors said that the waters of the Tigris ran black with ink from the enormous quantities of books flung into the river. Citizens attempted to flee, but were intercepted by Mongol soldiers who raped and killed with abandon.

Although death counts vary widely and cannot be easily substantiated, a number of estimates do exist. A low estimate is that close to 90,000 people may have died (Sicker 2000, p. 111). Higher estimates range from 200,000 to a million!

The Mongols looted and then destroyed. Mosques, palaces, libraries, hospitals — grand buildings that had been the work of generations were burned to the ground. The caliph was captured and forced to watch as his citizens were murdered and his treasury plundered!

Marco Polo reports that Hulagu starved the caliph to death, but there is no corroborating evidence for that. Most historians believe the Mongol accounts (and Muslim) that the Mongols rolled the caliph up in a rug, and rode their horses over him, as they believed that the earth was offended if touched by royal blood. All of his sons but one were killed.

Baghdad was a depopulated, ruined city for several centuries and only gradually recovered something of its former glory. Of all the Mongol Khans, Hulagu is, for obvious reasons, the most feared and despised.

Thus was the caliphate destroyed, and Mesopotamia ravaged; it has never again been such a major center of culture and influence. The smaller states in the region hastened to reassure Hulagu of their loyalty, and the Mongols turned to Syria in 1259, conquering the Ayyubids and sending advance patrols as far ahead as Gaza.

After Baghdad, in 1260, Mongol forces combined with those of their Christian vassals in the region, such as the army of Cilician Armenia under Hetoum I, and the Franks of Bohemond VI of Antioch. This force then conquered Muslim Syria, domain of the Ayyubid dynasty. They took together the city of Aleppo, and on March 1, 1260, under the Christian general Kitbuqa, they also took Damascus. A Christian Mass was celebrated in the Grand Mosque of the Umayyads (the former cathedral of Saint John the Baptist), and numerous mosques were profaned. Many historical accounts describe the three Christian rulers (Hetoum, Bohemond, and Kitbuqa) entering the city of Damascus together in triumph, though some modern historians such as David Morgan have questioned this story as apocryphal.

The invasion effectively destroyed the Ayyubid Dynasty, theretofore powerful ruler of large parts of the Levant, Egypt, and Arabia. The last Ayyubid king An-Nasir Yusuf was killed by Hulagu in 1260. With the Islamic power center of Baghdad gone and Damascus weakened, the center of Islamic power transferred to the Egyptian Mamluks in Cairo.

Hulagu's intent at that point was to continue south through Palestine towards Cairo to engage the Mamluks. However, Great Khan Mongke had died in late 1259, requiring Hulagu to return Karakorum to engage in the decision on who the next Great Khan would be. Hulagu departed with the bulk of his forces, leaving only about 10,000 Mongol horsemen in Syria under Kitbuqa to occupy the conquered territory. Kitbuqa's forces engaged in raids southward towards Egypt, reaching as far as Ascalon and Jerusalem, and a Mongol garrison of about 1,000 was placed in Gaza, with another garrison located in Naplouse.

The Mamluks took advantage of the weakened state of Kitbuqa's forces. The Crusaders, though traditional enemies of the Mamluks, also regarded the Mongols as the greater threat. Discussions took place between the Muslims and the Christians, with debate about whether or not to join forces against the Mongols, but the Muslims were not in agreement with this action. So instead, the Crusaders allowed the Egyptian forces to come north through Crusader territory, and resupply near the Crusaders' powerbase of Acre. The Mamluks then engaged the remnants of the Mongol army in Galilee, at the Battle of Ayn Jalut. The Mamluks achieved a decisive victory, Kitbuqa was executed, and the location established a highwater mark for the Mongol conquest. In previous defeats, the Mongols had always returned later to re-take the territory, but they were never able to avenge the loss at Ayn Jalut. For the rest of the century, the Mongols would attempt other invasions of Syria, but never be able to hold territory for more than a few months. The border of the Mongol Ilkhanate remained at the Tigris River for the duration of Hulagu's dynasty.

Hulagu returned to his lands by 1262, after the succession was finally settled with his brother Kublai Khan established as Great Khan. But when Hulagu massed his armies to attack the Mamluks and avenge the defeat at Ain Jalut, he was instead drawn into civil war with Batu Khan's brother Berke. Berke Khan, a Muslim convert, had promised retribution in his rage after Hulagu's sack of Baghdad, and allied himself with the Mamluks. He initiated a series of raids on Hulagu's territories, led by Nogai Khan. Hulagu suffered a severe defeat in an attempted invasion north of the Caucasus in 1263. This was the first open war between Mongols, and signaled the end of the unified empire.

Hulagu sent multiple communications to Europe, in an attempt to establish a Franco-Mongol alliance against the Muslims. In 1262, he sent an embassy to "all kings and princes overseas", along with his secretary Rychaldus. However the embassy was apparently intercepted in Sicily by King Manfred, who was allied with the Mamluks and in conflict with Pope Urban IV, and Rychaldus was returned by ship.

On April 10, 1262, Hulagu sent through John the Hungarian a letter to the French king Louis IX, offering an alliance. It is unclear whether the letter ever reached Louis IX in Paris, as the only known manuscript survived in Vienna, Austria. However, the letter stated Hulagu's intention to capture Jerusalem for the benefit of the Pope, and asked for Louis to send a fleet against Egypt:

"From the head of the Mongol army, avid to devastate the perfidious nation of the Sarasins, good-willing support of the Christian faith (...) so that you, who are the rulers of the coasts on the other side of the sea, endeavor to deny a refuge for the Infidels, your enemies and ours, by having your subjects diligently patrol the seas."
—Letter from Hulagu to Saint Louis.

Despite many attempts, neither Hulagu nor his successors were ever able to form an alliance with Europe. However, the 13th century did see a vogue of Mongol things in the West. Many new-born children in Italy were named after Mongol rulers, including Hulagu: names such as Can Grande ("Great Khan"), Alaone (Hulagu), Argone (Arghun) or Cassano (Ghazan) are recorded.

Hulagu Khan died in 1265 and was buried in the Shahi Island in Lake Urmia. His funeral was the only Ilkhanid funeral to feature human sacrifice. He was succeeded by his son Abaqa, thus establishing his line.

Hulagu Khan laid the foundations of the Ilkhanate State, and by doing so paved the way for the later Safavid dynastic state, and ultimately the modern country of Iran. Hulagu's conquests also opened Iran to both European influence from the west and Chinese influence from the east. This, combined with patronage from his successors, would develop Iran's distinctive excellence in architecture. Under Hulagu's dynasty, Iranian historians also moved from writing in Arabic, to writing in Persian.


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Guo Kan (1217-1277), Chinese General Under Mongol

Mongol vs European


Guo Kan or Guo Khan (Chinese: 郭侃) (1217–1277) was a famous general of Han Chinese descent that served the Mongolian Khans in their Western conquests and the conquest of China itself. He was descended from a lineage of Chinese generals. Both his father and grandfather had served the Khan, while his ancestor is Guo Ziyi, a famed general of the Tang Dynasty.

He was one of the foreign legions that served for the Mongol Empire, and some of the later conquests of the Mongols were done by armies under his command. The biography of this Han Chinese commander in the Yuan Shi ("History of Yuan") said that Guo Kan's presence struck so much fear in his foes, that they called him the "Divine Man"!

Guo Kan was raised in the household of Prime Minister Shi Tianzhe (who was also a Han Chinese, and whose father and two brothers all served the Yuan).

He took part in the final drive in the conquest of the Jin Dynasty, including the capture of Kaifeng, and may have served in the European campaign with Subutai a few years following the fall of the Jin Dynasty. He then served in Hulagu's invasion of the Middle East, playing a major role in the capture and Battle of Baghdad, reportedly devising the strategy of using the dikes to drown the Caliph's army, and supervising the reduction of Baghdad's walls. He was then appointed Governor of Baghdad by Hulagu, and at some point after Khubilai Khan's accession as Khan, Guo Kan went to serve him, instead of his brother, and assisted Khubilai Khan in the conquest of the Southern Song, and ultimately the unification of China proper under the Yuan Dynasty.

The Yuan Shi is known to contain many errors. It is proven that many events after 1259 in Guo Kan's biography are false since he returned to Mongolia with Hulagu Khan after the death of Mongke Khan in China.

The Yuan Shi in many ways resembled historical fiction, claiming all manner of conquests by Guo Kan which were not true, but nonetheless were legend in China for many years. Contrary to claims in the Yuan Shi, the Mamluks of Egypt crushed the Mongol occupation army and their Christian allies at Ain Jalut led by Hulagu's lieutenant Ked-Buka; and the Crusader Kingdoms Mecca and Cyprus were neither conquered by the Mongols.

This biography of Guo is mostly open lies in what seems to be an attempt to hide the crushing defeats inflicted on the Mongols at Ain Jalut, and on Hulagu by Berke Khan in the first Mongol on Mongol war in the Transcaucasus. It must be noted that Ain Jalut took place while Guo Kan was in Mongolia with Hulagu during the selection of a Great Khan. Guo Kan, like Hulagu, had believed the force left to occupy Palestine was sufficient enough to deal with the Mamluks, which it was obviously not, and that the Il-Khanate could defeat the Golden Horde, which it equally could not.

After he returned to Mongolia with Hulagu Khan after Mongke Khan's death, Guo Kan was taken from Hulagu's command, and assigned by Kublai Khan to aid him in the difficult conquest of Southern Song Dynasty of China. Khubilai's accession as Khan left him able to select the best of the Mongol Generals to serve him. Subutai and Jebe were both dead of old age, and Guo Kan was the last of the dreaded Dogs of War, and the new Great Khan Khubilai assigned Guo Kan to commander the final conquest of China. Guo Kan reportedly urged him to adopt a Chinese-style dynastic title, establish a capital and central government, and build schools. He reportedly was the general who proposed capturing Xiangyang as a strategy for invading the Southern Song. He defeated Song forces in a battle at Xuzhou in 1262, and in 1266 urged Khubilai to establish military farms in Huaibei to provide supplies for an invasion of the Southern Song. In 1268 and 1270 he suppressed local rebellions, and then he was sent to participate in the siege of Xiangyang. In 1276, the Song dynasty fell (except for the loyalist movement that lasted until 1279), and Guo served as a prefect for one more year before dying.

More than any army in history until the 20th Century, and more so than many even in the Modern Era, the Mongols promoted strictly on the basis of military skill and ability. Like his brother "dogs of war," Jebe, son of an ordinary warrior in a tribe which had opposed Genghis Khan in his unification of the nomads, and Subutai, son of a blacksmith, Guo Kan, ethnically Han Chinese, represented the revolutionary concept of promoting the sons of the most humble, or foreign born, to command any of the Mongol nobility - including relatives of the Great Khan! Though Batu was nominally in charge of the invasion of Europe, it was Subutai who truly commanded. Equally, Guo Kan devised the strategy which reduced the powerful walls of Bagdad in mere days, after destroying her small, but brave and disciplined army in mere hours by drowning them. Merit, not birth, was one of Genghis Khan's most brilliant innovations, and Guo Kan, an ethnic of the Mongol's strongest rival, one of his prized dogs of war for five generations of Great Khans.


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Muqali (1170-1223), One Of The Greatest Generals Under Genghis Khan

Mongol warriors


Muqali or Mukhulai (1170–1223) was one of the greatest generals under Genghis Khan of Jalayir descent and the first prince of the Mongol Empire. The fact that his father died trying to save Genghis Khan during a battle coupled with his own skills in battle led Muqali to become one of the Khan's most trusted generals. He was a participant in many battles in Genghis Khan's unification of Central Asia confederations.

During the coronation of Genghis Khan, Muqali was given the command of the Third Tumen and control over the Eastern mingghans. In 1211, the Battle of the Badger Mouth he created the first and greatest merit for Mongol. After Genghis Khan decided to go to war with the Khwarezmid Empire, he gave control of all Turco-Mongol forces to Muqali and gave him the title of King, a largely ceremonial title. Despite Genghis Khan having most of the main Turco-Mongol forces taken away and sent to the West, Muqali was able to subdue most of Northern China with his small force of around 20,000 men, although some historians give figures of between 40,000 and 70,000 men. In 1217 Muqali attacked the province of Hopeh as well as northern Shantung and northern Shansi. This was an important agricultural area, which Muqali had largely subdued by 1219. In 1220 Muqali turned his attention to the rest of Shantung; four towns were captured, but the hard-pressed Chin managed to hold on elsewhere in the province. Muqali's last campaign began in 1222. He crossed the Wei River and attacked south, capturing towns that had already been plundered by a previous Mongol general-Samuqa, who suddenly disappeared from Mongol history. Meanwhile, the Chin launched a counter-attack into the province of Shansi. Muqali swiftly raced to the area; the Chin fled without giving battle. Besieging another town, Muqali became seriously ill and died shortly thereafter. On his deathbed, Muqali declared with pride that he had never been defeated. After his death, Genghis Khan gave command to Muqali's son Birdlu. In seven years of campaigning in northern China, he had reduced the Chin empire to the province of Honan. He had proved himself to be an excellent general who was indefatigable in his efforts to serve his master, Genghis Khan.

A few of his descendants, such as Antong and Baiju, later became prominent officials in the Confucian fashion of the Yuan Dynasty founded by Kublai Khan in China.


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Jochi (1180-1226), Gifted Son of Genghis Khan

Statue of Jochi Khan in Mongolia


Jochi (Mongolian: Зүчи, Züchi, Crimean Tatar: Cuçi; also spelled Jöchi and Juchi) (c. 1180–1227) was the eldest of the Mongol chieftain Genghis Khan's four sons by his principal wife Börte. An accomplished military leader, he participated in his father's conquest of Central Asia, along with his brothers and uncles.

There is some question as to Jochi's true paternity. Shortly after her marriage to Genghis Khan (known as Temüjin at the time), Börte was abducted by members of the Merkit tribe. She was given to a certain Chilger Boke, who was the brother of the Merkit chief, as a spoil of war. She remained in Chilger Boke's captivity for a few months before she was recovered by Temüjin. Shortly afterwards she gave birth to Jöchi. By all accounts, Genghis Khan treated Jochi as his first son, but a doubt always remained among the Mongols whether Temüjin or Chilger Boke was the real father of Jochi. This uncertainty about his paternity was not without consequences. Jochi’s descendants, although they formed the oldest branch of the Genghis Khan’s family, were never considered for the succession in claiming their father’s heritage and there were signs of estrangement between Jochi and Genghis Khan.

In 1207 he had successfully conquered the forest peoples in Siberia, extending the northern border of the Mongol Empire for the very first time. On behalf of his father, Jochi led two campaigns against the Kyrgyz, in 1210 and 1218. Jochi’s contribution in the Khwarezm war was extensive and he was responsible for capturing the towns of Signak, Jand, and Yanikant in April, 1220, during this war. Subsequently he was given the command of operation against the city of Urgench (Gurganj) which was the capital of the Khwarezmian Empire. Here the siege of the town led to inordinate delays because Jochi engaged in extensive negotiation with the town to persuade it to surrender peacefully and save it from destruction. This action was seen as militarily unsound by his brother, Chagatai. Chagatai wanted to destroy the city but Genghis Khan had promised the city to Jochi after his victory. This difference of opinion on military affairs deepened a rift between Jochi and Chagatai. Genghis Khan intervened in the campaign and appointed Ögedei as the commander of the operation. Ögedei resumed the operations vigorously and the town was duly captured, sacked, massacred and destroyed thoroughly.
The differences in tactics between Jochi and Chagatai in early 1221 added to their personal quarrel about the succession. To settle the matter, Genghis Khan called a kurultai. The formal meeting was used in both familial matters and matters of state. Temüjin was elected/appointed Khan of his tribe during a kurultai, and he called for them often during his early campaigns to garner public support for his wars. These meetings were key to Genghis Khan legitimacy. Tribal tradition was also critical. As Genghis Khan's first born son, Jochi, was favored to rule the clan and the empire after his father died. At the familial kurultai called in 1222, the issue of Jochi's legitimacy was brought up by Chagatai. At that meeting, Genghis Khan made it clear that Jochi was his legitimate first-born son. However, he worried that the quarrelsome nature of the two would split the empire. By early 1223 Genghis Khan had selected Ögedei, his third son, as his successor. For the sake of preserving the Empire, both Jochi and Chagatai agreed but the rift between them never healed. Their rift would later politically divide the European part of the Mongol Empire from its Asian part permanently.

In the autumn of 1223 Genghis Khan started for Mongolia after completing the Khwarezm campaign. Ögedei, Chagatai and Tolui went with him but Jochi withdrew to his territories north of Aral and Caspian Seas. There he remained until his death and would not see his father again in his lifetime. Perhaps the selection of Ögedei as a successor to Genghis Khan had greatly disappointed him; this is a probable explanation for Jochi's withdrawal from court life.

Though the histories are unclear, there is evidence that Jochi conspired against Genghis, and that Genghis in return pondered a pre-emptive strike. When Genghis Khan returned home he sent for Jochi. When the latter refused to obey and asked a pardon Genghis Khan sent Chagatai and Ögedei against him. But before it came to open hostilities, news came that Jochi had died in February 1226.

Genghis Khan had divided his empire among his four surviving sons during his lifetime. Jochi was entrusted with the westernmost part of the empire, then lying between Ural and Irtish rivers. In the kurultai of 1229 following Genghis Khan’s death, this partition was formalized and Jochi’s family (Jochi himself had died six months before Genghis Khan) was allocated the lands in the west up to ‘as far as the hooves of Mongol horses had trodden'. Following the Mongol custom, Genghis Khan bequeathed only four thousand ‘original’ Mongol troops to each of his three elder sons and 101,000 to Tolui, his youngest son. Consequently Jochi’s descendants extended their empire mostly with the help of auxiliary troops from the subjugated populations which happened to be Turkic. This was the chief reason why the Golden Horde acquired a Turkic identity. Jochi's inheritance was divided among his sons. His sons Orda and Batu founded the White Horde and the Blue Horde, respectively, and would later combine their territories into the Kipchak Khanate or Golden Horde. Another of Jochi’s sons, Shiban, received territories that lay north of Batu and Orda’s Ülüs.

Genghis Khan had made Jochi responsible for the supervision and conduct of the community hunt. Hunting was essentially a large scale military exercise designed specifically for the training of the army. It frequently encompassed thousands of square kilometers of area, required the participation of several tumens and lasted anywhere between one to three months. Rules and procedure of the conduct of the military exercise were encoded in the Yassa.

Certain incidences hint towards the fact that Jochi was of a kinder disposition than Genghis Khan, though the adjective “kind” must be interpreted by the standards of his times and milieu because Jochi had had his share of indulgence in massacres of civilians. On one occasion Jochi pleaded with his father to spare the life of a son of an enemy chief who had been taken captive and who happened to be a great archer. Jochi argued that such a great archer could be an asset to the Mongol army. Genghis Khan brushed aside this argument and had the captive executed.

Jochi had at least 14 sons and one daughter:
Orda (c. 1204-1280)
Batu (c. 1205-1255)
Berke, Khan of the Golden Horde from 1257-1267[3]
Berkhechir
Shiban
Tangad
Teval (Buval). He was the grandfather of Nogai Khan.
Chilagun
Sinqur
Chimbay
Muhammed
Udur
Tuq-timur, the ancestor of late khans of the Great Horde.
Shingum
a daughter who married the Qarluq chief of Almaliq.


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Jebe ( ? - 1225), Loyal General of Genghis Khan

Mongol warriors in hand-to-hand combat at the battle of the Kalka River 1223


Chepe (or Jebe or Jebei) Noyan (Mongolian: Зэв, Zev) (died 1225) was one of the prominent Noyans (generals) of Genghis Khan. His clan was Besud, which belonged to the Taichud tribe, which was at the time of Genghis Khan under Targudai Khiriltug's leadership.

When Genghis Khan attacked this tribe, Jebe was said, according to The Secret History of Mongols (one of the prime sources related to the life of Genghis Khan and his followers) to have shot and injured Genghis Khan in the neck during the battle. After the battle, Genghis Khan asked the defeated to reveal who shot "his horse" in the neck (euphemizing his own injury as his horse's in an apparent attempt to conceal his injury, or possibly to prevent false confessions). Jebe is said to have voluntarily confessed that he shot Genghis Khan himself and not his horse, and further said, that "if Genghis Khan desired to kill him, it was his choice, but if he would let him live, he would serve Genghis Khan loyally". Genghis Khan, in his own usual custom, highly valued honesty and loyalty in his soldiers and so, in the traditions of nomadic chivalry, pardoned him and praised him on this account. He then gave him a new name, Jebe, which means both "arrow" and "rust" in Mongolian. Jebe was not his birth name (which was Zurgadai), but a nickname based on this occasion.

Jebe is further known to have become one of the best and most loyal commanders of Genghis Khan in later conquests. His ability as a general puts him in one rank with Subutai ba'atur.

After Jebe scored great victories over Kuchlug of Kara-Khitan, Genghis Khan himself was said to be jealous and was afraid Jebe would rebel against him. When rumors reached Jebe, he immediately returned to where Genghis Khan was and offered 100 white horses (the same kind of horse that Genghis Khan was riding when Jebe shot the horse) as a sign of loyalty. From then on Genghis Khan never doubted this skilled general again.

He likely died on his way back from the conquests of Kievan Rus. He had made the legendary raid around the Caspian Sea where he and Subutai defeated the Kievan Rus' and Cumans at the Battle of the Kalka River, which preceded the conquest of Kievan Rus, and left an indelible mark on history with his conquests in China, the conquest of Central Asia, and into Europe at Kiev and the Rus.


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Subutai (1176-1248), One of Genghis Khan's and The Mongol Empire's Most Prominent Generals


Subutai. Medieval Chinese drawing


The Mongols at war


Subutai (Subetei, Subetai, Subotai, Tsubotai, Tsubetei, Tsubatai Mongolian: Сүбээдэй, Sübeedei; Classic Mongolian: Sübügätäi or Sübü'ätäi; 1176–1248) was the primary military strategist and general of Genghis Khan and Ögedei Khan. He directed more than twenty campaigns in which he conquered thirty-two nations and won sixty-five pitched battles, during which he conquered or overran more territory than any other commander in history! He gained victory by means of imaginative and sophisticated strategies and routinely coordinated movements of armies that were hundreds of kilometers away from each other. He is also remembered for devising the campaign that destroyed the armies of Hungary and Poland within two days of each other, by forces over five hundred kilometers apart.

Subutai is regarded in history as one of Genghis Khan's and the Mongol Empire's most prominent generals in terms of ability and tactics helping with the military campaigns in Asia and Eastern Europe. He commanded many successful attacks and invasions during his time and was rarely defeated.

Historians believe Subutai was born between the years of 1165–1170, probably just west of the upper Onon River in what is now Mongolia. He belonged to the Uriankhai tribe, a name Mongols gave to a number of tribes of "forest people". Subutai's family had been associated with the family of Genghis Khan for many generations. His brother Jelme also served as a general in the Mongol army.

Despite this close family association, Subutai was proof that the Mongol Empire was a meritocracy. He was a commoner by birth, the son of Qaban, who was supposedly a blacksmith. Qaban brought his son to serve Genghis Khan when Subutai was about 17 years old, and he rose to the very highest command available to one who was not a blood relative to Genghiz. Within a decade he rose to become a general, in command of one of 4 tumens operating in the vanguard. In 1212 he took Huan by storm, the first major independent exploit mentioned in the sources. Genghis Khan called him one of his "dogs of war", a title he earned through his campaigns.
Mongol histories say that Subutai said to Genghis Khan, "I will ward off your enemies as felt cloth protects one from the wind."

Subutai was one of the first Mongol generals besides Genghis Khan who realized the value of engineers in siege warfare. Even in field battles he made use of siege engines, much as Chinese armies had in their own wars. In the Battle of Mohi, the Hungarian crossbowmen repelled a night bridge crossing by the Mongols, and inflicted considerable casualties on the Mongols fighting to cross the river the following day. Subutai ordered huge stonethrowers to clear the bank of Hungarian crossbowmen and open the way for his light cavalry to cross the river without further losses. This use of siege weapons was one of the first recorded use in the West of artillery outside of siege warfare. While the stonethrowers were clearing the path to cross the main bridge, Subutai supervised construction of a another temporary bridge downriver to outflank the Hungarians.

Subutai was also well known for incorporating conquered peoples who brought specialized skills into his forces, especially engineers. He was skilled at intelligence gathering and planning his campaigns well in advance. For instance, he used spies to gather information on the Russian principalities, the Poles, and the Hungarians at least a year before the attacks on each. He tailored his strategy to match the enemy, adjusting his tactics according to the opponents, the terrain, and the weather as required. He emphasized the use of light cavalry in his army, maneuvering the enemy into feints and ambushes, and efficiently pursuing and defeating broken armies to destroy further resistance. Subutai kept his forces in line with the Mongol tradition of dispensing with excess baggage train and ensured his troops could efficiently live off the land and rapidly advance great distances on campaign. He preferred to maneuver the enemy into a position of weakness before committing to battle.

Unlike European armies of the day which esteemed personal valor in a commander above all else, the Mongols valued strategic vision and the skill to make tactical adjustments in the heat of battle in their leaders. Whereas leaders such as Richard the Lionheart rode to battle at the head of their men and put themselves into the thick of the fighting, Subutai situated himself on high ground at a distance from the engagement, where he could observe the battle as it unfolded and direct his troops with flags. These are among the reasons Subutai was rarely defeated, ensuring his reputation as one of the finest commanders in history.

Genghis Khan sent Subutai to hunt down the Merkits. Subutai defeated them on the Chu River in 1216 and again in 1219 in Wild Kipchak territory. Mohammad II of Khwarizm attacked Subutai shortly afterwards along the Irghiz. Subutai held him off after a fierce battle.
Genghis Khan led the Mongol army westwards in late 1219 to invade Khwarizm as retaliation for the execution of Mongol ambassadors. Subutai commanded the vanguard of the invasion force. With about 130,000 or so armed men, the Mongol army was numerically inferior to the forces of the Khwarizim Empire, but through deception and rapid maneuver, the Mongols crushed the Khwarizim in several key battles. Mohammad attempted to save himself by fleeing into central Persia, leading Genghis Khan to send Subutai and Jebe with 20,000 men to hunt him down. Mohammad eluded capture, but he fell ill and died at a fishing village on the Black Sea in early 1221.

Subutai spent part of the winter in Azerbaijan. Here he conceived the idea of circling the Caspian Sea to fall on the rear of the Wild Kipchaks and Cumans. After a police action in Persia and a raid into Georgia, the Mongols cut across the Caucasus Mountains during the winter to get around the Derbent Pass. Using clever diplomacy, Subutai isolated and defeated the Alans and Don Kipchaks/Cumans in detail. He crushed a combined Rus and Cuman army along the Kalka (31 May 1223), but a raid into Volga Bulgar territory ended with a defeat. Subutai received reinforcements and subsequently subjugated the Wild Kipchaks and the Kanglis. The campaign concluded with Subutai rejoining Genghis Khan as the Mongol army was making its way back home.

Subutai played a key part in the campaign against the Xi Xia in 1226. In 1227 he conquered the Jin districts along the upper Wei River. The Mongol operations were interrupted by the death of Genghis Khan. Genghis Khan was succeeded by his son Ögedei. In 1230-1231, Ögedei personally led the main Mongol army against the Jin (in Central China), but the attempt to break into the plains of Henan ended in failure after Subutai was defeated at Shan-ch’e-hui. The Mongols besieged and took Fengxiang, a secondary target. In 1231-1232 the Mongols made another attempt. This time Subutai was able to outmaneuver the Jin armies.

The Mongols won decisive victories at Sanfeng (9 February 1232), Yangyi (24 February 1232), and T’iehling (1 March 1232). Ögedei and the main Mongol army returned to Mongolia, leaving Subutai with a small force to complete the conquest of Honan. Subutai found it difficult to take the large cities and needed almost 2 more years to finally eliminate the Jin. He made an alliance with Song China to get help to complete the job. But it did not take the Song long to fall out with the Mongols. Two Song armies seized Kaifeng and Luoyang during the summer of 1234. The Mongols returned and retook the cities.

Ögedei decided to send a major part of the army into the western regions to finally crush the Wild Kipchaks and Bulgars. Subutai was tasked to direct the operations (under the overall command of prince Batu). He defeated Kipchak leader Bachman on the north side of the Caspian Sea and next conquered the Volga Bulgars. In late 1237, Subutai attacked Ryazan and Vladimir-Suzdal, operating with 3 columns (attacking as the Mongols usually did during the winter). The Rus forces were defeated in 3 separate engagements and their cities were taken in quick succession. The Mongols spent the summer of 1238 resting along the Don River. Columns were sent out to subjugate the various tribes living in the plains around the Black Sea. In 1239, the Rus state of Chernigov was defeated and their cities were taken.

The Mongols had made a treaty with Galich-Vladimir, whose prince was therefore taken by surprise when the Mongols suddenly attacked in December 1240. Kiev, Vladimir, and other cities were quickly taken. The Mongols were ready to enter Central Europe. Subutai operated with several separate detachments, aiming to distract on the flanks, while he dealt with the main Hungarian army in the center. The Mongols defeated European armies at Chmielnik (18 March 1241), Kronstadt (31 March 1241), Liegnitz (9 April 1241), Muhi (10 April 1241), and Hermannstadt (10 April 1241). Hungary was overrun. The Mongols set out for home in 1242, after learning that Ögedei had died, relieving Vienna and the rest of Central Europe from further assaults.

The attack on Europe was planned and carried out by Subutai, who achieved his lasting fame with his victories there. Having devastated the various Russian Principalities, he sent spies as far as Poland, Hungary, and even Austria, in preparation for an attack into the heartland of Europe. Having a clear picture of the European kingdoms, he brilliantly prepared an attack nominally commanded by Batu Khan and two other princes of the blood. While Batu Khan, son of Jochi, was the overall leader, Subutai was the actual commander in the field, and as such was present in both the northern and southern campaigns against Kievan Rus'. He also commanded the central column that moved against the Kingdom of Hungary. While Kadan's northern force won the Battle of Legnica and Güyük's army triumphed in Transylvania, Subutai was waiting for them on the Hungarian plain.

King Béla IV of Hungary had summoned a council of war at Esztergom, a large and important settlement upriver from Buda and Pest. As Batu was advancing on Hungary from the northeast, the Hungarian leadership decided to concentrate their strength at Pest and then head north to confront the Mongol army. When news of the Hungarian battle strategy reached the Mongol commanders, they slowly withdrew to the Sajo River, drawing their enemies on. This was a classic Mongol strategy, ultimately perfected by Subutai. He prepared a battlefield suitable to his tactics, and waited for his enemies to blunder in. It was a strong position, because woods prevented their ranks from being clearly scouted or seen, while across the river on the plain of Mohi, the Hungarian army was widely exposed.

Only one day after the smaller Mongol army in Poland had won the Battle of Legnica, Subutai launched his attack, thus beginning the Battle of Mohi during the night of April 10, 1241. At the Mohi, a single division crossed the river in secret to advance on the Hungarian camp from the southern flank. The main body began to cross the Sajo by the bridge at Mohi, and continued to attack the following day. This was met with fierce resistance, so catapults were used to clear the opposite bank of crossbowmen, as was noted earlier. When the crossing was completed, the second contingent attacked from the south.

The result was complete panic, and, to ensure that the Hungarians did not fight to the last man, the Mongols left an obvious gap in their encirclement. This was one of Subutai's classic tricks, to create a tactical situation which appeared to be favorable to the enemy, but which was anything but. The Mongols had already incurred heavier than usual casualties as the Hungarian crossbowmen had done considerable damage to the Mongol cavalry. Subutai did not want a battle where the massed crossbowmen, supported by mounted Knights, stood firm and fought to the death against his army. He far preferred to let them flee and be slaughtered individually. The gap in the Mongol lines was an invitation to retreat, which would leave the Knights and crossbowmen spread out all over the countryside, easy pickings for the disciplined Mongols. As Subutai had planned, the Hungarians poured through this apparent hole in the Mongol lines, which led to a swampy area, poor footing for horses and hard going for infantry. When the Hungarian knights split up, the Mongol archers picked them off at will. It was later noted that corpses littered the countryside over the space of a two day journey. Two archbishops and three bishops were killed at the Sajo, plus 40,000 fighting men. At one stroke, the bulk of Hungarian fighting men were totally destroyed, with relatively minimal casualties to the Mongols, reportedly less than 1,000 men.

By late 1241, Subutai was discussing plans to invade the Holy Roman Empire, when news came of the death of Ögedei Khan. Over the objections of Subutai, the Mongol Princes withdrew the army to Mongolia for the election of a new Great Khan. A lucky accident, the death of Ögedei, thus put an end to the Mongol invasion of Europe.

Subutai was removed from command of the European invasions after the ascencion of Güyük Khan to the Khanate, and was instead placed in charge at the age of 70 of the campaign against Song China for 1246–1247. Most historians believe this transfer was not to denigrate his generalship during the European campaigns, but rather the opposite. The Mongol forces in Europe were headed by Güyük's relative Batu. Güyük had no love for Batu and wanted this best of the Mongol generals unavailable to Batu if the feud between them came to open war.
Subutai returned to Mongolia from the Song campaign in 1248. Mongolian histories say that Subutai died then, at the age of 72. His descendants such as Uryankhadai and Aju would serve the Great Khans for the next three decades as commanders.


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