Things You Didn't Know About Genghis Khan

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He killed an estimated 40 million people, he founded the Mongol Empire, he might have a little of his DNA in you. He is Genghis Khan. Today, we're going to talk about things you didn't know about Genghis Khan. But before we get started, subscribe to our channel, Weird History. Leave us a comment, and let us know what historical figure you want us to cover next. First things first, you heard his name 100's if not 1000's of times before, but there's a very good chance you've never heard it pronounced correctly. While most Westerners say Genghis with a hard g, that's incorrect. In Mongolia, the g is soft, so it's actually pronounced like this, Chinghis. But we're going to go with Genghis today, because that's what you're used to. What does it mean. Well, there's no historical consensus, but Khan means ruler or King. And Genghis, or to be 100% accurate, Chinghis, is believed to mean stern or fierce. So Genghis Khan means stern or fierce King. The confusion goes all the way back to spelling and pronunciation getting lost in European translation. Since we're on the topic of names, Genghis Khan wasn't his name either, despite what you were taught in junior high and most, if not all, of high school. The man who would unite the Mongol tribes was actually born to Mujin, meaning of or from iron, while Jin denotes agency. Thus, if you break it down Temujin means blacksmith. His name was said to have come from a Tatar tribesman who had been captured and brought home by the boy's father. The name Genghis Khan wasn't given to Temujin until 1206, when he was 44 years old, as part of this coronation as the King of all Mongols. Most of what we know about young Temujin comes from the Secret History of the Mongols. An anonymous record of the early days of the United Konate. According to that book, written for the Khan successors, Temujin was born sometime in 1162 on the banks of the Onon River. His father, Yesugei, was the chieftain of the Borjigin clan, the ruling class of the Mongol tribes. If you believe the legend, Temujin was born clutching a blood clot in his fist. An omen and that he was destined to be a great leader. Whether that's true is actually anyone's guess. For someone who radically altered the world's population with his very own DNA-- we'll get back to that in a bit-- Temujin's first son may not even have been his. It all started when his father arranged a marriage for him and delivered him at age 9 to the family of his future wife, in order to cement alliances between the Onggirat and the Mongols. Here's where things get messy. On his way home after delivering his son to the Bortes, Temujin's father ran into the neighboring Tatars, who had long been Mongol enemies, and they assassinated him. When young Temujin heard about his father's death by poisoning, he returned home to claim his position as tribe's chief, but they denied the kid and abandoned his family leaving them without protection. After several years of hardship and in slavery, Temujin finally married Borte, but the bad news kept coming. Not long after the marriage, Borte was kidnapped by the Merkit, a rival tribe, and she was reportedly given away as a wife. Temujin rescued her several months later and she gave birth to a son, Jochi, nine months after her rescue. The timeline of Jochi's birth was iffy at best. Was Jochi Temujin's legitimate firstborn son or was Borte impregnated when she was kidnapped? It's something we'll probably never know. But Jochi grew up to become a great military leader nonetheless, even though he was excluded from Genghis's line of succession We know of Jochi, the son who may or may not have been the first son of Genghis Khan. We also know of eight other sons and daughters Temujin had with Borte, but that's not the extent of Genghis's offspring, not by a long shot. While married to Borte, Temujin took a number of other wives, far too many to name here. While many of these women were taken as war trophies, at least one woman, Princess Qiguo was married to Genghis Khan as a gift of sorts, in exchange for relieving the Mongol siege upon Zhongdu. In short, it's uncertain which if any of these marriages were consensual. Although it's certain his spouses bore him numerous children, including a number of daughters whose names weren't even recorded. As famous and infamous as Genghis Khan is, very little is known about his personal or physical appearance. No contemporary portraits or sculptures of him survived and what is written about him at the time is practically revisionist history, The little we do know about Genghis Khan describes him as tall and strong with a flowing mane of blond hair, blue eyes, and a bushy beard. But 14th century Persian chronicler Rashid Al Din claims Genghis had red hair and green eyes. Al Din never met the Khan in person, but these striking features were not unheard of among the Mongol. You hear the name Genghis Khan and the first things your imagination conjures up are probably brutish acts of mass destruction, barbarism, and blood lust. All of those things are a big part of Genghis Khan's story but he was quite the innovator too. He created the Yam route, which was an efficient postal system meant to send written orders to the far flung outposts of his empire. He also adapted an official script in 1206 upon his election as Khan. And while he was very likely illiterate, Genghis Khan kept written books of his laws. A complex and far reaching system of edicts called the Yassa. Of course, for any good he did, he soured by destroying countless works of art, priceless artifacts, cultural sites, and other various precious objects. Chinese, Russian, Persian, and Muslim traditions of sculpture and painting were subjugated, and their masters almost always were killed. While other Mongol leaders appreciated the cultures of the sedentary people they wiped out, the Mongols themselves left little in terms of cultural heritage and almost no written works. Genghis Khan probably enjoyed the sight of blood but he was also a man of his word. Take for example, the time he honorably murdered the Mongol military and political leader, and childhood pal, Jamukha. According to the Secret History of the Mongols, Jamukha was eventually betrayed to Temujin by his followers in 1206. The first thing Temujin did was execute Jamukha's betrayers on basic principle. Betrayal merits the worst punishment imaginable. Then Temujin offered Jamukha a renewal of the brotherhood, but Jamaica refused. He insisted that just as there was only room for one sun in the sky, there was room only for one Mongol lord. Instead Jamukha asked to be executed by dying a noble death, without the spilling of blood. Temujin honored his request by having a soldier snap Jamukha's spine. It's said that Temujin then buried Jamukha with the golden belt that he had given to him when they had formed their bond of brotherhood. Pretty dramatic on the Khan's part. Sounds like something a young George Lucas would have written in the mid 70s. One of the great things about Genghis Kahn was that he had an eye for talent when it came to choosing people for leadership roles. Take for example, Jelme. During the 1201 Battle of the 13 Sides against the Taichuud tribe, Genghis got hit in the neck with an arrow. He obviously survived, and his army won the battle. But when he recovered from his wound he asked the soldiers of the defeated Taichuud tribe to reveal who shot his horse in the neck. Side note, either Genghis was using his horse's neck as a euphemism for his own injury, in an attempt to conceal his injury, or possibly to smoke out a false confession. Moving along, a soldier named Zurgadai voluntarily confessed and told Genghis, and we paraphrase, you got me, I did it, but if you let me live I will serve you loyally. Genghis was impressed. He valued skill and loyalty, so he pardoned and praised Zurgadai, making him an officer and nicknamed him Jebe, Mongolian for both arrow and weapon. How's that for luck? It's like hitting your boss over the head with a Louisville slugger because he swiped your idea. Then he promotes you for your candor and calls you bat boy at the next office happy hour. Jebe would go on to become one of the Mongol's greatest field commanders during the conquest in Asia and Europe. Mongol warriors began learning how to fight and live off the land, as children. When they came of age, usually around 15, they had mastered how to ride, shoot, fight, and go for days at a time without provisions. At this point in their lives, they were Genghis Khan's warriors. These young warriors were tactical and calculating. Employing many war worn strategies when it came to war. Fighting was never a simple exhibition of force. It was an evenly paced, evaluated, and considered option. The Mongols would fight using formations, proven battle game plans, and were comfortable with a bow. If no bow was on hand, then a Mongol warrior was more than comfortable and capable of using a saber or a spear to kill their enemy. No contemporary army could match a Mongol warrior's skill, bravery and tenacity. Like most men in power who wielded their force with little regard for their foe, Genghis Khan was a religious man. He passed laws declaring religious freedom in conquered lands, even granted tax exemptions to places of worship. The Mongols generally had an exceptionally liberal attitude towards religion. While they subscribe to a shamanistic belief system that revered the Eternal Blue Sky, the step peoples also included Christians, Buddhists, Muslims, and others. No one was persecuted for their faith. Genghis Khan also had a personal interest in spirituality. He was known to pray in his tent for multiple days before important campaigns and he often met with different religious leaders to discuss their faiths. Conquering the Western Xia and Jin empires was a matter of survival for Genghis. He had no intention of war with the powerful Khwarezmid Empire in modern day Iran, but it became inevitable after the Khwarezmian Shah executed Genghis's ambassadors to him and massacred a peaceful caravan. In a war lasting just three years, from 1218 to 1221, the Khwarezmid Empire was annihilated. With its population cold and its beautiful walled cities destroyed. Final defeat was inflicted at the Battle of the Indus River where 50,000 men, led by the Shah's son, were beaten and killed. The Mongols exacted such a toll on the Khwarezmid Empire, that of its nearly three million people, at least one million were killed. Usually executed methodically using swords or axes. Of course, this is all a drop in the bucket in terms of Khan's body count. Figures vary, but about 40 million people or 10% of the world population at the time were killed or died because of his attacks. Famine and disease killed a large portion of the people but Ganga is wiped out any city or country that opposed him. After destroying the Khwarezmid Empire, Genghis split his army into two units. One unit, which he led personally, headed back to Mongolia, but not before laying waste to northern India. The other unit, made up of two packs of soldiers, were led by Subutai and Jebe. They headed west, toward what's now Russia, pursuing the Kwarezmian Shah. They didn't catch him, but they made history anyway. In a raid of so much power and destructiveness that it's never been equaled, two of Genghis's dogs of war sacked Georgia, Armenia, and defeated a gigantic Kievan Rus force at the legendary Battle of the Kalka River. In keeping with Mongol tradition, the Russian princes who resisted were crushed to death under a platform, their blood never spilling. Because you, know, royal blood. Hundreds of thousands of Russian peasants were slaughtered and Russia itself would take centuries to recover from this Mongol invasion, and its geography was permanently changed. It's only fitting that Kangas Khan's death is as shrouded in as much mystery as the basic details of his personal life. The common tale says he died in August 1227 during the sack of the western Xia capital, around the age of 64 or 65, after injuring himself from falling off a horse while hunting. Other sources list everything from malaria to an arrow wound in the knee, during the battle. One chronicle even says he was murdered by a western Xia princess he was attempting to add to his harem. After his death, the traditional Kurultai tie was held. Meaning all Mongol conquests were put on hold. sort of like a truce between the Hatfields and McCoys. And all leaders met at the Onon river. Bypassing Jochi, whose parentage was never confirmed, they elected Genghis's third son, Ogedai, as the new Khan. After his untimely death in China, Genghis's body was returned to Mongolia and presumably to his birthplace in the Khentii Aimag. Per his orders, Genghis was to be buried without any markings or signage. But many assume his tomb is buried somewhere close to the Onon river. Of course, this was Genghis Khan's funeral, so there had to be some level of barbarism to it, and the Mongols came through in shocking style. According to historical evidence, 30,000 people participated in his funeral. Of course, these 30,000 were killed by Khan's army to preserve the secret location of his tomb. But that wasn't enough, because Khan's army knew where the tomb was, they were killed by his traveling escorts. And as Khan was taken to his final resting place by said escorts, all onlookers were murdered in order to keep everything a secret. When Khan's traveling escorts reached their destination and after they buried his tomb, they rode horses over his burial grounds to help conceal it, and they might even had changed the course of a river to go over it. Then his escorts killed themselves, taking the location of their leaders final resting place with them. And before you ask, yes, numerous excavations have already been undertaken to find Genghis and the treasure said to be buried with him. But even with satellite imaging used recently, its precise location is unknown. What do you think of these little known Genghis Khan facts? Let us know what you think in the comments below and while you're at it, check out some of these other stories in our weird history.
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Channel: Weird History
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Keywords: genghis khan, genghis khan facts, mongol empire, mogols, mongolian, khan, khan of mongolia, weird history, Great Khan, mongolian empire, temujin, nomadic tribes, genghis khan wife, genghis khan death, genghis khan real name, china, iran, persian empire, genghis khan biography, warriors, mongolia, today i learned, asia history, china history, history channel, drunk history, genghis khan conquest
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Length: 14min 5sec (845 seconds)
Published: Sun Jul 07 2019
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