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Mongol expansion
The story of the 1200's is largely that of Mongol military expansion.
In Mongolia as the century opened, a chieftain named Temujin emerged from
poverty and adversity to unify the Mongol people and earn the title Genghis
Khan, the universal ruler. Between 1206 and 1227, Genghis Khan and his
Mongol armies imposed their rule in central Asia, Manchuria, northern
China, and Persia. Descendants of Genghis Khan later gathered Tibet, southern
China, and Russia under the Mongol canopy. They also launched invasions
of Japan, Vietnam, Cambodia, Burma, Java, Poland, Hungary, and Germany,
though they failed to establish Mongol rule in those lands.
Economic hardships
Mongol campaigns and conquests have caused hardship throughout many
lands. The populations of China and Persia have dwindled as war and economic
disruption claimed millions of lives. Agricultural production also has
fallen, especially in Persia, where Mongols destroyed delicate irrigation
systems.
Talk and trade
Yet, from the outrages of the Mongols' violent imperialism has bloomed
trade and communication. The Mongols hold merchants, missionaries, diplomats,
and other travelers in high esteem, and they have protected the silk road
that links China to the eastern Mediterannean. Marco Polo is only one
of the hundreds or perhaps thousands of European travelers who have visited
Asian lands during the Mongol era.
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