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A History of the Mongols

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A History of the Mongols This book offers a sweeping journey through the full arc of Mongol history, from the ancient nomadic cultures of the Eurasian steppe to the vibrant, contested identities of Mongols in the twenty‑first‑first century. Readers will discover how the harsh grasslands forged a people whose survival depended on mobility, horsemanship, and a deep kinship with livestock, setting the stage for the rise of Temüjin, who united warring tribes into the Great Mongol Nation and launched a conquest that reshaped continents.

Through detailed chapters, the work explains the revolutionary military organization that made the Mongol war machine a marvel of speed, discipline, and psychological tactics, and shows how that same ingenuity produced the Pax Mongolica—a period of unprecedented trade, cultural exchange, and administrative innovation that linked Europe and Asia under a single protective umbrella. The narrative then follows the empire’s inevitable fracture into the Yuan Dynasty, the Golden Horde, the Ilkhanate, and the Chagatai Khanate, exploring how each successor state adapted Mongol traditions to local realities while preserving a shared heritage.

The book continues the story beyond the medieval era, tracing the Mongol peoples’ encounters with the rising Manchu Qing, the Russian Tsars, and the Soviet Union, revealing how religion, politics, and economic pressures reshaped their societies from the banner system of Inner Mongolia to the Buddhist revival among the Oirats, the Buryats’ dual pull of Orthodoxy and Lamaist faith, and the tragic deportation of the Kalmyks. Readers will experience the tumultuous twentieth century as Mongols navigate independence, foreign domination, and the struggle to maintain cultural autonomy amid modernization.

Finally, the volume brings the saga into the present, examining how Mongol identity is being re‑negotiated in the democratic nation of Mongolia, the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region of China, and the republics of Buryatia and Kalmykia in Russia. It highlights the resurgence of Genghis Khan as a national symbol, the revival of traditional scripts and Buddhist monasteries, and the new digital connections that allow a scattered people to reclaim a shared sense of belonging in a globalized world. This is not merely a chronicle of conquest; it is a profound exploration of resilience, adaptation, and the enduring legacy of a people shaped by the endless steppe.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • The Mongol Empire's revolutionary military organization, tactics, and technological adaptations that enabled the creation of history's largest contiguous land empire under Genghis Khan and his successors
  • How the Mongols governed their vast multicultural empire through innovations like the Yassa legal code, the Yam postal relay system, and the Pax Mongolica that facilitated unprecedented Eurasian trade and cultural exchange
  • The fragmentation of the unified empire into four distinct khanates (Yuan Dynasty, Golden Horde, Ilkhanate, and Chagatai Khanate) and their unique historical developments across China, Russia, Persia, and Central Asia
  • The Mongols' enduring resilience after the empire's fall, including their conversion to Tibetan Buddhism, experiences under Russian and Qing rule, and the preservation of steppe identity through centuries of political change
  • The evolution of Mongol identity in the modern world, from Soviet satellite state to democratic nationhood, cultural revival across Mongolia, China, and Russia, and the ongoing negotiation of heritage in a globalized era
Who's It For:

This book is ideal for students and scholars of world history, particularly those interested in Eurasian history and nomadic societies; readers fascinated by the Mongol Empire's military conquests and administrative innovations; anyone seeking to understand how steppe cultures have shaped global trade, technology exchange, and political systems; and general readers looking for a comprehensive yet accessible account of one of history's most influential peoples, from their origins on the Eurasian steppe to their contemporary cultural revival across Mongolia, China, and Russia.

Author:

Elias Marlowe

Published By:

Ephyia Publishing


Date Published:

May 21, 2026

Word Count:

47,611 words

Reading Time:

3 hours 20 minutes

Sample:

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