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The Mongol Impact On China - Europe - and The Middle East
The Mongol Impact On China - Europe - and The Middle East
Historians
Apprentice
Learning the Historians Craft
by Practicing the Historians Craft.
by Jonathan Burack
Each unit in The Historians Apprentice series deals with an important historical topic. It
introduces students to a five-step set of practices designed to simulate the experience of a
historian and make explicit all key phases of the historians craft.
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The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East | The Historians Apprentice 3
Teacher
Introduction
Suggested Five-Day Sequence
Below is one possible way to use this Historians Apprentice unit. Tasks are listed day by day in a
sequence taking five class periods, with some homework and some optional follow-up activities.
PowerPoint Presentation: Five Habits of Historical Thinking. This presentation comes with each
Historians Apprentice unit. If you have used it before with other units, you need not do so again. If
you decide to use it, incorporate it into the Day 1 activities. In either case, give students the Five
Habits of Historical Thinking handout for future reference. Those Five Habits are as follows:
History Is Not the Past Itself
The Detective Model: Problem, Evidence, Interpretation
Time, Change, and Continuity
Cause and Effect
As They Saw It: Grasping Past Points of View
Warm-Up Activity: Homework assignment: Students do the Warm-Up Activity. This activity
explores student memories and personal experiences shaping their understanding of the topic.
Day 1: Discuss the Warm-Up Activity. Then either have students read or review the Five Habits of
Historical Thinking handout, or use the Five Habits PowerPoint presentation.
Homework assignment: Students read the background essay The Impact of the Mongols.
Day 2: Use the second PowerPoint presentation, The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the
Middle East to overview the topic for this lesson. The presentation applies the Five Habits of
Historical Thinking to this topic. Do the two activities embedded in the presentation.
Homework assignment: Students read the Interpreting Primary Sources Checklist. The checklist
teaches a systematic way to handle sources:
Sourcing
Contextualizing
Interpreting meanings
Point of view
Corroborating sources
Day 3: In class, students study some of the ten primary source documents and complete Source
Analysis worksheets on them. They use their notes to discuss these sources. (Worksheet
questions are all based on the concepts on the Interpreting Primary Sources Checklist.)
Day 4: In class, students complete the remaining Source Analysis worksheets and use their notes
to discuss these sources. Take some time to discuss briefly the two secondary source passages
students will analyze next.
Homework assignment: Students read these two secondary source passages.
Day 5: In class, students do the two Secondary Sources activities and discuss them. These
activities ask them to analyze the two secondary source passages using four criteria:
Clear focus on a problem or question
Position or point of view
Use of evidence or sources
Awareness of alternative explanations
4 The Historians Apprentice | The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East
Teacher
Introduction
Suggested Three-Day Sequence
If you have less time to devote to this lesson, here is a suggested shorter sequence. The
sequence does not include the PowerPoint presentation Five Habits of Historical Thinking. This
presentation is included with each Historians Apprentice unit. If you have never used it with your
class, you may want to do so before following this three-day sequence.
The three-day sequence leaves out a few activities from the five-day sequence. It also suggests
that you use only six key primary sources. Yet it still walks students through the steps in the
Historians Apprentice approach: Clarifying background knowledge, analyzing primary sources,
comparing secondary sources, and debating or writing about the topic.
Warm-Up Activity. Homework assignment: Ask students to read or review the Five Habits of
Historical Thinking handout and read the background essay The Impact of the Mongols.
Day 1: Use the PowerPoint presentation The Industrial Revolution in Daily Life. It overviews
the topic for this lesson by applying the Five Habits of Historical Thinking to it. Do the two
activities embedded in the presentation.
Homework assignment: Students read or review the Interpreting Primary Sources Checklist.
The checklist teaches a systematic way to handle sources.
Day 2: In class, students study some of the ten primary source documents and complete
Source Analysis worksheets on them. They use their notes to discuss these sources. We
suggest using Documents 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, and 9.
You may wish to make your own choices of primary sources. Use your judgment in deciding
how many of them your students can effectively analyze in a single class period.
Homework assignment: Students read the two secondary source passages.
Day 3: In class, students do the two Secondary Sources activities and discuss them. These
activities ask them to analyze the two secondary source passages using four criteria.
Follow-Up Activities (optional, at teacher discretion):
Do as preferred: the DBQ Essay Assignment and/or the Structured Debate.
The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East | The Historians Apprentice 5
Teacher
Introduction
Suggestions for Use With Younger Students
For younger students, parts of this lesson may prove challenging. If you feel your students need a
somewhat more manageable path through the material, see the suggested sequence below.
If you want to use the Five Habits of Historical Thinking PowerPoint presentation, this sequence takes
four class periods. If you do not use this PowerPoint, you can combine DAY 1 and DAY 2 and keep
the sequence to just three days. We suggest using six primary sources only. The ones listed for DAY
3 are less demanding in terms of vocabulary and conceptual complexity. For DAY 4, we provide some
simpler DBQs for the follow-up activities.
Vocabulary: A list of vocabulary terms in the sources and the introductory essay is provided on
page 7 of this booklet. You may wish to hand this sheet out as a reading reference, you could make
flashcards out of some of the terms, or you might ask each of several small groups to use the
vocabulary sheet to explain terms in one source to the rest of the class.
SUGGESTED FOUR-DAY SEQUENCE
Warm-Up Activity. Homework assignment: Students do the Warm-Up Activity. This activity
explores student memories and personal experiences shaping their understanding of the topic.
Day 1: Discuss the Warm-Up Activity. Show the Five Habits of Historical Thinking PowerPoint
presentation (unless you have used it before and/or you do not think it is needed now). If you
do not use this PowerPoint presentation, give students the Five Habits of Historical Thinking
handout and discuss it with them.
Homework assignment: Ask students to read the background essay The Impact of
theMongols.
Day 2: Use the PowerPoint presentation The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle
East. This introduces the topic for the lesson by applying the Five Habits of Historical Thinking
to it. Do the two activities embedded in the presentation.
Homework assignment: Students read or review the Interpreting Primary Sources Checklist.
The checklist teaches a systematic way to handle sources.
Day 3: Discuss the Interpreting Primary Sources Checklist and talk through one primary source
document in order to illustrate the meaning of the concepts on the checklist. Then have
students complete Source Analysis worksheets after studying primary source documents 2,
3, 4, 6, 7, and 9.
Homework assignment: Students read the two secondary source passages.
Day 4: Students do only Secondary Sources: Activity 2 and discuss it. This activity asks them to
choose from among the sources the two that best back up each secondary sourcepassage.
6 The Historians Apprentice | The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East
Vocabulary
The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East | The Historians Apprentice 7
Teacher
Introduction
Warm-Up Activity
A simple exercise designed to help you see what students know about the topic, what confuses
them, or what ideas they may have absorbed about it from popular culture, friends and family,
etc. The goal is to alert them to their need to gain a clearer idea of the past and be critical of
what they think they already know.
PowerPoint presentation: The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East
This PowerPoint presentation reviews the topic for the lesson and shows how the Five Habits
of Historical Thinking can be applied to a clearer understanding of it. At two points, the
presentation calls for a pause and students are prompted to discuss some aspects of their prior
knowledge of the topic. Our proposed sequences suggest using this PowerPoint presentation
after assigning the introductory essay, but you may prefer to reverse this order.
8 The Historians Apprentice | The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East
Student Activity
Warm-Up Activity
What Do You Know About the Mongol Empire?
This lesson deals with impact of the Mongols on
world history. Whenever you start to learn something
about a time in history, it helps to think first of what
you already know about it, or think you know. You
probably have impressions. Or you may have read or
heard things about it already. Some of what you know
may be accurate. You need to be ready to alter your
fixed ideas about this time as you learn more about it.
This is what any historian would do. To do this, study
this map and take a few notes in response to the
questions below it. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East | The Historians Apprentice 9
Introductory Essay
The story of the Mongols of the 13th and 14th Finally, the Mongol story is hard to believe or
centuries is one that many people find fascinating, fully understand. This is in part because we are
horrifying, and often difficult to believe or fully used to thinking of nomadic herders of the open,
understand. rolling steppes as far less advanced than the huge
agricultural and city-based civilizations such as
It is fascinating for being full of dramatic, colorful,
ancient Egypt, Rome, China, or Persia. Yet in less
swiftly moving events and amazing personalities
and also for its exotic setting. For the Mongols than a century after Temujin united the Mongol
were nomads of the steppes of Central Asia, tribes in 1206, his armies of about a hundred
herders who mastered the art of horse riding. Of thousand had conquered two of the civilizations
course, nomadic societies on the Eurasian steppes mentioned above (China and Persia), civilizations
had been doing that for centuries. However, the which contained tens of millions of people. The
Mongols put their horse-riding skills to the test Mongol Empire soon split into four main parts, or
within a military machine of truly formidable power. khanates, when Chinggis divided the empire among
No other society at the time had warriors as skilled four of his sons. Overall, these four regions together
at shooting arrows from a galloping horse, nor were made up the largest empire in history. The question
others as smart in cavalry tactics of attacking and of of how the Mongols did all this is a challenging
engaging in deceptive retreats as well. In time, the matter that of course interests historians.
Mongols also learned from the Chinese how to use Another issue that interests them, however, is what
catapults and gunpowder explosives in the siege sort of lasting impact, if any, the Mongols had on
ofcities.
history in general. For as swiftly as the Mongol
As for Mongol personalities, none is more amazing Empire arose, it lasted only about a century in
than Temujin, destined to rise from the head of a most places and then disappeared completely as
family of seven abandoned by its clan to become an organized political entity. For some, the Mongol
Chinggis Khan (often spelled Genghis Khan), ruler of impact is seen almost entirely as a negative one.
a great united federation of Mongol tribes. As a part Mongol warriors laid waste to many regionsparts
of his efforts to unify the Mongol tribes and clans, he of China and Russia, present-day Iraq and Iran,
seems to have created entirely new arrangements Poland and Hungary, areas of northern India, and
to overcome the purely tribal organization in military many other places. In the Middle East, they put
and other affairs. These efforts helped achieve much an end to the Muslim worlds Abbasid Caliphate
greater unity and discipline than what nomadic tribal and may well have cut short the creative energy
societies had attained. of Muslim civilization in certain places, such as
Baghdad, which was subject to a devastating siege
Along with being fascinating, the story of the
Mongols is also horrifying. It is horrifying to many and slaughter in 1258. Everywhere they conquered,
because of the ruthless form of warfare by which the Mongols brought terror and often destruction.
a small army of horse-riding Mongol warriors was Yet historians also speak of a Pax Mongoliaa
able to sow terror among and subdue whole Mongolian Peace in which a widespread
civilizations vastly more populous and wealthier lawfulness replaced the warring of small states
than the Mongols themselves. In attacking a city, for and tribal societies throughout the parts of Asia
example, the Mongols learned to let residents know the Mongols conquered. In China, by the time of
that if they surrendered, they would be allowed to Chinggiss grandson Khubilai Khan, the Mongols
live. If they did not surrender, the Mongols would were adopting many Chinese practices and acting
massacre themmen, women, and childrensell to strengthen and protect that ancient civilization.
any survivors into slavery, and level the city. They The Yuan Dynasty established by Khubilai brought
carried out this threat often enough that it had the a degree of unity to China greater than had existed
desired effect in many cases.
10 Debating the Documents | The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East
Student Handout
previously. There and elsewhere, Mongol leaders According to some historians, these accomplish-
also seem to have taken a tolerant attitude toward ments explain why Europeans and others closer in
the religious diversity in many of the lands they time to the Mongols often admired them, rather than
nowcontrolled. saw them as a bloodthirsty horde, as many people
did later on. Hence in the late 1300s, Geoffrey
Economic life thrived in many parts of the Mongol
Chaucer in The Canterbury Tales could speak of this
Empire. The Pax Mongolia made it far easier for
noble king, the Tartar Genghis Khan. Obviously not
merchants to trade along the many routes that
all historians agree with this assessment, nor need
made up the so-called Silk Road across Central
for you accept it either. Yet you do need to consider
Asia. Safe travel was guaranteed to them, and way
all the evidence on either side of this controversy.
stations were provided. Not only trade goods, but
The sources for this unit should help you decide
ideas, religions, and other cultural traditions could
for yourself which view of the Mongols you think is
be carried much more easily from one part of the
mostaccurate.
Mongol Empire to another. Europeans, for example,
likely benefited from various transfers of technology
from China, such as gunpowder, paper money,
the compass, and many other materials, tools
andmethods.
The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East | The Historians Apprentice 11
Student Handout
Five Habits of Historical Thinking
History is not just a chronicle of one fact after another. It is a meaningful story, or an
account of what happened and why. It is written to address questions or problems
historians pose. This checklist describes key habits of thinking that historians adopt as
they interpret primary sources and create their own accounts of the past.
12 The Historians Apprentice | The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East
The Primary Sources
Part 2: Analyzing the Primary Sources
Note to the teacher: The next pages provide the primary sources for this lesson. We suggest you give
these to students after they read the background essay, after they review the Five Habits of Historical
Thinking handout, and after they watch and discuss the PowerPoint presentation for the lesson.
The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East | The Historians Apprentice 13
Student Handout
Interpreting Primary Sources Checklist
Primary sources are the evidence historians use to reach conclusions and write their
accounts of the past. Sources rarely have one obvious, easily grasped meaning. To
interpret them fully, historians use several strategies. This checklist describes some of
the most important of those strategies. Read the checklist through and use it to guide
you whenever you need to analyze and interpret a primary source.
Sourcing
Think about a primary sources author or creator, how and why the primary source document was
created, and where it appeared. Also think about the audience it was intended for and what its
purpose was. You may not always find much information about these things, but whatever you
can learn will help you better understand the source. In particular, it may suggest the sources
point of view or bias, since the authors background and intended audience often shape his or her
ideas and way of expressing them.
Contextualizing
Context refers to the time and place of which the primary source is a part. In history, facts do
not exist separately from one another. They get their meaning from the way they fit into a broader
pattern. The more you know about that broader pattern, or context, the more you will be able to
understand about the source and its significance.
Interpreting Meanings
It is rare for a sources full meaning to be completely obvious. You must read a written source
closely, paying attention to its language and tone, as well as to what it implies or merely hints at.
With a visual source, all kinds of meaning may be suggested by the way it is designed, by such
things as shading, camera angle, use of emotional symbols or scenes, etc. The more you pay
attention to all the details, the more you can learn from a source.
Point of View
Every source is written or created by someone with a purpose, an intended audience, and a point
of view or bias. Even a dry table of numbers was created for some reason, to stress some things
and not others, to make a point of some sort. At times, you can tell a point of view simply by
sourcing the document. Knowing an author was a Democrat or a Republican, for example, will
alert you to a likely point of view. In the end, however, only a close reading of the text will make
you aware of point of view. Keep in mind, even a heavily biased source can still give you useful
evidence of what some people in a past time thought. But you need to take the bias into account
in judging how reliable the sources own claims really are.
Corroborating Sources
No one source tells the whole story. Moreover, no one source is completely reliable. To make
reasonable judgments about an event in the past, you must compare sources to find points of
agreement and disagreement. Even when there are big differences, both sources may be useful.
However, the differences will also tell you something, and they may be important in helping you
understand each source.
14 The Historians Apprentice | The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East
The Primary Sources
The Primary Sources for the Lesson
Document 1
Information on the source: This photo is of a
woman, possibly Turkman or Kyrgyz, standing on a carpet
at the entrance to a yurt, dressed in traditional clothing
and jewelry. The photo was taken in the early 1900s, but it
depicts a scene on the steppes of Central Asia that is not
that different from what would have been common there
during the time of the Mongol Empire.
Document 2
Information on the source: An 1870s photo
of a woman and four men on horseback in front of a
yurt. The photo helps call attention to the central role of
the horse in the various cultures that gave birth to the
Mongols and other federations of steppe nomads of
the past.
Document 3
Information on the source: The Franciscan monk William of Rubruck traveled
to the Mongol capital of Karakorum in 125355. He wrote a detailed account of the his
time with the Mongols. The passage here is from The Journey of William of Rubruck to
the eastern parts of the world, 125355, as narrated by himself, with two accounts of the
earlier journey of John of Pian de Carpine, translated from the Latin and edited, with an
introductory notice, by William Woodville Rockhill (London: Hakluyt Society, 1900).
Nowhere have they fixed dwelling- chimney, and this they cover over
places, nor do they know where their with white felt
next will be For in winter they go And they make these houses so
down to warmer regions in the south: large that they are sometimes thirty
in summer they go up to cooler feet in width. I myself once measured
towards the north. The pasture the width between the wheel-tracks
lands without water they graze over of a cart twenty feet, and when the
in winter when there is snow there, house was on the cart it projected
for the snow serveth them as water. beyond the wheels on either side five
They set up the dwelling in which feet at least. I have myself counted
they sleep on a circular frame of to one cart twenty-two oxen drawing
interlaced sticks converging into a one house, eleven abreast across
little round hoop on the top, from the width of the cart, and the other
which projects above a collar as a eleven before them.
The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East | The Historians Apprentice 15
The Primary Sources
Document 4
Information on the source: In one of
O people, know that you have committed great
his wars of conquest, Chinggis Khan fought the
sins, and that the great ones among you have
Khwarezmid Empire in Central Asia and what is now
committed these sins. If you ask me what proof
Iran and part of Iraq. After his Mongol army took
I have for these words, I say it is because I am
over the city of Bukhara, he spoke to the Muslim
the punishment of God. If you had not committed
population at a mosque. These words from that
great sins, God would not have sent a punishment
speech are reproduced from Ata Malik Juvaini,
like me upon you.
Genghis Khan: The History of the World Conqueror,
translated by J. A. Boyle, (Seattle: University of
Washington Press, 1997), p.105. Juvaini was a
native of an area the Mongols conquered in what is
now the northeastern part of Iran.
Document 5
Information on the source: In 1243, Pope
Innocent IV sent Franciscan friar John Plano Carpini Document 6
to Karakoram to meet with the Kuyuk Khan, the third Information on the source: Another
Great Khan of the Mongol Empire, to ask him to stop passage from William of Rubrucks account of his
his attacks on Christians. After a wait, Carpini was travels to the Mongol capital, Karakorum.
given a reply, part of which is reproduced here.
16 The Historians Apprentice | The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East
The Primary Sources
Document 7
Information on the source: Perhaps the most famous European visitor to China under Mongol rule
was Marco Polo. He left Venice in 1271 and did not return until 1295. His account was treated with some
doubts at first, though over time many Europeans had their views of China shaped by it. This passage deals
with Khubilai Khan, a grandson of Chinggis Khan who became the fifth Great Khan of the Mongol Empire
and the founder of Chinas Yuan Dynasty. Here Marco deals with Khubilais views on Christianity and other
religions. From The Travels of Marco Polo, translated and with an introduction by Ronald Latham (London:
Penguin Books, 1958).
It was in the month of November that Kubilai returned Christians say that their God was Jesus Christ,
to Khanbalik. And there he stayed until February the Saracens Mahomet, the Jews Moses, and the
and March, the season of our Easter. Learning that idolators Sakyamuni Burkhan [Buddha] who was the
this was one of our principal feasts, he sent for all first to be represented as God in the form of an idol.
the Christians and desired them to bring him the And I do honour and reverence to all four, so that
book containing the four Gospels. After treating the I may be sure of doing it to him who is greatest in
book to repeated applications of incense with great heaven and truest; and to him I pray for aid. But on
ceremony, he kissed it devoutly and desired all his the Great Khans own showing he regards as truest
barons and lords there present to do the same. This and best the faith of the Christians, because he
usage he regularly observes on the principle feasts of declares that it commands nothing that is not full of
the Christians, such as Easter and Christmas. And he all goodness and holiness. He will not on any account
does likewise on the principle feasts of the Saracens, allow the Christians to carry the cross before them,
Jews, and idolaters. Being asked why he did so, he and this because on it suffered and died such a great
replied: There are four prophets who are worshiped man as Christ.
and to whom all the world does reverences. The
Document 8
Information on the source: The Mongol Ilkhanate was
founded in the 1200s by Chinngis Khans grandson Hulagu So was the world cleansed which had
in what is now mainly Iran and Iraq and nearby parts of been polluted by their evil. Wayfarers now
Central Asia. It arose at first during Mongol wars against the ply to and fro without fear or dread or the
Khwarezmid Empire. At first the Ilkhanate was sympathetic inconvenience of paying a toll and pray for
to Buddhism and Christianity. After 1295, its rulers embraced the fortune of the happy King who uprooted
Islam. This passage is by Persian chronicler Ata Malik Juvaini, their foundations and left no trace of
who worked for the Mongols. In it, he describes the results anyone of them.
of the Mongol destruction of a Shia group known as the
Assassins. From Ata Malik Juvaini, Genghis Khan: The History
of the World Conqueror, translated by J. A. Boyle, (Seattle:
University of Washington Press, 1997).
The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East | The Historians Apprentice 17
The Primary Sources
Document 9
Information on the source: Pegolottis Merchant Handbook offers insight
into trade across Central Asia in the 1300s, when the Golden Horde was in
control of much of the area. The Golden Horde was the name used for the group
of Mongols who took control of what is now Russia and other nearby lands.
Francesco Balducci Pegolotti worked for a merchant firm in the Italian city-state
of Florence. The passages here are from the partial translation in Henry Yule
and Henri Cordier, tr. and ed., Cathay and the Way Thither, Being a Collection of
Medieval Notices of China, Vol. III (London, 1916).
The road you travel from Tana to Cathay is less. And you may reckon the sommi to be
perfectly safe [Tana is Azov, at the mouth of worth five golden florins
the Don River in Russia, Cathay is China], Whatever silver the merchants may carry
whether by day or by night, according with them as far as Cathay the lord of
to what the merchants say who have Cathay will take from them and put into
usedit his treasury. And to merchants who thus
You may calculate that a merchant with bring silver they give that paper money of
a dragoman, and with two men servants, theirs in exchange. This is of yellow paper,
and with goods to the value of twenty-five stamped with the seal of the lord aforesaid.
thousand golden florins, should spend And this money is called balishi; and with
on his way to Cathay from sixty to eighty this money you can readily buy silk and all
sommi of silver, and not more if he manage other merchandise that you have a desire
well; and for all the road back again from to buy. And all the people of the country
Cathay to Tana, including the expenses of are bound to receive it. And yet you shall
living and the pay of servants, and all other not pay a higher price for your goods
charges, the cost will be about five sommi because your money is of paper.
per head of pack animals, or something
Document 10
Information on the source: One unintended
result of the more open trade on the Central Asian
routes during Mongol times was the ease with which
diseases passed from one region to another. In
the 1340s, merchants helped spread the terrifying
Black Death throughout Europe. Perhaps a third of
Europes population was destroyed by it. Since no
one really understood how the disease spread, many
blamed outsiders or people who were different in
some way. This illustration from a book published in
1493 depicts Jews being burned alive for spreading
the Black Death. The photo of this work of art is
courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
18 The Historians Apprentice | The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East
Student Activity
Source Analysis: Primary Source Document 1
Photo of a woman standing on a carpet at the entrance to a yurt
Contextualizing _____________________________________________________________________
What aspects of the physical environment
on the Central Asian steppes might
explain why nomadic groups there
preferred this form of housing? What
aspects of their nomadic lifestyles also
might lead them to build such dwellings?
The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East | The Historians Apprentice 19
Student Activity
Source Analysis: Primary Source Document 2
An 1870s photo of a woman and four men on horseback in front of a yurt
Contextualizing _____________________________________________________________________
The first societies to tame the horse were
probably those located on the Eurasian
steppes where the Mongols lived. Why
might that environment lead societies to
stress the raising of horses?
20 The Historians Apprentice | The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East
Student Activity
Source Analysis: Primary Source Document 3
William of Rubruck on how nomads adapt to conditions on the steppes
The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East | The Historians Apprentice 21
Student Activity
Source Analysis: Primary Source Document 4
Ata Malik Juvaini reports the words of Chinngis Khan to Muslims he has conquered.
Point of view________________________________________________________________________
Ata Malik Juvaini worked for the Mongols
and wrote a chronicle about them. He
was also a native of Khorasan, an area
of northeastern Iran conquered by the
Mongols. How might this background
explain the way he depicts Chinggis Khan
here? Do you think he might be altering
what Chinggis Khan said in some way or
reporting it fairly and accurately? Explain
your answer.
22 The Historians Apprentice | The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East
Student Activity
Source Analysis: Primary Source Document 5
The Great Khans reply to Franciscan friar John Plano Carpini, regarding attacks
onChristians
Contextualizing _____________________________________________________________________
Notice that the date of this source is
1243. What do you know about recent
events then involving Mongols and
Europeans? How might those events
explain the haughty tone the Khan
seems to have taken here in dealing with
thepope?
The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East | The Historians Apprentice 23
Student Activity
Source Analysis: Primary Source Document 6
Another passage from William of Rubruck on his travels to the Mongol capital
24 The Historians Apprentice | The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East
Student Activity
Source Analysis: Primary Source Document 7
Marco Polo on Khubilai Khans views on Christianity and other religions
Point of view________________________________________________________________________
In what way might Marco Polos account
reflect his own attitudes about Christianity
as much as it describes Khubilai Khans?
How reliable do you think his account is?
Explain your answer.
The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East | The Historians Apprentice 25
Student Activity
Source Analysis: Primary Source Document 8
Ata Malik Juvaini on the Mongol destruction of a Shia group, the Assassins.
Contextualizing _____________________________________________________________________
This passage refers to the Mongol efforts
to eliminate a Shia sect known as the
Assassins. What do you know about
Shia Islam and about this particular sect?
Based on what you know, explain how
this passage does not illustrate general
Mongol attitudes toward all of Islam.
26 The Historians Apprentice | The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East
Student Activity
Source Analysis: Primary Source Document 9
Francesco Balducci Pegolottis Merchant Handbook, on trade across Central Asia in
the 1300s.
The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East | The Historians Apprentice 27
Student Activity
Source Analysis: Primary Source Document 10
A medieval work of art showing Jews being burned at the stake during the
BlackDeath
Contextualizing _____________________________________________________________________
The Black Death was most likely the
bubonic plague. It probably first arose
in Central Asia and spread west.
What do you know about how it was
actuallyspread?
Point of view________________________________________________________________________
Do you think this illustration expresses any
attitude toward the Jews being burned
at the stake here, or is the image purely
neutral in tone? Explain your answer.
28 The Historians Apprentice | The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East
The Secondary Sources
Part 3: Analyzing the Secondary Sources
Note to the teacher: This next section includes passages from two secondary source accounts dealing
with the Mongols impact, along with two activities on these sources. We suggest you first discuss the brief
comment Analyzing Secondary Sources just above the first of the two secondary sources. Discuss the
four criteria the first activity asks students to use in analyzing each secondary source. These criteria focus
students on the nature of historical accounts as 1) problem-centered, 2) based on evidence, 3)influenced
by point of view and not purely neutral, and 4) tentative or aware of alternative explanations.
Activity 2
In pairs, students select two of the primary sources for the lesson that best support each
authors claims in the secondary source passages. Students discuss their choices with
theclass.
The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East | The Historians Apprentice 29
The Secondary Sources
The Secondary Sources for the Lesson
Analyzing Secondary Sources
Historians write secondary source accounts of the past after studying primary source documents like the
ones you have studied on the Mongols impact. However, They normally select documents from among
a great many others, and they stress some aspects of the story but not others. In doing this, historians
are guided by the questions they ask about the topic. Their selection of sources and their focus are also
influenced by their own aims, bias or point of view. No account of the past is perfectly neutral. In reading
a secondary source, you should pay to what it includes, what it leaves out, what conclusions it reaches,
and how aware it is of alternative interpretations.
* * * *
Secondary Source 1
Information on the source: The passage in the box below is an excerpt from Genghis Khan
and the Making of the Modern World, by Jack Weatherford (New York: Crown Publishers, 2004),
p. 2334.
Whether their policy of religious did not have to worry whether their
tolerance, devising a universal alphabet, astronomy agreed with the precepts
maintaining relay stations, playing of the Bible, that their standards of
games, or printing almanacs, money, writing followed the classical principles
or astronomy charts, the rulers of the taught by the mandarins of China, or
Mongol Empire displayed a persistent that Muslim imams disapproved of their
universalism. Because they had no printing and painting. The Mongols
system of their own to impose upon had the power, at least temporarily, to
their subjects, they were willing to adopt impose new international systems of
and combine systems from everywhere. technology, agriculture, and knowledge
Without deep cultural preferences in that superseded the predilections or
these areas, the Mongols implemented prejudices of any single civilization; and
pragmatic rather than ideological in so doing they broke the monopoly on
solutions. They searched for what thought exercised by local elites.
worked best; and when they found it,
they spread it to other countries. They
30 The Historians Apprentice | The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East
The Secondary Sources
The Secondary Sources for the Lesson
Secondary Source 2
Information on the source: The passage in the box below is an excerpt from Timothy Mays
review of Jack Weatherfords Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World, in World History
Connected, Vol. 2, No. 2, May 2005.
The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East | The Historians Apprentice 31
Student Activity
The Secondary Sources: Activity 1
In this exercise, you read two short passages from longer secondary sources dealing with the impact of the
Mongols on world history. For each secondary source, take notes on the following four questions (you may
want to underline phrases or sentences in the passages that you think back up your notes):
1. How clearly does this account focus on a problem or question. What do you think that problem or
question is? Sum it up in your own words here.
Genghis Khan, Weatherford Review of Weatherfords Genghis Khan, May
2. Does the secondary source take a position or express a point of view about the impact of the Mongols
on world history? If so, briefly state that point of view or quote an example of it.
Genghis Khan, Weatherford Review of Weatherfords Genghis Khan, May
3. How well does the secondary source seem to base its case on primary source evidence? Take notes
about any specific examples, if you can identify them.
Genghis Khan, Weatherford Review of Weatherfords Genghis Khan, May
4. Does the secondary source seem aware of alternative explanations or points of view about this topic?
Underline points in the passage where you see this.
Genghis Khan, Weatherford Review of Weatherfords Genghis Khan, May
32 The Historians Apprentice | The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East
Student Activity
The Secondary Sources: Activity 2
This activity is based on the passages from Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World, by Jack
Weatherford, and from Timothy Mays review of Weatherfords Genghis Khan and the Making of the
Modern World, in World History Connected. From the primary sources for this lesson, choose two that
you think best support each sources point of view about the impact of the Mongols on world history. With
the rest of the class, discuss the two secondary source passages and defend the choice of sources you
havemade.
1. From this lesson, choose two primary sources that best back up the interpretation in Weatherfords
Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World. List those sources here and briefly explain why you
chose them.
2. From this lesson, choose two primary sources that best back up the interpretation in Mays review of
Weatherfords book. List those sources here and briefly explain why you chose them.
3. Does your textbook include a passage describing the impact of the Mongols on world history? If so, with
which of the two secondary source passages (Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World or the
review of that book) does it seem to agree most? What one or two primary sources from this lesson would
you add to this textbook passage to improve it?
The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East | The Historians Apprentice 33
Follow-Up Activities
Part 4: Follow-Up Options
Note to the teacher: At this point, students have completed the key tasks of The Historians Apprentice
program. They have examined their own prior understandings and acquired background knowledge on the
topic. They have analyzed and debated a set of primary sources. They have considered secondary source
accounts of the topic. This section includes two suggested follow-up activities. Neither of these is a required
part of the lesson. They do not have to be undertaken right away. However, we do strongly recommend
that you find some way to do what these options provide for. They give students a way to write or debate in
order to express their ideas and arrive at their own interpretations of the topic.
Document-Based Questions
Four document-based questions are provided. Choose one and follow the guidelines
provided for writing a typical DBQ essay.
A Structured Debate
The aim of this debate format is not so much to teach students to win a debate, but to learn
to listen and learn, as well as speak up and defend a position. A more interactive and more
civil debating process is the goal.
34 The Historians Apprentice | The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East
Follow-Up Activities
Document-Based Questions
Document-Based Questions (DBQs) are essay questions you must answer by using your own background
knowledge and a set of primary sources on that topic. Below are four DBQs on the impact of the Mongols
on world history. Use the sources for this lesson and everything you have learned from it to write a short
essay answer to one of these questions.
Suggested DBQs
Using the documents for this lesson, describe the key ways that the Mongol
Empire differed in its social patterns and cultural attitudes from the settled
societies around it.
The Mongols were just lucky. They benefitted from the more advanced societies
around them without really understanding them. Assess the validity of this
statement (that is, explain why you do or do not agree with it).
The Mongols may have been ruthless warriors, but so were warriors everywhere
then. What was unusual was their openness and tolerance in peacetime. Assess
the validity of this statement (that is, explain why you do or do not agree with it).
How accurately can we understand the Mongols when so many available sources
are accounts by non-Mongols? Discuss this with reference to the sources for
this lesson.
The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East | The Historians Apprentice 35
Follow-Up Activities
A Structured Debate
Small-group activity: Using a version of the Structured Academic Controversy model, debate alternate
interpretations of this lessons topic. The goal of this method is not so much to win a debate as to learn
to collaborate in clarifying your interpretations to one another. In doing this, your goal should be to see
that it is possibly for reasonable people to hold differing views, even when finding the one right answer is
notpossible.
Use all their notes from previous activities in this lesson. Here are the rules for this debate.
1. Organize a team of four or six students. Choose a debate topic based on the lesson
The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East.
(You may wish to use one of the DBQs suggested for the Document-Based
Questions activity for this lesson. Or you may want to define the debate topic in a
different way.)
2. Split your team into two subgroups. Each subgroup should study the materials for
this lesson and rehearse its case. One subgroup then present its case to the other.
That other subgroup must repeat the case back to the first subgroups satisfaction.
4. Your team either reaches a consensus which it explains to the entire class, or it
explains where the key differences between the subgroups lie.
36 The Historians Apprentice | The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East
Answers
Answers to Source Analysis Activities
Source Analysis: Document 1
Contextualizing: Lack of timber or stone for more solid buildings, need to be able to move
regularly,etc.
Interpreting meanings: Answers will vary and should be discussed.
There is no one right answer, but students should at least see how well adapted to the environment
this sort of housing is.
The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East | The Historians Apprentice 37
Answers
Source Analysis: Document 6
Interpreting meanings: It was a diverse city with several major religions represented.
Answers will vary: He could have simply wanted to manage possible conflict, he might actually have
hoped to learn more or see a way to get these groups to understand each other better, etc.
Answers will vary. Some may see this as a sincere wish to avoid conflict. Others may see it as
anexcuse.
Corroborating sources: Answers will vary and should be discussed.
38 The Historians Apprentice | The Mongol Impact on China, Europe, and the Middle East
Answers
Evaluating Secondary Sources: Activity 1
These are not definitive answers to the questions. They are suggested points to look for in
student responses.
1. How clearly does this account focus on a problem or question. What do you think that problem or
question is? Sum it up in your own words here?
Weatherford in Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World focuses on the question of how
the Mongols reacted to and adopted various beneficial accomplishments of the more settled societies
they conquered and controlled.
May in his review of Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World focuses on Weatherfords
strong claim that the Mongols shaped the modern world in fundamental ways. In this passage, May
looks at some of the evidence Weatherford uses to make his case and assesses how accurate he is
in doing this.
2. Does the secondary source take a position or express a point of view about the impact of the Mongols
on world history? If so, briefly state that point of view or quote an example of it.
Weatherford in this passage sums up his thesis by using the phrase persistent universalism to
get at the way the Mongols accepted and passed on to others all kinds of technological, cultural,
and intellectual achievements of the societies they came to control. In other words, they were very
practical, he says, in seeing each of these achievements as having universal valuethat is, value
beyond the boundaries of the society that originated that achievement.
May in his review does not dispute the general notion that the Mongols had the sort of universalizing
effect Weatherford claims. What he does is indicate some factual mistakes that he says call some of
Weatherfords claims into question and that exaggerate the influence of the Mongols on some of the
later historical trends discussed.
3. How well does the secondary source seem to base its case on primary source evidence? Take notes
about any specific examples, if you can identify them.
Weatherford does not refer directly to primary sources because this passage is more of a summary of
the overall Mongol influence as he sees it. May does refer to other sources, but does not quote any or
site them specifically.
4. Does the secondary source seem aware of alternative explanations or points of view about this topic?
Underline points in the passage where you see this.
Both Weatherford and May are responsive to alternative views. Weatherford does not refer to any here
directly, but his whole book is explicitly defined as a corrective to purely negative views of the Mongols
and their influence. May is directly responding to Weatherfords view and appears to accept some but
not all of it.
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