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NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • The startling true history of how one extraordinary man from a remote corner of the world created an empire that led the world into the modern age—by the author featured in Echoes of the Empire: Beyond Genghis Khan. The Mongol army led by Genghis Khan subjugated more lands and people in twenty-five years than the Romans did in four hundred. In nearly every country the Mongols conquered, they brought an unprecedented rise in cultural communication, expanded trade, and a blossoming of civilization. Vastly more progressive than his European or Asian counterparts, Genghis Khan abolished torture, granted universal religious freedom, and smashed feudal systems of aristocratic privilege. From the story of his rise through the tribal culture to the explosion of civilization that the Mongol Empire unleashed, this brilliant work of revisionist history is nothing less than the epic story of how the modern world was made.
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I don't remember studying the Khans in any of my history classes from elementary through undergrad. All my history classes frame civilization rising from Egypt to Greece to Rome and then Europe. Any mention of Asia is simply as backward barbarians. This book helped provide a far more nuanced view of the Mongol society and contributions of the Khans to our shared history.
Mr. Weatherford does an excellent job telling the story. I had a hard time putting the book down (or pausing audible).
I highly recommend this book for anyone interested in history or just a good story.
I've been meaning to read this book for years and finally got around to it. I'm sorry I waited, but I do feel rewarded as I learned more from this book than from almost anything I've read. While I have visited both “Inner” and “Outer” Mongolia, I was sadly ignorant about Genghis Khan and the history of the Mongols. This book is very readable, yet filled with fascinating historical detail. I would recommend it to anyone interested in history, Asian or otherwise, because the Mongols had such a great impact on the entire world.
Not an easy read. It's obvious that the author has great admiration for Genghis Khan and the Mongols people, but his sensationalist style gets in the way of telling the story. What saved this book for me was fascinating detail about Mongol society and customs, and what made it possible for them to conquer and rule over such a vast territory. I have seen reviews of this book that take issue with Weatherford's presentation of the facts, so I may now have some incorrect beliefs about Mongol history, but I did think the subject was deeply interesting. I read this for the Luther Seminary book club and wouldn't really recommend it to others. Find a better book about the Mongols!
Do you ever play Chaos Butterfly? Imagining what the world would be like if a certain butterfly ten million years ago had flapped its wings this way instead of that? It can be briefly fun but primarily what it is is humbling: we get a glimmer of how insanely complex the universe is, how limited our imaginations are. Reading this book feels kind of like the opposite: wow, we think, look at all that happened because of this one man, and we try to subtract out all the destruction (and creation) that Genghis Khan wreaked, and we think we can picture that world ... but no, it's still Chaos Butterfly, and still a fruitless exercise. Complex systems just don't work that way, and our imaginations are hopelessly incapable of playing What-If. It's so damn tempting anyway, though.
Genghis Khan was in many ways responsible for the world we live in today. (So is Chaos Butterfly, but the Mongols left better written records). What this book does is gather up the best available sources – including some only made accessible within our lifetimes – and try to depict the personalities involved, all the way down, with much guesswork, to motivations and relationships. Weatherford paints a nuanced picture of Genghis Khan as someone who was “provoked” into fights but who also recognized the wondrous value of combining ideas and cultures, and hence led to a Golden Age of civilization and scientific discovery. What he covers a little less is the suffering he caused, unequaled before or since: the deaths, enslavements, the unimaginable violence and cruelty he inflicted. He was not a barbarian: he was intelligent and thoughtful, and that somehow makes it feel worse.
But that's just me. It's possible, I suppose, to read this book and feel nothing but awe and gratitude to the Khans for how they shaped the world's societies. Some may even argue that Great Good usually comes from Great Disruptions, that you need to crack some eggs for that omelet. I choose to see it another way: I think that Great Good comes no matter what, because that's the very nature of a species that has evolved to cooperate. I do agree that disruptions can be sources of great progress. Willful cruelty, though, no. Fuck that and fuck the orange-topped traitor-cockroaches who pursue it and fuck those who enable it.
Oh, yeah, the book. I found much of it painful to read, in the sense of thinking of the violence and harm happening to so many lives. Despite that I learned history I didn't know and gained perspectives I hadn't thought of before. So, yeah, I hesitantly recommend it: read it, gain from it, but be prepared for an interesting ride