Genghis Khan is not remembered kindly in the West. Medieval
chroniclers of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries were so terrified by his
reputation that they never saw past the appalling idea of what would happen if
they resisted him. They regarded him as a ruthless barbarian, a demon, an Asian
Horseman of the Apocalypse, and their fearful image of him remains with us today.
In Genghis Khan and the Making of the
Modern World anthropology professor Jack Weatherford attempted to expand our
understanding of the great Mongol conqueror, reminding us that not only did Genghis
Khan create the largest empire in the history of the world, but he also
provided reasonable government and, by placing the state above religion, offered
religious tolerance at a time when that was extremely rare. Most important of
all, he developed the Silk Road, turning an unreliable, often dangerous caravan
route controlled by a string of unpredictable warlords into a commercial
superhighway. The trickle of commerce turned into a torrent, with the flow of goods,
people, and ideas cross-fertilizing and advancing the cultures of both East and
West. Under the Mongols, according to Weatherford, the Silk Road laid the
foundations for modernity and served as a prototype for modern communication
systems. It was an achievement sought after but never realized by Alexander,
the Romans, Muslims or Christians.
In The Secret History
of the Mongol Queens: How the Daughters of Genghis Khan Rescued His Empire,
Weatherford illuminates another surprising feature of the Mongol leader, how he
gave the top roles in the Mongol Empire to women. This fact was obscured not only
by European writers; some unknown person doctored the historical record. In the
classic Mongol chronicle, The Secret
History of the Mongols, written soon after the death of Genghis Khan, there
is only one hint of what he did, a single revealing sentence. Preceding that
sentence is a report of how Genghis Khan distributes titles, offices, and
territories to various male members of his family. Then come the words, “Let us
reward our female offspring.” At that point the document is mutilated, an
unknown number of words being cut out. Nothing remains about his female
offspring. Professor Weatherford, however, has managed to piece together what
really happened by poring over non-Mongolian sources—Chinese, Korean, Persian,
Tibetan, Russian, Italian, French. It makes a fascinating story.
The view that women can rule as well as men came easily to
Genghis Khan. Both his mother, Hoelun, and his wife, Borte, came from steppe
tribes in which women played influential roles. They raised his daughters to
rule, and even as his daughters matured and strengthened under their imperial
tutelage, Genghis recognized that his four sons were drunks and wastrels. In
preparation for his first major military campaign beyond the Mongolian Plateau,
he gave his most important appointment to his daughter Alaqai, to rule over the
lands adjacent to China south of the Gobi desert, his springboard for a massive
invasion. During her reign, which lasted 21 years, Alaqai began by making
herself literate, then set up administrative and cultural organizations so
effective that they became models for the entire Mongol Empire. Her capital was
the model for Karakorum, the capital of Ogodie, Genghis Khan’s son, and for
Beijing, the capital of Khublai Khan. Genghis put two other daughters in charge
of kingdoms controlling the Silk Road, the gateway between China and the Muslim
lands to the southwest—and an arrow pointing at Russia and Europe. A fourth
ruled over the northern lands reaching into Siberia. The four sons administered
the stable, nomadic Mongolian heartland. The daughters were given full power,
not expected to be puppets of a central government. To ensure that no one would
infringe on their freedom, Genghis was careful about how he installed them. Upon
marrying a daughter to the leader of a vassal state, he designated her as queen
and demoted her new husband to mere “prince consort.” The prince consort had to
divorce all his existing wives. Then the hapless husband was conscripted into
the Mongol army and sent to the front lines, where he usually died in battle
within a few years. The daughters of Genghis Khan thus ruled without opposition
or interference of any kind.
After the death of Genghis Khan and, later, his daughters,
the empire began to unravel as members of the ruling clan fought for power.
When the dust settled after the first round, the widows of Genghis Khan’s sons
emerged victorious—another group of Mongol queens, who ruled from Korea to the
Caucasus, and from the Arctic to the Indus, the largest empire ever ruled by
women. Cleverest and most powerful was Sorkhokhtani, a Christian, who, by avoiding
marriage to Genghis Khan’s son and successor, enabled her to advance her own
sons, all four of whom took the title of Great Khan. So impressive was she that
her fame spread far beyond the empire, a Syriac scholar writing, “If I were to see
among the race of women another woman like this, I should say that the race of
women was far superior to that of men.” Unfortunately, the daughters-in-law of
Genghis Khan struggled ceaselessly against each other, as well as other
ambitious relatives. After several generations of such infighting, the empire
was torn to shreds. The great Mongol Empire was reduced once again to little
more than a tribal power.
Even during this period of decline, remarkable Mongol women
appeared. Khutulun, who lived in the fourteenth century, declared that she
would never marry a man unless he could defeat her in wrestling. No man ever
did, and it is said she won 10,000 horses from the men who tried. She went on
military campaigns with her father, the Great Khan, and was a fearsome warrior
who, according to Marco Polo, could ride into enemy ranks and snatch a captive
as easily as a hawk snatches a chicken. In the late fifteenth century, almost
three hundred years after Genghis Khan, Queen Manduhai the Wise arose virtually
out of nowhere to unite the Mongols once again, if not in a great empire at
least as a proud and independent nation. Hers is an amazing story. Taking in
hand seven-year-old Dayan, Genghis Khan’s last, sickly male descendant, who had
barely escaped assassination by several pretenders to the throne, she maneuvred
so brilliantly from her small power base, winning battle after battle, that she
was finally able to have him installed as Great Khan over all the Mongols. She
married him when he grew up, and they ruled as a pair.
In a fascinating final chapter, Weatherford contends that it
is impossible to suppress history forever. Everything that happens leaves
traces of itself. Traces of the Mongol queens can be found, for example, in
Chaucer’s “The Squire’s Tale,” in Milton, even in the Taj Mahal. Khutulun
surfaced in an Italian play in the seventeenth century as a woman warrior named
Turandot. The play was translated by Schiller, directed by Goethe in 1802, and
turned into an opera by Puccini in 1924.
Jack Weatherford is an anthropology professor who spent his earlier career studying and writing on tribal peoples, beginning with indigenous North American cultures. His later research and writings on the Mongols led him to receiving the Order of the Polar Star, Mongolia’s highest national honor for foreigners. He has retired to live in Mongolia.
Jack Weatherford is an anthropology professor who spent his earlier career studying and writing on tribal peoples, beginning with indigenous North American cultures. His later research and writings on the Mongols led him to receiving the Order of the Polar Star, Mongolia’s highest national honor for foreigners. He has retired to live in Mongolia.