How to govern like a Mongol

by LIVIA GERSHON

Temüjin being proclaimed as Genghis Khan in 1206, as illustrated in a 15th-century Jami’ al-tawarikh manuscript. IMAGE Wikimedia Commons

The leaders of the Mongol empire never abandoned their nomadic lifestyles, but they created organizational structures capable of ruling a huge part of the world.

At the peak of their success in 1259, the Mongol people numbered under a million, yet they ran an empire that covered a huge part of the world, including most of Russia, China, and Iran. And, as historians Paul D. Buell and Judith Kolbas write, they did it without abandoning their nomadic lifestyle.

The empire began on the Central Asian steppe, where small groups organized grazing rights based on complex kinship structures. The Mongols initially emerged as a confederation of smaller groups, pulled together with violence, negotiation, and strategic marriages.

As this alliance grew into an empire under Genghis (Chinggis) Khan, a new structure emerged based on mingan, or “thousands”—units composed of about 1,000 warriors and their families. Although these weren’t based in the older kinship system, outsiders often incorrectly identified them as “tribes.” Meanwhile, the khan’s bodyguard transformed into the locus of a central government. Its members were drawn from both inside Mongolia and from conquered territories. Some members were technically hostages, but all were participants in what Buell and Kolbas term a “school of national assimilation.” They functioned as legal judges and negotiators, working with local leaders outside the empire.

Under Genghis’s son and successor, Ögödei, the empire developed a civilian government that put local government bureaucracies in north China, Turkistan, and Iran under a central administration overseen by a senior bodyguard officer. The government issued coins, conducted censuses, built (or rebuilt) cities, and adopted a taxation system based on a Chinese model.

When a significant decision, such as appointing the chief of a mingan, was made, it was accompanied by rituals including the composition of a long alliterative poem.

In 1220, it established Karakorum (Qaraqorum) as the empire’s capital, with a ceremonial white palace. However, the khans only stayed there for about one month a year, continuing the nomadic practice of moving with the grazing cycle. At the empire’s height, the Mongols established what would become Beijing as a new capital city, but the leadership still traveled each year to spend the summer at pastures in Inner Mongolia.

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