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The Mongols didn’t have strong artistic tradition of their own but loved beautiful objects and often spared vanquished craftsmen in order to put them to work. Archaeologists have unearthed evidence of glass-working and bone-carving workshops. “We found relics of the craftsmen’s quarters and firing places and iron and metal artifacts,” says Ernst Pohl, a German archaeologist who spent years excavating the site. His team discovered a gold bracelet decorated with a phoenix flanked by demons that had apparently been made in the city.
Just as they were inspired by the cities that they conquered, the Mongols were influenced by the Chinese and Arab civilizations that they absorbed.
“Nomads are not dogmatic,” says Bill Honeychurch, a Yale University archaeologist. “They had the idea that you can learn from people you’ve brought into the fold.” From these pieces the Mongols forged a culture of their own. “They didn’t just adopt, they synthesized and acquired, and the end result was something unique and different.”
As it turned out, Khara Khorum was a less than ideal site for a city. “There wasn’t sufficient food or resources,” Rossabi says. Five hundred carts of supplies were brought in each day to feed a population that grew along with the empire, which by the mid-thirteenth century would stretch from Hungary to the shores of the Pacific. Genghis’s grandson, Kublai Khan, eventually moved the capital city to Beijing and built a summer palace at Shangdu -- the “stately pleasure dome” of Samuel Coleridge’s “Kubla Khan” poem.
“You can’t rule a population of 75 million from Mongolia,” Rossabi says. “Kublai was trying to ingratiate himself with the Chinese, playing down the foreignness of his dynasty to win over his subjects.”
Khara Khorum began to fade, although the Khans periodically returned to the city on the steppe. After the Mongols were expelled from China in the fourteenth century, they briefly made the city their center again; in 1388 the Chinese obliterated it. The site remained important to various Mongol clans and in 1586 Abtaj Khan built a large Buddhist monastery there.
The Palace of the Great Khan, archaeologists now think, lies beneath the remains of this complex, much of which was destroyed by Mongolia’s Communist leadership in the 1930s. Its silver fountain may never be recovered, but to historians the real fascination of the Mongols’ city is that it existed at all.
“It is kind of amazing that they conceived of, or accepted, the idea of setting up a permanent structure,” Rossabi says. If the Khans hadn’t “moved toward having an administrative capital, the empire wouldn’t have succeeded so readily.”


Comments
I know very little about this culture, but it is fascinating to me. I'd love to see more articles. Thank you for this story!
Posted by KSmith on March 27,2009 | 09:45AM
I am very interested in this topic, and would like more historical information as well as information about new books and museum shows.
Posted by Conn Thomas on March 29,2009 | 10:09AM
This sounds fabulous. When is the exhibit coming to D.C.?
Posted by patricia Moeller on March 29,2009 | 10:16AM
Very good. (I'm having difficulty getting to page 2) and I'm disappointed the exhibit apparently will not visit the Chicago area. Please favor us with photos!! Thanks, Marjorie Mandel
Posted by Marjorie Mandel on March 29,2009 | 12:57PM
I read the book "Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World" by Jack Weatherford last year and have been raving to friends about it ever since. It is a fascinating read. There is so much more to the story than what brief paragraphs in our history books conveyed, often inaccurately. Thank you for the above article.
Posted by Susan Savion on March 29,2009 | 03:32PM
A visit to this country was a fascinating and marvelous experience--although be advised that roads are mostly nonexistent. I hope the exhibit comes to Chicago!
Posted by Susanna McNeil on March 30,2009 | 02:57PM
Had no knowledge of the History of Genghis Khan, very interesting.
Posted by Rosemary Rozen on March 30,2009 | 07:20PM
Will the Genghis Khan exhibit come to Washington, DC, or Philadelphia, PA?
Posted by Mike Wilson on April 1,2009 | 05:43AM
Very interesting, love to see more pictures. I know nothing about this except what I just read. Thanks.
Posted by Jane McIntosh on April 3,2009 | 11:36AM
There is an ongoing exhibition on history of Mongolia and Genghis Khan at the Houston Museum of Natural Science
http://www.hmns.org/exhibits/special_exhibits/genghis_khan.asp
Excerpt from introductory page on museum's web-site:
Assume your role in a stunning recreation of the Khan’s empire, from the lush grasslands to his extensive capital in the largest-ever presentation of 13th century treasures. More than 200 spectacular artifacts will be on display, including the first-ever printing press and paper money, to imperial gold, silk robes and sophisticated weaponry of the world's most visionary ruler and his descendants.
Organized by Genghis Khan Exhibits, Inc. in cooperation with the Ministry of Education, Culture and Science, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, The National Museum of Mongolian History, The Institute of Archaeology of the Mongolian Academy of Sciences, The National Library of Mongolia, The Military Museum of Mongolia, The Dornod Province Museum and The State Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg, Russia.
Posted by M.Bolormaa on April 8,2009 | 07:59AM
i love learning abuot this guy! its so intresting
Posted by STRK on April 8,2009 | 11:02AM
Very interesting article. I enjoyed reading about this discovery.
Posted by John McCauley on April 10,2009 | 12:56PM
I think that many people misunderstand Genghis Khan. I do know that Genghis Khan was far more than the vicious dictator most people think he was if they've heard of him at all.
Posted by CarlC on April 10,2009 | 06:26PM
For anyone who may be interested in the life of one of history's most fascinating figures, I have just published a two novel set, Heaven's Favorite, on the life of Chinggis Khan. The book's website can be found at www.heavensfavorite.com Tom Shanley
Posted by Tom Shanley on April 13,2009 | 09:02AM
These objects really don't live up to the hype. These are hardly the treasures of the great Khan and don't even realistically portray the scale or quality of the sorts of objects Genghis Khan gave away to his lower echelon officers as a matter of course after a great victory. I'm glad that you are willing to show these recovered objects, but you do your subject a disservice by representing these found objects as part of of his personal treasure. Please dig more deeply into this subject with more historically accurate and precious specimen. Dr. Kantor Charlotte, NC
Posted by Ronald Kantor on May 13,2009 | 06:19PM
Which Khan had the palace in what is now Ukraine - not far from Yalta? Even a small map in the article would have helped. Maps, in my estimation, are vital in ANY article. M.A.Blatt
Posted by M.A.Blatt on May 17,2009 | 12:13PM
I have read a number of books about the redoubtable Genghis Khan. A series of Historical Fictions by Conn Iggulden are very fasinating and educational. I realy like the way Mr. Khan used his 3 tents, one White, one Red, one Black that he would post outside a Chin City before seige. Word quickly travelled thoughout the Chin Lands that "You don't wanna see the BLACK TENT" I agree with Mr. Shanely, Genghis was an extraordinary man who achieved many Firsts for mankind.
Posted by Canadian Guy on May 18,2009 | 05:22AM