Here is the outline for chapter 11.
Chapter 11: Pastoral Peoples on the Global Stage: The
Mongol Moment, 1200–1500
I. Looking Back and
Around: The Long History of Pastoral Nomads
A. The World of
Pastoral Societies
1. Small populations on large
amounts of land
2. High levels of social and
gender equality
3. Mobile but in contact with
settled agriculturalists
4. Tribal alliances and military
power of horsemen
B. Before the
Mongols: Pastoralists in History
1. Modun of the Xiongnu (r.
210–174 b.c.e.)
2. Bedouin Arabs and the rise of
Islam
3. Turkic nomads versus China, Persia,
and Byzantium
4. Berbers and the Almoravid
Empire
II. Breakout: The
Mongol Empire
A. From Temujin to
Chinggis Khan: The Rise of the Mongol Empire
1. Desperate and poor childhood
2. Generous to friends, ruthless
to enemies
3. Supreme Leader of a Great
Mongol Nation, 1206
4. Started five decades of
expansionist wars, 1209
B. Explaining the
Mongol Moment
1. No plan or blueprint
2. Weak enemies and a strong army
3. Discipline, loyalty, and charisma
… and loot!
4. Incorporation of useful
conquered people
5. Ruthless and terrifying
6. Strong administration and
systematic taxation
7. Favorable conditions for
merchants
8. Religious toleration
III. Encountering
the Mongols: Comparing Three Cases
A. China and the
Mongols
1. 70 years of conquests,
1209–1279
2. Yuan Dynasty and Kublai Khan
(r. 1271–1294)
3. A foreign and exploitative
occupation
4. Collapse of Mongol rule and
rise of the Ming Dynasty
B. Persia and the Mongols
1. Chinggis Kahn
(1219–1221) and Helugu (1251–1258)
2. Damage to
agriculture
3. Persian
civilization of barbarian Mongols
C. Russia and the
Mongols
1. Brutal invasion of a disunited
Kievan Rus (1237–1240)
2. Khanate of the Golden Horde
3. Exploitation without occupation
4. Resistance and collaboration
5. Rise of Moscow and expansion of the church
IV. The Mongol
Empire as a Eurasian Network
A. Toward a World
Economy
1. Not producers or traders but
promoters of commerce
2. Security on the Silk Roads
3. Connected to the larger world
system
B. Diplomacy on a
Eurasian Scale
1. European envoys sent east
2. European discovery of the
outside world
3. Mongol linkage of China and Persia
C. Cultural Exchange
in the Mongol Realm
1. Forced population transfers and
voluntary migrations
2. Technology transfer and the
spread of crops
3. Europe
gained the most
D. The Plague: An
Afro-Eurasian Pandemic
1. The Black Death
2. China,
1331, Europe, 1347, and East Africa, 1409
3. The end of the world?
4. Social changes in Europe
5. Demise of the Mongol Empire
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