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Temüjin

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Temüjin
NameTemüjin
Birth datec. 1162
Death dateAugust 1227
Place of birthNear Mount Burkhan Khaldun, Khamag Mongol
Place deathXingqing, Western Xia
AllegianceMongol Empire
BattlesConquest of the Jin dynasty • Conquest of the Qara Khitai • Conquest of the Khwarazmian Empire • Invasion of the Caucasus • Invasion of the Khwarazmian Empire • Battle of the Indus

Temüjin. He was the founder and first Khagan of the Mongol Empire, which became the largest contiguous land empire in history. Through ruthless political strategy and revolutionary military organization, he unified the nomadic tribes of the Mongolian Plateau and launched campaigns that reshaped Eurasia. His legacy, cemented under the title Genghis Khan, established a vast imperial administration that connected East Asia and Europe through the Pax Mongolica.

Early life and rise to power

Temüjin was born around 1162 near the Onon River and the sacred Mount Burkhan Khaldun, into the Borjigin clan. His father, Yesügei, was a minor chieftain of the Khamag Mongol confederation, who was poisoned by the rival Tatars when Temüjin was young, leaving his family in destitution. During this period of hardship, he killed his half-brother Bekhter in a dispute over resources, an early display of his decisive and ruthless nature. He later forged a crucial alliance by marrying Börte of the Onggirat tribe, but she was soon kidnapped by the Merkit tribe, leading to a daring rescue with the help of his blood brother Jamukha and his early patron, Toghrul of the Keraites.

Unification of the Mongol tribes

Leveraging his relationship with Toghrul and his partnership with Jamukha, Temüjin began consolidating power, attracting followers through a meritocratic system that rewarded loyalty over aristocratic birth. This policy brought him into conflict with the traditional tribal aristocracy and eventually with Jamukha himself, culminating in a decisive victory at the Battle of Dalan Baljut. He systematically subdued major rival confederations, defeating the Tatars with Jin dynasty support, and later turning on his former ally Toghrul, conquering the Keraites after the Battle of Qalaqaljid Sands. The final major internal threat, the powerful Naiman tribe under Tayang Khan, was crushed at the Battle of Chakirmaut, clearing the path for his supremacy.

Establishment of the Mongol Empire

In 1206, a kurultai (grand assembly) held at the source of the Onon River proclaimed Temüjin as Genghis Khan, the universal ruler. This event formally established the Mongol Empire and its supreme law, the Yassa. He reorganized the entire society into a decimal-based military system, breaking old tribal loyalties by forming new units like the Kheshig imperial guard. He appointed his most loyal generals, such as Jebe and Subutai, to key commands, and launched the Mongol conquest of Western Xia to secure his southern flank, forcing Emperor Xiangzong to submit.

Military campaigns and conquests

Genghis Khan's external conquests were vast and brutal. He turned on the Jin dynasty, capturing its capital, Zhongdu (modern Beijing), after victories at the Battle of Yehuling and the Battle of Zhongdu. His generals pursued the fleeing Kuchlug of the Naiman into the Qara Khitai kingdom, annexing it. The Mongol conquest of the Khwarazmian Empire was triggered by the Otrar incident, leading to the utter destruction of cities like Bukhara, Samarkand, and Urgench. Campaigns extended into the Caucasus and the Kievan Rus', where Mongol forces defeated a coalition at the Battle of the Kalka River.

Governance and administration

Despite his reputation for destruction, Genghis Khan established a sophisticated imperial administration. He promoted trade and communication by protecting the Silk Road under the Pax Mongolica and developed the Yam courier network. He employed administrators from conquered territories, such as the Khitan scholar Yelü Chucai and the Uyghur scribe Tatatunga, to manage taxation and record-keeping. The Yassa legal code standardized laws on commerce, criminal punishment, and military discipline across diverse cultures, while his policy of religious tolerance helped stabilize the conquered regions.

Legacy and death

Genghis Khan died in August 1227 during the final campaign against the Western Xia, with the exact cause remaining a subject of debate among historians. His body was returned to Mongolia for a secret burial, likely in the region of the Khentii Mountains. The empire was divided among his four principal sons—Jochi, Chagatai, Ögedei, and Tolui—with Ögedei Khan succeeding him as Khagan. His descendants, including Kublai Khan who founded the Yuan dynasty in China, expanded the empire further, influencing regions from Hungary to Korea. Today, he is a central figure in Mongolia's national identity and a globally recognized symbol of conquest and statecraft.

Category:Mongol Empire Category:Founders of empires Category:12th-century births Category:1227 deaths