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17th Century Central & Northern Asia: Decline of Nomadic Hordes & Rise of New Powers, Study notes of History

An overview of central and northern asia during the 17th century, a time when the energy of the nomadic hordes began to decline and new powers emerged. The regions beyond the arctic circle, where the evenks and yakuts lived, as well as siberia, mongolia, and tibet. It discusses the impact of russian expansion, chinese military colonies, and the spread of lamaistic buddhism. Toynbee's perspective on the religious triumph is also mentioned.

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2011/2012

Uploaded on 10/13/2012

arold
arold 🇺🇸

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Download 17th Century Central & Northern Asia: Decline of Nomadic Hordes & Rise of New Powers and more Study notes History in PDF only on Docsity! Connexions module: m17829 1 Central and Northern Asia: A.D. 1601 to 1700 ∗ Jack E. Maxeld This work is produced by The Connexions Project and licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License † 1 CENTRAL ASIA Back to Central and Northern Asia: A.D. 1501 to 16001 This great source of the dynamic, nomad hordes, which had periodically ooded both the East and the West, began to decline in energy. In the far north beyond the Arctic Circle the Evenk reindeer herders lived, particularly in the region at the mouth of the Yenissei. They rode their animals, sitting far forward on their- shoulders, not on their weak backs. As early as 1614 they paid heavy taxes of furs to the czars. Farther east, but still within the Arctic Circle, lived the Yakuts, relative newcomers to the region, apparently having migrated from a southern steppe. They lived in log houses and used iron, which disseminated from them to the Evenks, although the two people often clashed. (Ref. 2882) South of these people in Siberia, fur was the thing tempting Russians deeper and deeper into the area and they reached the Pacic coast in 1649. Only the western portion of Mongolia (now called "Outer Mongolia") remained independent, while the southern and eastern part was eventually taken over by China. While the Manchu Ch'ing dynasty was busy suppressing southern rebels, eastern Mongols known as Tatars and Khalkas stormed northern China in 1675. Although at rst thrown back by the Manchu emperor, next a western Mongol chief, Galdan, invaded Mongolia from Central Asia. The emperor's forces launched three campaigns against him, forcing Galdan to commit suicide in 1697, and allowing Chinese military colonies at Central Asian oases of Hami and Turfan. (Ref. 1013) The Mongols and adjacent Calmuchs were converted to the Lamaistic form of Mahayan Buddhism. Toynbee (Ref. 1924) says that this represents an astonishing triumph of a fossilized relic of religious life of the long extinct primary Indic civilization, although the connection here escapes me. The old Uzbek areas northeast of the Caspian were now called the land of the Kalmuks and Kazakhs. In the old area of Khwarizm, Transoxiana, Ferghana and Chinese Turkistan there were now independent Turkish, military khanates. (Ref. 85) In Tibet, the Potala - home, oce, castle and fortress of the Dalai Lama  stands atop a mountain, rising 700 feet above the town of Lhasa. Although this was started under construction in the 7th century, most ∗Version 1.2: Oct 14, 2008 10:16 pm GMT-5 †http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ 1"Central and Northern Asia: A.D. 1501 to 1600" <http://cnx.org/content/m17824/latest/> 2"A Comprehensive Outline of World History: Bibliography", reference [288] <http://cnx.org/content/m17805/latest/#twoeighteight> 3"A Comprehensive Outline of World History: Bibliography", reference [101] <http://cnx.org/content/m17805/latest/#onezeroone> 4"A Comprehensive Outline of World History: Bibliography", reference [192] <http://cnx.org/content/m17805/latest/#oneninetwo> 5"A Comprehensive Outline of World History: Bibliography", reference [8] <http://cnx.org/content/m17805/latest/#eight> http://cnx.org/content/m17829/1.2/
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