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Unit 1&2: Practice DBQ Mongols 2020 – 5-Doc-DBQ Format Sample Intro & Body Paragraph Intro Paragraph (Context-2 / Context 1 / Thesis) During the time of the “Middle Ages” between 1200 to 1400 there was tremendous of amount of variation in the development of the many different people, societies and civilizations of the world. In some areas like in North America and Australia peoples were isolated and culturally and technologically behind other societies elsewhere, that had wider and richer contacts with their neighbors and other civilizations. In West Africa the empires of Mali and Songhai thrived along the Sand Roads – trading Gold for Salt with traders from North Africa, Spain and the Middle East - who transferred Islamic cultural achievements such Arabic, math / science and medical advances from Andalusia & dar es Islam – which experiencing a cultural golden age. While western Europeans were completing their crusades, dominated culturally by Christianity and politically by feudalism. Beginning in 1204, the nomadic Mongols united under their Great Khan – Ghengis – conquering Song dynasty China and beginning their conquest of East Asia, the Middle East, Russia and Eastern Europe. Over the next 150+ years the Mongols would create the largest land based empire in history. The Mongols concurrently created a massive trade network connecting these conquered realms known as the Pax Mongolica which greatly facilitated technological and cultural transfers both positively and negatively – both within their empire as well as between the Mongol Empire and other civilizations and societies outside of their sphere of control. Body Parag: 1 (OI + Doc support & sourcing) The Mongols facilitated positive cultural exchanges both between societies within their sphere of influence, but also between the Mongol Empire and societies outside of their direct influence. (Theme/Arg). After their conquest of areas such as Persia and Anatolia – during the Pax Mongolica, the Mongol Golden Age between the mid-1200s to mid-1300s, the Mongols facilitated positive cultural exchanges through their use and transfer of educated, adept officials from the Muslim world – which had been experiencing a Golden Age of Math w/ the developments of scholars such as al-Jabir in Algebra and al-Razis in medical knowledge – such as surgery, pharmaceuticals and the diagnosis of diseases such as Small Pox. The transfer and use of these officials throughout the Mongol Empire resulted in the positive diffusion of not only the Arabic language, but Muslim knowledge, inventions and culture eastward. The Mongols’ tolerance of religions of the conquered also helped to ensure & facilitate these cultural transfers. (OI). These positive cultural transfers by the Mongols are evidenced by Docs 1-3. In Doc 1, Hulegu Khan – an educated Muslim Vizier – official – is shown working for the Khan of the Ilkhanate as an advisor. In this illustration from the 1300s the time of the Pax Mongolica – the purpose of this primary document was to show conquered peoples that their knowledge, skills and education were valued by the Mongols and that there was a place for such people within the Mongol system. (Purp/Sourcing)/(Doc1). The positive transfer of western culture within the Mongol Empire is also evidenced by Doc 2 – in the writings of Marco Polo a 13th C. Italian merchant and traveler who lived the Mongol capital of China and worked as an advisor. The Purpose of Polo’s text is to show the extent & complexity of the Mongols’ relay communication system called the “Yam”, which not only transferred Mongol communications but cultural knowledge. (Doc.2 / Purp). The Mongols’ positive facilitation of cultural diffusion is also evidenced by Doc 3 – the Journal of a westerner from 1254 – William Rubriuk – a primary source document that describes Mongke Khan’s curiosity about and tolerance of foreign religions including “…Christians, Saracens… and Tuins…”. (POV). This doc furthers the argument that the Mongols facilitated positive cultural transfer, when Rubruck quotes the Khan as referencing the cultural and literary contributions of these foreign religious leaders, stating “…his law is the best and his literature, that is his books…”, suggesting that they, as well as the Khan, had access to these cultural achievements and that they had been moved from their places of origin, to China during the Yuan Dynasty by 1259 the time of the Khan’s death (Doc 3). Body Parag: 2 (Theme/Arg/claim & OI) • The Mongols facilitated positive technolical exchanges both between societies within their sphere of influence, but also between the Mongol Empire and societies outside of their direct influence. (Theme/Arg). After their conquest of areas such as Persia and Anatolia – during the Pax Mongolica, the Mongol Golden Age between the mid1200s to mid-1300s, the Mongols facilitated positive Technological transfers through their use of their extensive trade network – like the Silk Roads and their efficient communication network called the Yam. Some examples of these exchanges from east to the west were Chinese printing techniques such as moveable type – which would eventually help spur Johann Gutenberg’s invention of the Printing Press in the mid-1400s. The Chinese invention of gun powder which the Ottomans and Europeans would further develop as instrument of war, conquest & control in the subsequent centuries. The Mongols also transferred warfare technology – such as the stirrup, recurve bow and varioius technologies used in siege warfare. Finally, the negative transfer of new diseases such as the Bubonic Plague which would ravage the Middle East, North Africa and Europe from the 1300s-the 1400s. Some of these technological transfer are evidenced by Docs… Paragraph 4: Conclusion / Complexity To summarize, the Mongols greatly facilitated the transfer of both culture and technology – both positively, negatively -- throughout their empire impacting peoples both within their sphere of control as well as outside of it. Some of these impacts and transfers to would outlast the Mongol Empire itself – including gun powder, the stirrup and the Black Death. The Mongol’s facilitation of cultural and technological transfer via trade routes is similar to that seen during the Roman empire during the first 2 centuries of the Common Era. Like the Mongols the Romans utilized and moved promising skilled people (like Trajian) throughout their empire. Like the Mongols, the Romans also facilitated the transfer of technologies such concrete, dome and aqueduct construction and cultural transfers – sometimes by force – like Judaism – throughout their empire and beyond – and also like the Mongols these transfer had both positive and negative impacts. {complexity}