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Mongol conquest of Europe;A short glimpse

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Mongol conquest of Europe; A short glimpse:

Background:

During the winter of 1226-27, while en route across Gobi to make war on Tangut,Genghis Khan paused to haunt wild horses. The reddish grey horse shied when the wild horses charged him, throwing the almost seventy years old Khan on ground. Despite internal injuries and raising fevers,Genghis refused to listen to the concerns of his wife Yesui and continued his campaign. Six months later only a few days before the final victory,Genghis Khan died and Ogodei,his third son became the ruler of the vast empire.

Unlike his father, Ogodei was far from being a tough steppe warrior. According to Persian chronicler Ata-Malik Juvaini,Ogodei “was ever spreading the carpet of merrymaking and treading the path of excess in constant appreciation to wine and the company of beautiful women.”

By 1235, Ogodei had consumed most of his father’s wealth. His city was expensive to build and maintain.The Mongols produced no corps, they had no tradesmen, craftsmen to earn revenues. If the Mongol empire had to survive a new target had to be looted.


The Khuriltai:

To decide the target for future conquest ,Ogodei summoned a Khuriltai (an assembly of Mongol chieftains for decision making or electoral process) near his newly built capital of Karakorum. While each chieftains had their own share of ideas, one battle soaked one eyed veteran had a different proposal. The sixty year old, remarkably fat warrior Subodei had been one of the finest generals in Mongol Army. More than a decade earlier,in 1221 he had a taste of war with the Georgians and now he wanted to venture on European soil again.


The preparation:

Preparation for the campaign of Europe started with messengers treading out in all directions to deliver decision and distribute assignments.The Mongols sent in small squads to probe enemy defences,to locate appropriate pasturelands and water resources for their animals. Where the natural grasslands seemed inadequate the Mongols sent small detachments of soldiers to burn villages and farms to revert the land back to grasslands before the main Army arrived.With close to fifty thousand Mongols and another one hundred thousand allies led by the two most ablest grandsons of Genghis Khan, Batu and Mongke the European campaign began.

The invasion on Bulgars:

In 1236,the year of the monkey the invasion began with the conquest of Volga,occupied by the Bulgars. The Mongols followed their usual protocols before each and every invasion they made by sending envoys to request the capital city to surrender,join the Mongol family and become the vassal of the Golden Khan.The Mongols applied their time tested strategy on dividing the army in to two and attacking the enemy in at least two fronts. If any city moved its army to help another city,the Mongols immediately pounced upon the unguarded one,very similar to the strategy applied by the wolves far east in the Siberian steppe. With such uncertainty and danger to its home,no city intended to aid the others.

Subodei led his forces northwards of Volga, while Mongke (son of deceased Tolui) led another force southwards to attack the Kipchak Turks, some of whom fled and the others agreed to join the Mongols to invade the Russian cities. After a quick routing of the Volga Bulgars the Mongols turned this region as their base camp for their three years long parade through Russia and modern Ukraine.


The fall of Riazan:

Riazan was a prosperous Russian city located on Oka river,196 KMs south west of Moscow. Each Mongol warrior seized a number of civilians for digging fortifications, cutting trees and hauling supplies. They burnt villages and made the villagers running towards the walled city with enormous panic. This is also an age old trick of the steppe warfare. While in the contemporary battles fought across the world, the looted,raped civilians followed the invading army towards the main town to be attacked. But the Mongols used to begin their attack with a brilliant psychological and economic warfare by sending the panic stricken villagers towards the main city. The Mongols built another wooden wall around the already walled city of Riazan, sealed off the gates preventing the city defenders from sending troops to attack the Mongols. The wall sealed its own people, starving for reinforcements, foods and water leaving any chance of escaping in case of emergency.

From the safety of their newly built wall,the Mongols looked down upon the city exactly as generations of Mongol hunters looked at their tightly bunched preys from behind the safety of their ropes strung from tress and hung with felt blankets. They bombarded the city with rocks,woods,flaming pots of naptha and gunpowders. The terrible smell and smoke were thought to be part of black magic and source of disease in medieval Europe. Such was the terror spread among the city dweller that later the victims reported that the attackers travelled not only on horses but on trained attack dragons as well.

After five days of relentless bombardment, the Mongols finally emerged from their wall and entered the city by scaling and through the holes of the battered walls. As a contemporary Russian chronicler “No eye remained open to cry for the dead.”

Mathew Paris, a monk of the Benedictine abbey at St.Albans in Hertfordshire, England records that after capturing most of the Russian cities the Mongols turned their eye towards the largest and most important political and religious centre of the Slavic world, Kiev.

Courtsey: Genghis Khan and the Making of modern world by Jack Weatherford

Invasion of Kiev:

In the November’1240, year of the Rat, taking the advantage of frozen rivers, the Mongol envoys arrived at the gates of Kiev shortly before the city authorities murdered them and rouse their dead bodies high above the city gates.

Under the leadership of Mongke,when the Mongol fighters amassed outside the city, it was recorded by the priests as “clouds of Tatars.” The noise of the Mongols were so loud that the people inside the city could not hear one another talk. The civilians sought refuge in the Church of the virgin. The number grew so large that their weight caused the entire building collapse. On 6th December, the Mongol forces entered the city and burnt it to the ground. The Kievian general Dmitri fought so gallantly that Batu Khan released him with great appreciation and let him live with honor.

The Novgorod chronicle began referring Batu Khan as Tsar Batu,a title that literally meant Caesar Batu. With the fall of Kiev,the Mongolian conquest of East Europe was complete and they evicted a series of refugees towards central Europe,so that they can spread the story of horror and frightening tales of Mongol atrocities.

Subodei, while the central European rivers were still frozen in February’1241 wasted no time in sending new scouting squads to reach the plain grasslands of Hungary. Europe had little heard about the earlier conquest of Genghis Khan in Asia and only had little idea of his destruction of Khwarizm empire. But suddenly with the fall of Kiev and with the arrival of large contingent of refugees and their horrified stories, it felt a huge shuddering all of a sudden. Matthew Paris continues his records as “ with the force of lightning into the territories of the Christians, laying waste the country, committing great slaughter,and striking inexpressible terror and alarm into every one.” This reference to” lightning” warfare was possibly the first mention of the style that later acquired the German name Blitzkreig.


Subodei dispatched three pronged army of fifty thousand towards Hungary in the south and a smaller diversionary force of twenty thousand across Poland towards Germany in the North. The Mongols crossed an extra ordinary four thousand miles from their base in Mongolia to the German cities of Teutonic knights and Hanseatic League. In the north the passed through Poland as a stone skips on a pond. One city continued to fell one after another.

Wahlstatt; The Chosen Place;

Duke Henry II of Silesia gathered an army of thirty thousand,including knights through out Germany,Hungary and Poland. He even amassed a pool of gold miners in his troops who will be later happily taken aback to the Mongolian steppe for their skills in mining. On 9th April’1241 the two armies met at Leigntz,near the modern German-Polish border. The Mongols chose an open area for fighting,six miles away from the city. And the battlefield thereafter became known in German as Wahlstatt,the chosen place.

The Duke charged his cavalry to the Mongol ranks,who after repelling the first wave surprisingly started turning away from the battle ground. With cries of battle victory,the European knights broke their ranks and began chasing their enemies who slowly retreated only a short distance beyond the weapon of the knights.

When the templar’s horses began to tire under the heavy armour of their cheery riders, suddenly explosive noises and heavy smoke engulfed them. As described by the chronicler Jan Dlugosz,the Mongols used a device resembling a “great head,from which there suddenly bursts a cloud with foul smell that envelops the Poles and makes them all but faint.”

The smoke cut of the knights from the archers and infantries behind them. The overconfident hunters quickly became disorganized, confused and tiring prey trapped into a brilliant net of deceiving warfare. The European documents records a death toll of twenty five thousand of Duke’s thirty thousand men while the gold miners were taken to display their skills in the rich mineral deposit of Dzungaria in Western Mongolia,a personal property of Ogodei.


The entire campaign from Kiev to Germany had been just a diversionary tactics by the Mongols to prevent the Europeans from sending soldiers to fend off the real Mongol objective: Invading the grassy plains of Hungary.

Next the final phase of Mongolian invasion of Europe,the Hungarian chapter. (coming after a short break)
 
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Hungary: The final phase

Within days, the Mongol tactics to defeat the German Kights were replayed in Hungary with many times more casualties. King Bela and his large army of an estimated 80,000 troops started chasing the Mongols.The veteran Subodei retreated for several days until he arrived at the topography best suited for Mongol warfare,which was the plains of Mohi, at the south west coast of Sajo river. There the Hungarians gathered into densely packed camp which was fortified with a circle of wagons and heavy iron chains. The Mongols pulled up their catapults and began hurling their mysterious assortments of naptha,gun powder and flaming oil.

Unable to tolerate the smoke and the gas ,the Hungarians moved out of their camp only to find out that they were surrounded by their enemies ,except one area which straight away led to their own capital of Pest. It seemed that the Mongols had mistakenly forgot to barricade the area. The Hungarians quickly broke their ranks, started fleeing on foot, horse backs. According to the chronicler Thomas of Spalato, Archdeacon of modern city of Spilt,Croatia writes,” The dead fell to right and to left; like leaves in winter, the slain bodies of these miserable men were strewn along the whole route; blood flowed like ******** of rain.”

It was a deliberate mistake from the Mongols which easily could have been termed as a cruel humour too.

Having their knights failing to defeat the unknown enemies,the Christian clergy tried to subdue them through supernatural devices, not knowing the fact that how much the Mongols detested and feared exposure to remains of the dead.The priests in an attempt to keep Mongols out of Pest,paraded bones and relics of their saints in front of the approaching army for whom these were contaminating,as well as disgusting. The clerics were to be slewed,the relics and churches to be burned. Hungary lost a Bishop, two archbishops and many religious Knight’s Templars. The knighthood were destroyed and the Mongols chased the King south to the Adriatic. European knighthood never recovered from the blow of losing nearly one hundred thousand soldiers in Hungary and Poland. The days of walled cities and heavily armoured Knights were finished and the Mongol triumph with smoke and gun powder, portended the end of European feudalism and middle ages.


The myths about Mongols in medieval Europe:

After a few months of Mongol victories in 1241,alarm turned into panic when an eclipse blotted out the sun on Sunday,6th October. The panic was fed by the ignorance about the identity of the attackers. Middle age Europe interpreted this astronomical sign on the sacred day as more sufferings to come in nearest future. A cleric reported to the Archbishop of Bordeux that the Mongols “were cannibals from hell who eat the dead after a battle and leave only bones,which even vultures are too noble to peck.” Further according to this detailed and purposefully incendiary account,the Mongols enjoyed eating old women,and they celebrated their victories by gang raping Christian virgins until they died of exhaustion.Then “their breast were cut off to be kept as dainties for their chiefs,and their bodies furnished a jovial banquet to the savages.”

The most priceless question echoed all over the Europe was who were these attackers and where did they came from. As Matthew Paris laments “For never till this time has there been any mode of access to them, nor have they themselves come forth,so as to allow any knowledge of their customs or persons to be gained through common intercourse with other men.” He further goes on with his highly unlikely report a large scale atrocity and isolation against the Jews through out Europe for the belief that Mongols might be a missing Semite tribes.


Who stopped them?

With the capture of a mysterious Englishman by the Hapsburg troops, the penetration of Mongols into Europe came to an end.They had followed the grass steppes across central Asia,Russia,Ukraine, Poland and Hungary. But where the pasture ended,the Mongols stopped. With five horses per warrior,they needed that pasture to function. Their marked advantages of speed,mobility,and surprise were all lost when they had to pick their way through forests,rivers and ploughed fields with corps and ditches, hedges, and wooden fences. The soft furrows of the peasant’s fields began also offered an insecure foothold for the horses. The place where field began also marked the transition from the dry steppe to the humid climate of the coastal zones,where the dampness caused the Mongol bows to lose strength and accuracy. In the early months of 1242, the Mongols went back to their stronghold in Russia, without materializing the full scale onslaught of Western Europe. With the start of struggle among the Mongol lineages,the rest of the world would be safe for another decade from Mongol invasion.

Courtesy: Genghis Khan and the making of the modern world by Jack Weatherford

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@AUSTERLITZ

Your valuable inputs are urgently needed here.
 
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The death of ogedei and the terrain of central europe and the alps sarrounded italy led to the withdrawal of the mongols.And follow up intrusions were never again of that scale due to breakup of mongol empire.Nor would they ever have a subutai to lead them.A few raids ,and thats all.

Anyway hope to make a batte report on mohi and liegnitz battles after the current one ,hydaspes and blitzkrieg 1940.
Enjoyed the read.:toast_sign:
 
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The death of ogedei and the terrain of central europe and the alps sarrounded italy led to the withdrawal of the mongols.And follow up intrusions were never again of that scale due to breakup of mongol empire.Nor would they ever have a subutai to lead them.A few raids ,and thats all.

Anyway hope to make a batte report on mohi and liegnitz battles after the current one ,hydaspes and blitzkrieg 1940.
Enjoyed the read.:toast_sign:

Thank you. I will be waiting for your thread on Mohi and Liegnitz. By the way,Hydaspes and Bltzkreig are my favourite too. I remember @Joe Shearer sir once posted a thread on Battle of Hydaspes. That was a great thread to read.

The Battle of the Hydaspes: A Mystery in the Mists of Time
 
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If Russia was united in those days, the Mongols would break teeth on it. But then in Russia was feudal disunity, every prince only defended own city.
Unlikely. There are hundred reasons behind it. Only getting united would not have been much help. The defence of walled city and heavy armored soldiers had faint chances over the Mongols,who were quick, tough,light armored with a new age of tactical and psychological warfare.
 
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Unlikely. There are hundred reasons behind it. Only getting united would not have been much help. The defence of walled city and heavy armored soldiers had faint chances over the Mongols,who were quick, tough,light armored with a new age of tactical and psychological warfare.
In 100-200 years, when Russia began to unite and Mongolia - contrary disintegrate into separate ulus, everything was the opposite. Russian defeated the Mongols.
 
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In 100-200 years, when Russia began to unite and Mongolia - contrary disintegrate into separate ulus, everything was the opposite. Russian defeated the Mongols.

Yes,true. But in thirteenth century with the revolutionary warfare and seize tactics adopted by the Mongol which they learnt from the Chinese and the Islamic world Europe had no chance.

(The book by Jack Weatherford has quite eloquently described the food habits of the Mongols, the strange amalgamation of steppe warfare with the hunting games and it's application at the time war with the Jerched and other kingdoms. It also brilliantly tells where the Europe lagged behind.)
 
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Yes,true. But in thirteenth century with the revolutionary warfare and seize tactics adopted by the Mongol which they learnt from the Chinese and the Islamic world Europe had no chance.
You know, into the Russia often come invaders with the revolutionary tactics, the best weapons in the world, brilliant generals, and the world's largest and very expierenced army. It does not help them. If the Mongols came in 9, 10 or 11 century - Russian defeated them. Not immediately, with losses, but would have won.
 
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You know, into the Russia often come invaders with the revolutionary tactics, the best weapons in the world, brilliant generals, and the world's largest and very expierenced army. It does not help them. If the Mongols came in 9, 10 or 11 century - Russian defeated them. Not immediately, with losses, but would have won.

Ok,mate. I will definitely read about the early history of Russia.Then only I can answer you.
 
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Ok,mate. I will definitely read about the early history of Russia.Then only I can answer you.
In the 12th century there was no state "Russia". There were hundreds of separate independent principalities, that were constantly at war with each other.
 
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3 factors actually worked to mongol advantage in russia-The reason where they succeeded where others had failed.

1]Unlike all the others which came from the west,urban cultures and were bewildered and exhausted in the endless russian steppes,mongols were actually a steppe people and thus neither logistics nor space was a concern for them.
2]There was no centralized large power in russia.A key factor as well.However this is not the sole factor as we see in china and the middle east mongols faced huge centralized empires with enormous resources but simply devoured their armies in battle after battle due to their new method of warfare.
3]The mongol war machine at its time was the deadliest ever to have rode the earth.The organization,tactical skill were totally out of place in the drab middle ages and had a plethora of superb commanders as well.The tactic of retreat would be considered dishonuorable and cowardly in almost any culture during this period,especially medieval europe.Mongols fought to win,not for honour or god.[among the common goals in medieval period]
4]No one knew who they were or where they were coming from -while mongols did very good intelligence gathering before a campaign.Thus they were totally unpredictable and everyone took the mongols retreat tactics as genuine routs.A classic case of-
'Know ur enemy' ala sun tzu.
 
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3 factors actually worked to mongol advantage in russia-The reason where they succeeded where others had failed.

1]Unlike all the others which came from the west,urban cultures and were bewildered and exhausted in the endless russian steppes,mongols were actually a steppe people and thus neither logistics nor space was a concern for them.
Russian has long lived near the steppe, where constantly coming conquerors and robbers - the Khazars, Huns, Cumans, Pechenegs and God knows who else, whose names were forgotten.
So Russia was a huge battle experience with steppe nomads.
Feudal fragmentation - the main factor that led to the defeat of Russia.
 
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