Marco Polo | Bill & Ted''s Excellent Adventure | Napoleon | Korea
In Search Of Khan
by
Charles Runnette
In Search of
Khan
He's been dead for almost 800
years, but the mystery surrounding the elusive tomb - and treasures
- of Genghis Khan is as current as ever.
. Illustrations by Kako.
For those who know him only as a character in
Bill
& Ted's Excellent Adventure, the real Genghis Khan
(known to the Mongols as Chinggis Khan) is the Asian-history
equivalent of Napoleon or Alexander the Great.
The thirteenth and fourteenth centuries were all about Genghis and
his descendants, the Great Khans. At its height, the Mongol empire
stretched from modern-day
Korea to
Poland and from
Iraq to Vietnam.
By the end of the 1200s, Genghis's sons and grandsons - including
Marco Polo's pal Kubilai - had amassed the largest contiguous land
empire in world history. It was more than twice the size of the
Roman Empire and more than four times the size of Alexander the
Great's.
So, considering that Genghis Khan has been dead for almost 800
years and that his empire is long gone, why does anyone care about
him anymore? The obvious answer of "historical significance" aside,
most of the fascination surrounding him has to do with his secret
burial site (after all, who doesn't love a mystery?) and one juicy
word:
treasure.
During their reign, the Khans pillaged the wealthiest cities of
their era, including a string of shimmering gilded citadels along
the legendary Silk Road: Samarkand, Bukhara, and Tashkent. And
while much of the plunder was undoubtedly used to maintain the vast
empire and to pay off debts, scholars know that some of the
priceless objects Genghis was accused of looting in his lifetime of
conquest did indeed make it back to
Mongolia. Even though much was
given away, it is believed that he may very well have collected a
stunning treasure, one unrivaled in history - and taken some of it
with him to the grave.
Related Topics:
Print this Article |