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5 - How the East Made the World: Eurasia and Beyond

Chinggisid Influences on a Globalising World (Sixteenth Century)

from Part I - Cihannüma

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2022

Ayşe Zarakol
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

This chapter traces Chinggisid influences throughout the globalising world order of the sixteenth century. It shows that the European timeline – so foundational to IR – cannot be thought of as free from influences from Asia. As this chapter clearly demonstrates, Charles V and the Habsburgs were very much shaped by their competition with the Ottomans. The chapter then moves to the north and discusses the influences of Chinggisid sovereignty model on Muscovy, specifically on Ivan IV. It also catches up with sixteenth-century developments in Inner Asia and Ming China. The sixteenth-century order, with its centre of gravity in the post-Timurid empires of west Asia, fragmented in the seventeenth century, during the long period of 'general crisis' (often associated with climate change) which frayed both the material and ideational connections across Eurasia. Though some Asian polities were relatively unaffected by this period of crisis and others bounced back economically, no world ordering projects were successfully launched out of the East after this period. This was a major contributor to the perception of Eastern decline.

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Chapter
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Before the West
The Rise and Fall of Eastern World Orders
, pp. 173 - 214
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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