this post was submitted on 25 Apr 2025
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The Yuan Dynasty was established by the Mongols and ruled China from 1271 to 1368 CE. Their first emperor was Kublai Khan (r. 1260-1279 CE) who finally defeated the Song Dynasty which had reigned in China since 960 CE. Stability and peace within China brought a certain economic prosperity for some as Kublai and his successors promoted international trade which saw the now-unified country open up to the wider world. While there was peace in the western part of the Mongol Empire, Kublai launched two unsuccessful invasions of Japan and several others elsewhere in South East Asia. The Mongols' reign in China was finally ended due to a lethal cocktail of endless infighting amongst their leaders, inept and corrupt government which overspent and overtaxed, floods and famines. Peasant uprisings rumbled throughout the 14th century CE until one, led by the Red Turban Movement, toppled the Yuan and brought in a new regime, the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644 CE).

Kublai Khan & the Song

In 1268 CE Kublai Khan focussed on finally knocking out the Song Dynasty and establishing himself, as all nomadic leaders before him had dreamed of, as the emperor of China. The Mongols had already made several major attacks on Song territory, notably during the reigns of Genghis Khan (r. 1206-1227 CE) in 1212-1215 CE and of Mongke Khan (r. 1251-1259 CE) in 1257-1260 CE. Equipped with an army of over 1,000,000 men, a large naval fleet, and immense wealth, Song China would prove a stubborn opponent to the otherwise invincible Mongol military machine. The success of Mongol warfare across Asia had been based on fast cavalry, but the Song countered this by deliberately adopting a strategy of more static warfare and building great fortifications at key cities and river crossings. For this reason, it would take eleven long years for Kublai to pick off his targets one by one and finally batter the Song into submission.

The Mongols were helped by many Song generals defecting or surrendering their armies, and the fact the imperial court was beset by infighting between the child emperor's advisors. Ultimately, the empress dowager and her young son Emperor Gongzong (r. 1274-5 CE) surrendered along with their capital Lin'an on 28 March 1276 CE. The Song royals were taken prisoner to Kublai's new capital at Beijing (Daidu). Groups of loyalists fought on for three more years, installing two more young emperors in the process (Duanzong and Dibing), but the Mongols swept all before them. Finally, on 19 March 1279 CE a great naval battle was won at Yaishan near modern-day Macao; the Mongol conquest of China was complete. It was the first time that country had been unified since the 9th century CE, not that this was much consolation to the countless dead, robbed and displaced across China.

Establishing Government

Making himself emperor of China, Kublai gave himself the reign name Shizu and, in 1271 CE, his new dynasty the name 'Yuan', meaning either 'origin' or 'centre, main pivot.' The start date of the Yuan Dynasty is variously put at 1260 CE (Mongke's campaign), 1271 CE (first official use of the 'Yuan' dynasty title), 1276 CE (death of the last Song emperor and fall of the Song capital) or 1279 CE (final extinguishing of Song resistance).

Beginning with Kublai, Mongol rulers made some superficial attempts to appeal to their new Chinese subjects by adopting such traditions as emperor's robes, travelling in a sedan chair and surrounding themselves with Confucian advisors. The real power, though, remained in Mongol hands as key administrative positions in the newly created 12 semi-autonomous provinces that China and northern Korea (annexed in 1270 CE) was now divided into largely went to Mongols, especially to members of the very large Mongol imperial bodyguard. The traditional six Chinese ministries, in place since the Tang Dynasty (618-907 CE), continued as before, but there were Mongol institutions, too, like the Shumi Yuan or Ministry of War.

Kublai abolished the civil service examinations which would have favoured Chinese officials with their Confucian education (they were reinstated in 1313 CE but Mongols still received advantages). Although many Chinese officials continued to work as before, they were subject to random and secret inspections by Mongol-trusted censors. The Mongol regional official known as the jarquchi was appointed to Chinese territories, and these and representatives of the various Mongol clans made up a local government for each province. The Mongol police force, the tutqaul, was given the task of ensuring roads were kept free from bandits, and western Asians, particularly Muslims, were often given roles in the financial side of government such as finance ministers and tax inspectors.

A New Social Order

Kublai ensured that Mongols always gained an advantage in China by officially classing them as superior in rank to Chinese. The four official Yuan ranks, based on perceived loyalty to the Yuan rulers, were:

  • Mongols
  • Semu - people from Central Asia and/or speakers of Turkic languages
  • Hanren - northern Chinese, Tibetans, Khitans, Jurchen and others
  • Nanren - southern Chinese formally ruled by the Song.

Being a member of one of the above four classes had repercussions for an individual's tax status, their treatment by the judicial system and their eligibility for positions in the state administration (there was a 25% capped quota for southern Chinese, for example). Differences in treatment included northern Chinese being taxed by household while southern Chinese had to pay according to the area of land they owned. Punishments were a particularly striking area of difference with, for example, a Mongol found guilty of murder only having to pay a fine while a southern Chinese convicted of mere theft was fined and then tattooed as a criminal. The new law code introduced in 1270 CE, however, had only 135 capital crimes, half of those in the code used by the Song.

There were other measures of segregation, too, such as forbidding Chinese to take Mongol names, wear Mongol clothes or learn the Mongol language. Intermarriage was discouraged. Rather than being a solely racially-motivated policy, though, Kublai and his successors were most concerned with controlling their subjects, making it easier to identify who was who and ensuring there were no rebellions; Chinese were forbidden to carry weapons and congregate in public, for example.

At least traditional religions were permitted to continue as long as they did not threaten the state, although Buddhism was generally favoured over the traditional Chinese Confucianism. The Mongols' own preference for shamanism showed no signs of change, although Kublai himself converted to Tibetan (Lamaist) Buddhism.

Foreign Policy & Trade

Kublai Khan was particularly interested in re-establishing the Chinese tribute system which had been neglected during the latter part of the Song's reign. The system had states pay symbolic and material tribute to China's dominant position as the centre of the known world, the 'Middle Kingdom.' Not only was it a means to further legitimise his position as Chinese emperor but it could also bring in useful material goods and help expand international trade. There was also the matter that Mongol rulers legitimised their position through conquest and the distribution of booty to their followers to ensure loyalty and continued service. Kublai, then, embarked on a series of campaigns to bring China's neighbours back to their former position of subservience to the emperor.

In other parts of Asia, to the west, there was relative peace, the so-called Pax Mongolica, although there was a major rebellion in Tibet in the early 1290s CE, and the other descendants of Genghis Khan, especially the Ogedeids, continued to nibble at China's western borders. Nevertheless, the Mongols as a group, by forging an empire from the Black Sea to the Korean peninsula (even if it was now split into large khanates ruled by Genghis Khan's descendants) had managed to expose China to a wider world.

Of more concrete benefit to the Mongols and Chinese than world fame, the Yuan did promote international trade, too. Artisans and craftworkers were given a more elevated status than previously and given tax exemptions. Merchants, not being producers but 'exchangers,' had been discriminated against under the Song, and these, too, now benefitted from more favourable tax measures, low-cost loans and the end of sumptuary regulations.

The effect of these policies was to create a boom in crafts and trade, especially of silk and fine porcelain, the latter product now being supervised by a specific government agency, paving the way for the later Ming potters to gain worldwide fame of their own. Trade also brought a greater exchange of ideas and technologies such as Persian expertise in astronomical observations, maps, luxury textile weaving, and irrigation coming to China, and gunpowder weapons, printing, the mariner's compass, and paper money to the west. Islam also spread further to the east as merchants crisscrossed Asia.

Collapse & Ming Dynasty

By the mid-14th century CE, the Yuan rulers had been beset by a devastating combination of unusually cold winters, famines, plagues, and flooding of the Yellow River which all combined to bring hyper-inflation when the government tried to solve the problems of a damaged infrastructure by printing too much paper money. There followed widespread banditry and uprisings by an overtaxed peasantry. Worse, some of the local elites and provincial administrators in southern China were colluding with the bandits, smugglers and even religious leaders to take over entire towns. Yuan China was disintegrating from within.

The Yuan rulers had not helped themselves by squabbling over power, creating an overblown bureaucracy, and wasting revenue and land resources on a few favoured princes and generals. Most importantly of all, they failed to quash numerous rebellions, including that perpetrated by a group known as the Red Turban Movement, an offshoot of the Buddhist White Lotus Movement, led by a peasant called Zhu Yuanzhang (1328-1398 CE). Zhu replaced the Red Turban's traditional policy aim of reinstating the old Song Dynasty with his own personal ambitions to rule and gained wider support by ditching the anti-Confucian policies which had alienated the Chinese educated classes. Alone amongst the many rebel leaders of the period, Zhu understood that to establish a stable government he needed administrators not just warriors out for loot.

Zhu Yuanzhang's first major coup had been the capture of Nanjing in 1356 CE. Zhu's successes continued, and he defeated his two main rival rebel leaders and their armies, first Chen Youliang at the battle of Poyang Lake (1363 CE) and then Zhang Shicheng in 1367 CE. Zhu was left the most powerful leader in China, and, after taking Beijing, the last Yuan emperor of a unified China, Toghon Temur (r. 1333-1368 CE), fled to Mongolia and the old, now largely abandoned capital Karakorum. The Yuan would, thus, continue to rule in Mongolia under the new name of the Northern Yuan Dynasty (1368-1635 CE). Meanwhile, Zhu declared himself the ruler of China in January 1368 CE. Zhu would take the reign name of Hongwu Emperor (meaning 'abundantly marital') and the dynasty he founded Ming (meaning 'bright' or 'light').

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[–] GalaxyBrain@hexbear.net 10 points 1 day ago (3 children)

I found out office space originally had a different ending where the same guy who played the main character's manager in the office plays his foreman at the worksite and delivers similar bullshit lines in the same way. That is such a better ending.

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[–] whatnots@hexbear.net 16 points 1 day ago (2 children)

just saw the biggest rabbit i have ever seen outside my window niko-wonderous

[–] whatnots@hexbear.net 9 points 1 day ago

i wish i could post the pictures i got of them but it would doxx me for sure so you'll have to take my word that they were really cute and fluffy kitty-cri

[–] StillNoLeftLeft@hexbear.net 14 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Ffs, went to see what is up in the local (nato) leftist party website and these people are literally recommending Anne Applebaum books to "fellow leftists".

This is so pathetic from a place where Stalin and Lenin met for the first time. Where the streets ran red from the blood of communists that were slaughtered by the white terror and gave us all that we now have.

To think that these "leftists" have just comfortably chosen to ignore all this and just go slava ukraine all day long is doing my head in.

[–] oscardejarjayes@hexbear.net 6 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I only just got around to watching the Yugopnik AMA, but he answered my questions!

[–] ratboy@hexbear.net 4 points 1 day ago (4 children)
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[–] jjsandwich7@hexbear.net 5 points 1 day ago (5 children)

Anyone got advice on how to stick with reading a book? I always get like 30 to 60 pages into a book then I just stop reading. Like I like the concept of reading a book but my tiny brain just trails off and I’ll end up doing nothing all day

[–] Le_Wokisme@hexbear.net 2 points 1 day ago

audio book + something to do with your hands that you can mostly autopilot like driving in a videogame or the bethesda loop

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[–] sewer_rat_420@hexbear.net 18 points 2 days ago (3 children)

I didn't know about leftypol before this yugopnik AMA and I had no idea such a place existed. Its like the same attitude of 4chan posters but nominally leftist? But one of the main threads was dedicated to idubbbz being a cuck, so definitely had the 4chan energy. Hopefully some people have a good experience there but seemed like a sort of cesspit. Although, hexbear is also a cesspit so I guess I shouldn't judge

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[–] SpiderFarmer@hexbear.net 7 points 1 day ago (2 children)

My upstairs neighbor back on their kick of blasting the tv for hours on end so it just vibrates through the ceiling. At a certain point I lose sympathy, given how the place is small and limits the spots I can sit in a certain amount of peace.

[–] FidelChadstro@hexbear.net 6 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Shared walls fucking suck so bad

[–] peppersky@hexbear.net 5 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)
  • Americans explaining why they use four times as many natural resources as the rest of the world
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[–] SpiderFarmer@hexbear.net 6 points 1 day ago (1 children)

My complaining aside, I caught AEW on the screens at a local bar. I am madly bisexual for everyone on that show.

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[–] tocopherol@hexbear.net 23 points 2 days ago

I'm a communist because I'm an optimist at heart. Fascists think people are savages that need control, or that the world is falling into some destined dark ages and the human spirit needs to be violently repressed to stop it. Commies see the goodness in people, that we can work together, that we can build a better world beyond pure domination and subjection.

I was raised to love all and respect all life. Communism is the only political tendency today that aligns with this value. Average westerners don't think we can do better than capitalism, neoliberalism or welfare states, but to be communist is to have the knowledge that we can do so much better.

This isn't a new idea to anyone here, I just have a strong urge to soapbox right now to some imaginary impressionable people, thank you for coming to my ted talk. wall-talk

[–] hexaflexagonbear@hexbear.net 9 points 1 day ago (1 children)
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[–] Goblinmancer@hexbear.net 13 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Gamers deserve 9000000000 starfield slop

[–] Carl@hexbear.net 10 points 2 days ago

a definitive answer to the question "why does bethesda suck now"

because they get paid either way

[–] ratboy@hexbear.net 6 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

My person and I spent 7 hours working in our yard today. In pain but very proud to have totally transformed it! We let shit get super super overgrown last year so most of the lawn was 1-3ft tall and there was so much blackberry that we had to dig out. So we weed whacked the tall grass, raked, mowed. Weed whack, rake, mow. Again and again and AGAIN. We got rid of nearly all of the blackberry from the root too which is so satisfying!!! I rented a tree popper to get most of the roots and it made me feel invincible, highly recommend if you need to get rid of blackberries in your yard. Moist-ish soil is best

Aaaaaa I hope I actually go out to touch grass and enjoy the yard this summer after all of this. Running through sprinklers and Modelo time will be lit pineapple-cool

[–] ratboy@hexbear.net 12 points 1 day ago (5 children)

I feel like there have been more struggle sessions in the past 3 months than the year and a half(ish) before it ohnoes bums me out

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Poilievre fumbling this election is so funny. They need to make him commit seppuku in parliament.

[–] Sasuke@hexbear.net 18 points 2 days ago (4 children)

my most detestable coworker (he's a misogynistic know-all) confidently explained to me that if the U.S. wanted, they could just ramp up production and pay of all their national debt in a matter of weeks

[–] tocopherol@hexbear.net 10 points 2 days ago

With centralized planning maybe, does he think all these manufacturers that have gone overseas will just say to themselves 'yes, I will destroy all my profitability for the good of America!!"

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[–] Moonworm@hexbear.net 6 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

is this the underlying march of the universe?

I often think of the world as the falling away of all things as they desperately try to come home back to the place from which they came the unhumming unity of the pre-particle.

I cannot pretend to know the telos only to feel it dimly or imagine it.

In my darkest moments I ache with a tremendous dread that I imagine is felt by all things with the capacity to dread of an end.

That the falling away of all things is not written in the stars but written into them totally like a fatal sickness of the world.

There is little solace to retreat to, but there is a little.

I speak not of the salve of kindness and exterior feeling of loving all the world that continues around you as it can.

Each of its creatures and rocks all the things small and immense that awe into the sublime.

No, though a birdsong is certainly helpful and though the lapping of the waves at my feet is like mother's milk kissing my hungry soul,

There is a simple kind of knowledge, like the last redoubt of a platonic form, that

all that is is now and all that has been was and all that will be will.

Even as every grain of the world I know is ground to the void, It will be ground according to each moment where it was and will ever still be in its moment before the falling away.

Let us look at the chrsyalis. It is delicate and dangerous. It erases from view at first, and then devours the worm, erases the folds and boundaries of what spun it.

Each and every boundry dissolved until naught remains but some transformation writ into the thing that is no longer.

Does the fly remember the worm? It does not matter for the wing remembers the belly's memory of the leaf which remembers the sun which remembers how it fought desperately like its mothers did fight not to fall away forever from the all that once was and always will have been: memory written into every grain of the world.

A butterfly is a brief thing. A moth's folly is flame. and without either the flower would not seed

Without the seed there would not be fruit without which would not be the bird who eats the worm but without whom would not spread the plant

which feeds the worm which becomes the fly and which fucks the flower and each will be ground to dust.

A dust rich in history and future until it too is nothing

But it will be a nothing that came to be from every moment of its past.

Let us consider the Chrysalis in terms of its nothing.

[–] HarryLime@hexbear.net 9 points 1 day ago (1 children)

"This is an INJUSTICE! Shadeur Sanders was born into incredible wealth and could have lived in the lap of luxury, but he's chosen to follow in his father's footsteps and take on the humble responsibility of being an NFL quarterback, so he deserves to be drafted in the first round!"

This sounds like a joke take, but no, many people mean it completely seriously.

[–] Rojo27@hexbear.net 6 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Have to say, this whole saga has provoked some of the weirdest takes. Honestly not so unlike the whole drama around Bronny. Has the internet broken people's understanding/memory of multigenerational pro athletes?

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[–] LanyrdSkynrd@hexbear.net 7 points 1 day ago

One time a twink working at Burger King told me I looked like Heath Ledger. I'm guessing he was hitting on me, but maybe he just needed glasses.

[–] Carl@hexbear.net 9 points 2 days ago

I had a dream last night that corporate xitter found out about the dragons fucking cars meme, and were posting a bunch of images of their cars having sex with dragons.

[–] MidnightPocket@hexbear.net 8 points 2 days ago

Does anyone have a link to that crazy map of China's trade ascendancy over the last 20 years? Friend wants to scrutinize it.

[–] wombat@hexbear.net 7 points 1 day ago

it is april 26 and stalin saved the world from fascism

[–] Redcuban1959@hexbear.net 7 points 2 days ago

While working with Ian Watson on the story for A.I. Artificial Intelligence, Kubrick asked Watson for a pre-print copy of his Warhammer 40,000 tie-in novel Inquisitor. Watson quotes Kubrick as saying, "Who knows, Ian? Maybe this is my next movie?"

[–] neroiscariot@hexbear.net 14 points 2 days ago (2 children)

Going to see Godspeed you! Black emperor for the first time tonight after discovering them... 25 years ago.... Jesus.

Safe to say I'm pretty pumped

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[–] WhyEssEff@hexbear.net 8 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (3 children)

japanese language understanders in chatβ€”for purposes of calibration of my artistic license in the sketching out a potential fanficβ€”how fucked is it to derive γƒγƒˆγƒ© from 戦人, on a scale of "unusual grab bag of regular interpretations" to "arcane nonsense"

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