In recent years the image of the Mongols has undergone a steady change. This
shift reflects a growing interest in the development of the Chinggisid
Empire and its assimilation of the peoples and cultures that it absorbed and
conversely the absorption, not always voluntarily, of things Mongol by the
sedentary cultures which acted as the Mongols’ hosts. It was not only
military technology, cuisine, medicine, art, and the practicalities and
instruments for enhancing the quality of life and commerce which were
exchanged but the intellectual ideas and ideals which underpinned the life
styles of those who were encountered. Chinggis Khan famously aspired to
provide his wives and children with the fineries of life and the best the
world had to offer. But it was not just the material world that he aspired
to but also the intellectual luxuries of scholarship and learning.
Throughout the Chinggisid Chronicles there are references to wise men and
learned advisors who were consulted on the great decisions but also not
infrequently there are references to debates often described in language
more reminiscent of jousting tournaments or duels than intellectual
exchange. These learned debates, usually between clerics of rival faiths,
were staged by various princes in courts throughout the empire for sport and
entertainment. Their popularity highlights aspects of the
regimes’character.
This paper will consider the nature of these debates and the traditions from
where they might have emerged and at the same time it will consider the role
of ‘wise men’ in Chinggisid society.