Kublai Khan: The Barbarian
The Chinese emperor who inspired Coleridge and Columbus was not Chinese. Carrie Gracie finds a pattern in the way China digests foreigners and their ideas.
China has a love-hate relationship with what is foreign. Traditionally all people beyond the Great Wall were barbarians - only part human.
But invaders have sometimes been welcomed, in time, into the Chinese family. One was Kublai Khan.
In the 13th Century, no-one knew how big the world was so it was not so wild for the Mongols to set off from the grassland with the idea that they were going to conquer all of it.
When the mighty Genghis Khan died in 1227, he had already claimed an empire stretching from the Pacific to Europe. His grandson Kublai set out to finish the job - and started by moving south to attack China's Song dynasty.
But China had been a united empire on and off for more than 1,000 years. So what did the Song dynasty rulers make of Kublai's ambition?
Presenter: Carrie Gracie
Producer: Neal Razzell.
Last on
More episodes
Read more from China: As History is My Witness presenter Carrie Gracie.
Sima Qian: China's Great Historian
Death or castration: China's greatest historian Sima Qian faces a tough choice.
Du Fu & Li Bai: The Poets
Exploring why China's children still quote two drunkard poets from the 8th Century.
Hong Xiuquan: The Rebel
The empire builder who thought he was the younger brother of Jesus Christ.
Broadcast
- Tue 9 Oct 2012 13:45成人快手 Radio 4
Podcast
-
China: As History Is My Witness
Carrie Gracie presents a series exploring ten great lives from Chinese history