WY5V8181 HR Before the Mongols came to control the majority of Asia, the Song Dynasty and various religious Arab and Persian rulers were developing technological prominence (credit, gunpowder, seafaring) and had control over their regions because of prosperous centralized government. The Mongols, however, had superior military tactics, and were able to seize large parts of these empires. But despite their ability to take over these regions, bureaucratic control wasn't well-suited to their culture, especially after Kublai Khan's death where a single central controller couldn't exist. The khanates instead used local religious infrastructure and continued to develop technology within the regions they ruled because local rulers (usually religious in nature because states were often closely tied to religion, especially in the Islamic world) wanted to retain their power and the Mongols were such a small group that they could not entirely supplant a bureaucracy even if they wanted to. Religious leaders tried to preserve their own power as can be seen in document 2. A Buddhist monk is pushing the message that the Mongol empire should preserve religious organization for rational and bureaucratic reasons (order that the people already follow, and arguing that it would not interfere with Mongol rule). The intended audience is the Khan and the wider Mongol court, so this message is likely pandering to their sense of importance and power over China, but the parts about the religious organization retaining power are certainly believed by this monk. Especially because Khubilai Khan is a Buddhist himself, this monk believes that he has a good chance at retaining most of his power as long as he remains in the good grace of the Mongols. Document 3 also shows the Sufi sheikh (a religious ruler) has worked to convert the ruler to his faith. Religious leaders attempting to convert rulers is, historically, not uncommon, but the Mongols are particularly pliant to these advances because the Mongols do not have an established religion because they were originally a nomadic group and so do not have as strong of power structures. The Mongols are also uncommonly tolerant rulers. Because the roots of their power lie with Kubilai Khan's enhancement of the Silk Road in his early years, preservation of intergroup trade is easiest when the people controlling it are mostly neutral to the religion and ethnicity of merchants because then more merchants are likely to participate. But, after his death, the Khanates although still trying to retain the strength of the road began to infight between themselves---which eventually befell the empire. So, during these years, alliances with local ethnic groups was especially important. In the Yuan dynasty, Mongol leaders took ethnic female companions as can be seen in Document 5. In order to garner support of the local groups, the Yuan dynasty used this silk tapestry in religious ceremonies because it represented their alliance to the local powers---which was expected to be returned in favour. Document 4 shows this same pattern of native religious advantage. The Persian Khanate Ilkhanid ruler married to a Nestorian Christian because, although she didn't hold specific hierarchical power over this land, the alliance with the Nestorian Christians is valuable mostly in the preservation of peace. Technological growth was the earliest way that the Khans were affected by local change and culture. Khans brought together scholars and artists for their own gain; the development of new technology would further their control over the Silk Road and the prosperity of the lands they controlled. These technologies were also used directly by the Mongols, as is seen in Document 1. At this time, the Mongols were an illiterate people interested in developing a bureaucratic system because they had conquered much land but had no way to profit from it because no tax system was in place. The Mongols needed to reuse an existing writing system to further the strength of their empire, which projected into cultural changes. The Mongols gradually stopped being a nomadic people and their core strength (military dominance) faded out, their being closer to these native peoples because the reuse of native culture was the easiest way to control an area. But this eventually meant that the Mongol empire was essentially the same as the preexisting empire because they used the same tax and writing system, were just as divided as before, and began to face new challenges which it was difficult for the Mongols to handle.