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As a mongolian i have to say that this video is fantastically well done. Shamans never really disappeared in Mongolia, even after the spread of the abhramic religions, buddhism, and soviet athiesm to Mongolia. They are incredibly adaptive. The people who are shamans are absolutely terrifying to be in the presence of. I know of one who trains dogs that could kill most wolves (he does this successfully; he's petrifying) but when he goes into his trance, the terror is on another level entirely. Most Shamans are like this.
The fear of the spilling of noble blood is very interesting. As a Burmese, this is very much a part of our royal history too. Princes would often be drowned or strangled to death rather than executions by their political rivals to prevent their blood from coming out. Interesting! The more you learn...
Ancient natives used the land bridge from Asia to north America. Traditions and culture passed on and changed due to certain X factors. That's my idea at least
There should be a long-form video of all the Mongol culture videos such as the one on alcohol, their ideology, the shamans, life on the steppe, and others
i'm Mongolian. For a while, shamanism was very quiet and hidden, but since the beginning of 2000, it has become very popular. You won't believe it. But we really talk to the spirits of people who lived hundreds of years ago. It's really interesting and unique.
Worked with some people who hold similar beliefs. Convinced a good portion of their peers that large sections of the building were haunted by spirits, leading to refusal to do their jobs. Fun times
Next video about the Mongols, what happened to them after the fall of the Mongol Empire, from the Northern Yuan period passing by four Oirats, Dzungar Khanate and Manchu domination.
I am half Korchin Mongol half Sunggari Manchu, so both my mother and my father have told me about Shamanism into both cultures. In manchuria (Especially northern Sunggari, modern day Songhua river, where my fathers ancestors lived for centuries) Shamanism was very, almost completely, Mongolian influenced. The Northern Manchus believed in the Abka Enduri (Sky Khan, Emperor of the sky), also named Abka Han in later jurchen Jin. They also carried out ancestor worship, building large temples along the Sunggari. There is also evidence of worshipping the Sunggari river, as the Manchus would sometimes give offerings, from food to dead animals, to the river. They also carried out several sacrifices, for both the sunggari river and other locations in Heilongjiang. Although, as the southern Jianzhou Jurchens united the Jurchens, they destroyed and forced Sunggari Shaman worship to stop immediately, Nurhaci Khan also ordered all Shamans (Sunggari) to be killed. Although, Sunggari shamansim very extremely corrupt, as many of the herbal 'medicines' they brewed were, unsurprisingly, just made up recipes that they claimed to be 'healing', they also claimed that if you paid a large sum of money, the Shamans would 'speak' to the sky Khan and would bless you with a space in the sky heaven when you would die. They also used Ginseng extensively in herbal medicine. Although, after the Jianzhou Jurchens occupied the Northern Sunggari, Shamanism was strictly forbidden, and anyone who disagreed would face the horrific 10 Manchu tortures. Although, in 1619, when Nurhaci was sieging Chieftain Gintaisi Khan, the final remaining Haixi Jurchen Khan that was not either dead or submitted to Nurhaci and Asin Gioro, Gintaisi was already extremely ill and was dying slowly. In his last moments he ordered a Shaman to look into the future and cast a curse on the southern Manchus, and it is believed, that the curse actually worked, as the final ruler of the Qing was Empress Dowager Cixi, a northern Jurchen herself, and it is said that she was the reason why the Qing dynasty fell, therefore completing the curse cursed by Gintaisi Khan on his deathbed. This is most likely a made of story that old people in China believe.
It's wild to me that I think you can see a connection from, steppe shamans and the shamans of native American tribes, they seem to look similar and native American ancestors originated in Asia
There were 4 nations which have managed to defeat the 1200's Mongols in war ; Javanese (Majapahit), Turks (Khalji & Bahri Mamluks), Japanese, Vietnamese (Dai Viet). Mongols of the first half of the 13th century however were unstoppable Major nations destroyed by the Mongols ; -Jin(Tungusic) -Khwarezmids(Turkic) -Souther Song(Sinitic) -Kara Khitais(Khitanic) -Cumania(Turkic) -Kievan Rus(Germanic and Slavic) -Seljuk Rum(Turkic) -Abbasids(Arabic) -Western Xia(Qiangic) -Volga Bulgaria(Turkic)
@MeijiEmperor-o1kYou gassing up Sikh warriors. No one considers Sikhs as great warriors. However, the vast majority of historians consider Mongols great warriors.
Question: What the interactions and views of the Mongol Shamans during the time of the Mongol Empire toward the other faiths such as Buddhism, Islam, Christianity and Judaism that the conquered peoples practiced?
Each nation has its own masters in heaven. Today's Buriad shamanism, which has been preserved better and many words go back to Proto-Mongolian. For example, Edzi-wife, like the Hu (Syunnu) tribes or Tsegee-Tsega (dairy product) like the Hunnu. There is also a song in the Buriad (Buryad) language, where the word Shanyu is used.
With the establishment of the Mongol Empire, the Christian Turkic tribes in Mongolia (Naiman, Kerait, Uyghur, Ongud, Merkit etc.) changed religion. Those who stayed in Mongolia firstly converted to Tengrism and then to Tibetan Buddhism, while those who migrated firstly converted to Tengrism and then to Islam.
@@Jawadazizoglu Also, Naiman and Ongud were Turkic tribes. Keraites are disputed, the most likely explanation is that they were Turkic tribes who later intermixed with and assimilated into Mongols. Merkits were Mongols though.
I am interested in the overlap of Mongol, indigenous Siberian, Turkic, Ottoman, and Native American religions considering the Silk Road and Eurasia to North America land bridge migration theory.
Just to point out, there was no notification sign for this video, i was watching the new released video on W&W channel and saw this one as a yt suggestion, but I can't see it in the bell notification area
I had no idea shamans were such an important (and controversial) component of the early Mongol Empire. Thank you for teaching me yet another new piece of historical info. God be with you out there, everybody. ✝️ :)
@@blakebailey22 Yeah, the Mongolian language is an Altaic language and not Indo European, but Mongolian culture was heavily influenced by Indo European and east Asian culture. Tengrism originated from Indo European steppe cultures such as the Göktürks and the Bulgars.
There's been quite a lot of cultural mixing on the Eurasian steppe going back many thousands of years. I would not be surprised at all if the Sky Father of the original Indo-European people - who came from the steppes - was the same figure in origin and features as Tengri
As a Chinese, what shocks me is how so many of the practices of Mongol shamans and Mongol shamanic beliefs were also prevalent amongst the Chinese too.
Shamans played important role in tribe for healing the illness or even does surgeries in somehow . Mongolians found calendar like note and various surgery tools and very strong drug to give to patients for painkilling. Also they educate people about nature and life philosophy.
Very informative videos, thanks a lot. Keep doing such a hidden secret of the horrific history reveals. Sorcerer, magician worked to the horrific thing's done by the great empires. Making videos about magic, or superficial things done by the sorcerer for the empires.
the nomadic mongols are so alike but yet so diffrent like the sami people in north of sweden and american natives and those in australia nya zeeland. Im a pround 35 year old sami with autism that love history and heavy metal and take a lot of photos and 80s horror movies and nature.:D
It's maybe interesting that people that never interacted had very similar belief systems.. at the same time maybe it's the easiest answer when there's no science behind it
Interesting. Shamans, to this day, have a great influence in South Korean society. As stated, in decision making at the highest order in government and entertainment.
Wrong channel they have a separate channel with the same narrator and crew but exclusively for fantasy content it’s called Wizards and Warriors which has a green channel logo with a skull iirc whereas this channel Kings and Generals covers real world history as well as modernity I hope this helps you sort through their content
Its so weird how Mongol shamns with drums and drum beats and long floating gowns resemble Nepali Shamans known as Jhakris. Being a Magar myself I have seen how jhakris perform their ritual and bears striking similarities to Mongolian Shamans. Can there be relations between them ?
mongolian shamans are similar to turkic,siberian shamans and Native american shamans nepali shamans are similar to old tibetan shamans it is different from mongolian shaman
Love me some Mongol lore! Also, it makes researching them on my own very interesting. I am currently watching Man in the High Castle and casually doing some research on nazi era Germany. My NSA guy, I call him Ted, is probably very entertained with my search history 😂
When we got to witches, I immediately thought of the Monty Python _Holy Grail_ scene on the subject. "She turned me into a newt. Well, I got better." LOL
I never found the horse achievements particularly impressive just a bunch of force back mounted thieves taking opportunity wherever it was never fighting.
🎥 Watch our series on the Punic Wars and more than 150 other exclusive videos: ruclips.net/channel/UCMmaBzfCCwZ2KqaBJjkj0fwjoin or patreon: www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals
I am SO LOOKING FORWARD to the video on the Ukrainian Kursk Incursion ;)
As a mongolian i have to say that this video is fantastically well done. Shamans never really disappeared in Mongolia, even after the spread of the abhramic religions, buddhism, and soviet athiesm to Mongolia. They are incredibly adaptive.
The people who are shamans are absolutely terrifying to be in the presence of. I know of one who trains dogs that could kill most wolves (he does this successfully; he's petrifying) but when he goes into his trance, the terror is on another level entirely. Most Shamans are like this.
You can tell the animators had a lot of fun drawing really cool shamans in cool situations
The fear of the spilling of noble blood is very interesting. As a Burmese, this is very much a part of our royal history too. Princes would often be drowned or strangled to death rather than executions by their political rivals to prevent their blood from coming out. Interesting! The more you learn...
I'm Burmese to yeah it is very interesting too bad Kings and general don't mention about Myanmar(Burma) history.
Apparently this believe even made it to Madagascar
In Ottoman Empire this too was
Excellent doc, kinda interesting how similar in look the Mongal shamans are to the Native American Medicine Man.
And the sami people in north of my contary sweden🇸🇪 and norway finnland and parts of russia
Was thinking the exact same thing
They had same anchestors far before in Asia horses domesticated.
Right U.S. indians are Siberians and Mongols.
Ancient natives used the land bridge from Asia to north America. Traditions and culture passed on and changed due to certain X factors. That's my idea at least
Eagle Tribe on Iki Island represent!
*THROAT-SINGING INTENSIFIES!*
The Mongols would go ham until the shaman wasn't taken out
Why is no mongol fight on horseback in that game?
I was about to mention Ghost of tsushima😂
There should be a long-form video of all the Mongol culture videos such as the one on alcohol, their ideology, the shamans, life on the steppe, and others
So, Mongols Tengrism the next?
At some point
@@KingsandGenerals I'm actually quite curious to what religion the Mongols practiced. As its not often spoken about.
I am a tengrist
@@JehanRizvi😂😂😂
Paganism
im Mongol man and im really into Mongol history u are really expert on Mongol history. Thank you'
How would I tell a Mongol Man or (no doubt beautiful) Mongol Woman “Hail!” Or “What’s Up?”
Here in Texas I would tell you “Howdy!”
@@AquilaCrotalusEsox for women say "Yu baina huuhee" you pronounce it like "You ban who-hay" works most of the time with ladies
As qazaq man say mongols found Golden horde
So nice to read this
So many videos about the Mongols conquests and their ways of war, but this is one of the few about their culture and religion. Great stuff.
Love Mongolia from Romania
Sain uu 🇷🇴❤️🇲🇳
ТЭВ ТЭНГЭР ХОЧТОЙ ХӨХЧҮ ЗАЙРАН НАРТЫН ТАВИЛАНДАА ЭРГЭЭД ЗАЛАРСАН ШҮҮҮҮ! ! !
i'm Mongolian. For a while, shamanism was very quiet and hidden, but since the beginning of 2000, it has become very popular. You won't believe it. But we really talk to the spirits of people who lived hundreds of years ago. It's really interesting and unique.
"It would be bad luck to spill your blood"
"Oh thank god"
"Here have this carpet"
"Ummm thanks?"
as Mongolian i never known this wow. You have explored so hard just WOW
Worked with some people who hold similar beliefs. Convinced a good portion of their peers that large sections of the building were haunted by spirits, leading to refusal to do their jobs. Fun times
@@عليياسر-ك9ظwhat the hell do you mean Christian’s AND Muslims lmfao Muslims literally have a doctrine that straight up says spirits exist (Jinn)
@@عليياسر-ك9ظchristians are no different either but of course as usual it's varied
Next video about the Mongols, what happened to them after the fall of the Mongol Empire, from the Northern Yuan period passing by four Oirats, Dzungar Khanate and Manchu domination.
I am half Korchin Mongol half Sunggari Manchu, so both my mother and my father have told me about Shamanism into both cultures. In manchuria (Especially northern Sunggari, modern day Songhua river, where my fathers ancestors lived for centuries) Shamanism was very, almost completely, Mongolian influenced. The Northern Manchus believed in the Abka Enduri (Sky Khan, Emperor of the sky), also named Abka Han in later jurchen Jin. They also carried out ancestor worship, building large temples along the Sunggari. There is also evidence of worshipping the Sunggari river, as the Manchus would sometimes give offerings, from food to dead animals, to the river. They also carried out several sacrifices, for both the sunggari river and other locations in Heilongjiang. Although, as the southern Jianzhou Jurchens united the Jurchens, they destroyed and forced Sunggari Shaman worship to stop immediately, Nurhaci Khan also ordered all Shamans (Sunggari) to be killed. Although, Sunggari shamansim very extremely corrupt, as many of the herbal 'medicines' they brewed were, unsurprisingly, just made up recipes that they claimed to be 'healing', they also claimed that if you paid a large sum of money, the Shamans would 'speak' to the sky Khan and would bless you with a space in the sky heaven when you would die. They also used Ginseng extensively in herbal medicine. Although, after the Jianzhou Jurchens occupied the Northern Sunggari, Shamanism was strictly forbidden, and anyone who disagreed would face the horrific 10 Manchu tortures. Although, in 1619, when Nurhaci was sieging Chieftain Gintaisi Khan, the final remaining Haixi Jurchen Khan that was not either dead or submitted to Nurhaci and Asin Gioro, Gintaisi was already extremely ill and was dying slowly. In his last moments he ordered a Shaman to look into the future and cast a curse on the southern Manchus, and it is believed, that the curse actually worked, as the final ruler of the Qing was Empress Dowager Cixi, a northern Jurchen herself, and it is said that she was the reason why the Qing dynasty fell, therefore completing the curse cursed by Gintaisi Khan on his deathbed. This is most likely a made of story that old people in China believe.
Would like to see a video of history of Hmong shamanism came about. Its def similar to Mongolian shamanism
It's wild to me that I think you can see a connection from, steppe shamans and the shamans of native American tribes, they seem to look similar and native American ancestors originated in Asia
Crazy huh, makes you think about how crazy life is
There were 4 nations which have managed to defeat the 1200's Mongols in war ; Javanese (Majapahit), Turks (Khalji & Bahri Mamluks), Japanese, Vietnamese (Dai Viet). Mongols of the first half of the 13th century however were unstoppable
Major nations destroyed by the Mongols ;
-Jin(Tungusic)
-Khwarezmids(Turkic)
-Souther Song(Sinitic)
-Kara Khitais(Khitanic)
-Cumania(Turkic)
-Kievan Rus(Germanic and Slavic)
-Seljuk Rum(Turkic)
-Abbasids(Arabic)
-Western Xia(Qiangic)
-Volga Bulgaria(Turkic)
Most Indic peoples were under the rule of Turkic sultanates at that time
@MeijiEmperor-o1kTurks conquered rome both attila AND Ottoman Era mongols conquered persia china russi.a
@MeijiEmperor-o1kYou gassing up Sikh warriors. No one considers Sikhs as great warriors. However, the vast majority of historians consider Mongols great warriors.
@MeijiEmperor-o1k Bruh 🤣🤣🤣 Turks mongols conqueror to afghanistan India Pakistan Bangladesh for Mughal durannid etc beat sikhs LMAO.
@@spartanking7842 mongols and Turks nomads only conqueror to half world Huns beat all and greeks were enslaved stronger all world
Video about mongol shamans: throat singing intensifies
This video is great and would love to see more videos on pagan/niche religon's clergy.
Question: What the interactions and views of the Mongol Shamans during the time of the Mongol Empire toward the other faiths such as Buddhism, Islam, Christianity and Judaism that the conquered peoples practiced?
Each nation has its own masters in heaven. Today's Buriad shamanism, which has been preserved better and many words go back to Proto-Mongolian. For example, Edzi-wife, like the Hu (Syunnu) tribes or Tsegee-Tsega (dairy product) like the Hunnu. There is also a song in the Buriad (Buryad) language, where the word Shanyu is used.
With the establishment of the Mongol Empire, the Christian Turkic tribes in Mongolia (Naiman, Kerait, Uyghur, Ongud, Merkit etc.) changed religion. Those who stayed in Mongolia firstly converted to Tengrism and then to Tibetan Buddhism, while those who migrated firstly converted to Tengrism and then to Islam.
Wait, naiman ongud merkin and keratitis was m9ngol
@ΚωνσταντῖνοςΜαδιᾶςBosnians weren’t cathars and islam isn’t related to Gnosticism what so ever
@@Jawadazizoglu Why did you censor "Mongol" ?
@@Jawadazizoglu Also, Naiman and Ongud were Turkic tribes. Keraites are disputed, the most likely explanation is that they were Turkic tribes who later intermixed with and assimilated into Mongols.
Merkits were Mongols though.
@@Sarukhan475nice fake greek mangurt 🤣
A very interesting video and well narrated.
The Mongols are the greatest empire, thank you sir kings and generals, sir I like the narrators voice of the mongol empire videos
It’s the same narrator as all the other documentaries 😊
@@PeppyCat210 no it's not , the narrator for other videos isn't this guy voicing mongol empire
Same narrator
I am interested in the overlap of Mongol, indigenous Siberian, Turkic, Ottoman, and Native American religions considering the Silk Road and Eurasia to North America land bridge migration theory.
Excellent doc, kinda interesting how similar in look the Mongal shamans are to the Native American Medicine Man.
Truly fascinating! Thanks, K&G. ⚔🔥🏹
Breathtaking artwork and interesting content as always. Thank you so much :)
Just to point out, there was no notification sign for this video, i was watching the new released video on W&W channel and saw this one as a yt suggestion, but I can't see it in the bell notification area
Nice visuals, well done ✅❤
This channel deals with Mongol history more than Mongols.
Thanks for the video 👍🏻
I had no idea shamans were such an important (and controversial) component of the early Mongol Empire. Thank you for teaching me yet another new piece of historical info.
God be with you out there, everybody. ✝️ :)
I would like to hear the history of the Northern Yuan Dynasty, the Mongols after the empire.
I love how unique this is
Ooooh, so Genghis had windfury buff. It's all making sense now. 🙃
Ok, time for the critical battle. All shamans, cast Bloodlust!
Me and my two ladies went through a heavy Tengri thing one year, sweat and psychedelics, and lots of love ... I'm truly blessed... 🦅❤️🔥✨️
As a child growing up in mongolia, every time when my parents took me to a shaman. The shamanistic rituals always freak the shit out of me,lol
What would they do!?
3:30 So Tengri and Natigay sound a lot like the Proto-Indo-European "Sky father and Earth Mother." Was there any connection, or is this coincidental?
Almost certainly connected.
Given that Proto-Indo-Europeans came from the steppes themselves, it's likely, yeah.
@@Hashishiyah but PIE is in an entirely separate language family than mongolian, right?
@@blakebailey22 Yeah, the Mongolian language is an Altaic language and not Indo European, but Mongolian culture was heavily influenced by Indo European and east Asian culture. Tengrism originated from Indo European steppe cultures such as the Göktürks and the Bulgars.
There's been quite a lot of cultural mixing on the Eurasian steppe going back many thousands of years. I would not be surprised at all if the Sky Father of the original Indo-European people - who came from the steppes - was the same figure in origin and features as Tengri
As a Chinese, what shocks me is how so many of the practices of Mongol shamans and Mongol shamanic beliefs were also prevalent amongst the Chinese too.
1:58 bruh Gandalf was tengri shaman???
Awesome content
Shamans played important role in tribe for healing the illness or even does surgeries in somehow . Mongolians found calendar like note and various surgery tools and very strong drug to give to patients for painkilling. Also they educate people about nature and life philosophy.
New Video about Skanderbeg would be Great🏰
Very informative videos, thanks a lot. Keep doing such a hidden secret of the horrific history reveals. Sorcerer, magician worked to the horrific thing's done by the great empires. Making videos about magic, or superficial things done by the sorcerer for the empires.
Didn't expect to find this very interesting, but I was wrong. Didn't realize that there was a fair amount of information on the subject.
Forgot Mongols used to be shamanistic, I am so used to history portraying them as either Muslim or Confucists.
Many still are
Bravo I say, well done!!!!
Just munched down on a shroom laced chocolate bar! Right on time!
the nomadic mongols are so alike but yet so diffrent like the sami people in north of sweden and american natives and those in australia nya zeeland. Im a pround 35 year old sami with autism that love history and heavy metal and take a lot of photos and 80s horror movies and nature.:D
wow I love Sami people. I'm from Poland but really would like to go on the north of Finland, Norway or Sweden
It's maybe interesting that people that never interacted had very similar belief systems.. at the same time maybe it's the easiest answer when there's no science behind it
Kings and Generals is turning into "Kings, Generals and Priests"
😂
cant get average person to war without harnessing their innate obsessive compulsion using a professional charlatan
I watched about Teb Tengri on Jackmeisters channel.
Interesting. Shamans, to this day, have a great influence in South Korean society.
As stated, in decision making at the highest order in government and entertainment.
I feel like the rise of hideyoshi a month ago was really getting good, and left on a cliffhanger though...
History and psychonautics? Right up my alley! lol
More content like this, LESS star wars fantasy topics, please.
Wrong channel they have a separate channel with the same narrator and crew but exclusively for fantasy content it’s called Wizards and Warriors which has a green channel logo with a skull iirc whereas this channel Kings and Generals covers real world history as well as modernity I hope this helps you sort through their content
i like how they use civ 6 music in their videos.
12:30
Use sickness and death to get rid of a shamen
cool vid
Very nice video 📹 👍 👌
I had the opportunity to go to a Tengril ceremony in a ger (yurt) when I lived in Mongolia
i love emphasizing such an intimate spectrum of such a brutish empire
I want more khazar videos.
This ep is more of a mythology type..hard to ingest
Its so weird how Mongol shamns with drums and drum beats and long floating gowns resemble Nepali Shamans known as Jhakris. Being a Magar myself I have seen how jhakris perform their ritual and bears striking similarities to Mongolian Shamans. Can there be relations between them ?
mongolian shamans are similar to turkic,siberian shamans and Native american shamans nepali shamans are similar to old tibetan shamans it is different from mongolian shaman
Man that is lucky about the witches, imagine if it hadnt been somebody who was a rival? That would suck.
I want to go to Mongolia 🇲🇳 ❤️
Shamans the original Hype man!
I guess those shaman didn't predict the Divine Wind.
Love me some Mongol lore! Also, it makes researching them on my own very interesting. I am currently watching Man in the High Castle and casually doing some research on nazi era Germany. My NSA guy, I call him Ted, is probably very entertained with my search history 😂
Ich bin der Grammargruppenfuhrer, "information which survives" should be "surviving information. "
They look like power ranger villains
Can you please make a video on history of lakshadweep
No it's a part of India
When we got to witches, I immediately thought of the Monty Python _Holy Grail_ scene on the subject. "She turned me into a newt. Well, I got better." LOL
W. Video 🎉
Thankyou
The Sky Father
The Earth Mother
5:40 So did the Mongols have access to IKEA for that bedside lamp, or is this just AI generated?
We don't use AI. Chinese at the time had lamps similar to what we use today. With candles, of course.
@@KingsandGenerals that's actually super interesting, thanks for taking the time. As always, love the content :)
Mongols influenced early Tibetan pagan a lot before the arrival of Buddhism from North Pakistan (baltisan)
Luh Calm fit Shaman
Total War Attila main theme plays INTENSELY:
Will you cover any african civil wars or the Iran Iraq war
Love it from Mongolia 🇲🇳
Who's here after watching Ertugrul and other historic Turkish series?
Very similar to the Finno Ugric traditions
Yesssss!!!
If its one invaluable lesson taken from Age of Empires:
Religious unit: "Wololo!"
I had a vague recollection that they were shamanistic, but did not know they had female shamans.
Wait wolololo really worked irl
The eternal blue sky
*throat singing intensifies*
Glory to the Tengrism and Shananism
Plz cover the zarquchi/zargach
Always though folk religions > state religions
Move every mountain?
I never found the horse achievements particularly impressive just a bunch of force back mounted thieves taking opportunity wherever it was never fighting.
By this logic, almost everyone can be called a thief.
Can you make a video on tamil people in the future?
Sky Father and Earth Mother
Similar to Dyeus Pater and Earth Mother PIE
commenting helps a lot yall