Genghis Khan and the Quest for God
How the World's Greatest Conqueror Gave Us Religious Freedom
English


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About The Book

The conquests of the Mongols were arguably the most important event of the last millennium in Eurasia. Yet Genghis Khan has remained an opaque and enigmatic figure a symbol of cruelty and little else. Jack Weatherford has peeled back the curtain and revealed a complex man and thinker in this path-breaking work of rousing history and scholarship.<b><br> -- Robert D. Kaplan author of <i>The Revenge of Geography</i> and <i>Eastward to Tartary <p/> </i></b>Revisionist history on a grand scale but one as scrupulously well researched as such an intellectual overhaul needs to be...What is most remarkable about this fine and fascinating book is Weatherford's central claim that the Great Khan's ecumenism has as its legacy the very same rigid separation of church and state that underpins no less than the American idea itself. The United States Constitution's First Amendment is at its root an originally Mongol notion.... Weatherford argues his case very well and in doing so offers further amplification of the notion that so many of the West's claimed achievements in fact have their true origins in the East. <br><b><b>--</b> Simon Winchester <i>New York Times Book Review<br> </i></b><br> Genghis Khan the Mongol warrior who conquered swaths of Central and Eastern Asia in the early thirteenth century is not commonly considered a paragon of tolerance. But this account of the laws and customs of his court presents a figure who not only believed in freedom of religion but pioneered its implementation. Faced with unifying an empire that encompassed numerous warring religions the Mongols crafted policies that Weatherford argues influenced the architects of the U.S. Constitution...Analysis of Khan's thought bolsters the claim and adds a welcome dimension to a misunderstood figure. <br><b><i><b>--</b> The New Yorker<br></i></b><br> It's an unexpected connection that of Genghis Khan -- one of the bloodiest most ruthless imperialists the world has ever seen -- and the concept that people including and perhaps especially conquered populations should be allowed to practice the religion of their choice. This idea born of the wily Mongol's shrewd perception that the gift of religious liberty could extend the life of his empire far longer than enforced conversion in turn influenced generations of thinkers including the American Founding Fathers and in particular Thomas Jefferson. <b><i>-- Chicago Tribune </i></b><br> Few contemporary writers have Weatherford's talent for making the deep sweep of history seem vital and immediate. <br> <b><i>-- Washington Post</i></b> <p/> Weatherford tells the gripping story of how a man rose from nothing to control almost all the known world. That the Mongol conqueror Genghis Khan the ultimate self-made man was also the founder of religious liberty is only one of many surprises in this well-researched and well-written book. Through meticulous scholarship Jack Weatherford has found tangible echoes of the Founding Fathers' promotion of complete religious tolerance in the thinking of Genghis Khan. <br> <b><i>-- </i>Andrew Roberts author of <i>Napoleon</i></b> <p/> Genghis Khan is best remembered by Voltaire's description: a 'cruel tyrant King of Kings' who butchered and brutalised his way across the medieval world. But in this elegant original and scrupulously researched book Jack Weatherford makes the case for a Mongolian warlord as first mover behind the First Amendment freedoms millions of Americans enjoy today. Bold compelling and tautly argued this is another fine study of a subject Weatherford knows better than anyone else writing today.<br> <b>-- Dan Jones author of <i>The Plantagenets</i> </b><br> <b> </b><br> Jack Weatherford returns to Genghis Khan and offers a startling conclusion: that the Western tradition of secularism in fact was enhanced by the religious tolerance of the great Mongolian warlord. An engaging well-researched--and counter-intuitive--intellectual o...
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