The Christian Science Monitor

Russia takes a new look at an old enemy: Genghis Khan

The great Mongol steppe, from which Genghis Khan's hordes emerged, stretches out from the Merkit Fortress in southern Buryatia, Russia. Today's Mongolian border is about 18 miles away.

In the south of Buryatia, near the present-day border with Mongolia, there is a mountain-sized rock outcropping known locally as the Merkit Fortress, which looks out over the arid, rolling steppe that gradually fades into the Gobi Desert a few hundred miles away.

According to legend, this formidable natural fortification was stormed more than 800 years ago by the forces of a young Mongol warlord who claimed his bride had been stolen by the Merkit tribe, which had made its home base here. He seized the rock, and went on to unite most of the nomadic Mongol tribes of northeast Asia, including the ancestors of today’s Buryats. Taking the name Genghis Khan, which means “universal ruler,” he flung his vast army of highly disciplined, horse-mounted shock troops to the south and

Heirs of the empireHero of the Buryats‘It all leads back to Genghis Khan’

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