Beyond the Battlefield: The Systematic Exploitation and Hidden Horrors of Women in the Mongol Empire
What happened to the women who survived the Mongol conquests was often a fate far worse than death. The empire that killed 40 million people operated on a step-by-step process of exploitation that treated human beings as currency.
Every city that resisted was given a choice that wasn’t a choice at all: surrender or watch your daughters be dragged away forever. The Mongols used captured women as literal human shields, forcing them to march at the front of the army or fill moats with rubble under enemy fire.
Those who weren’t used as weapons were distributed as rewards to soldiers or sold into the massive slave markets of the Silk Road. Even the Khan’s own subjects weren’t safe, as shown by the horrific mass assault on 4,000 Oirat girls as a political move to seize land.
This history is not just about battles and cavalry tactics; it is about a mobile civilization built on the backs of women who never chose their fate.
We are still uncovering the extent of this cruelty through ancient records and modern science that links a massive percentage of the Asian population to a single, violent bloodline. Read the complete and harrowing account of the Mongol Empire’s hidden victims by clicking the link in the comments.
The Mongol Empire remains one of the most staggering paradoxes in human history. While modern scholars often celebrate Genghis Khan for his administrative genius, the religious tolerance he fostered, and the flourishing trade along the Silk Road, there is a much darker reality that is frequently omitted from the mainstream narrative.

Between 1206 and its peak, the empire covered over 24 million square kilometers, stretching from the Pacific coast of China to the heart of Eastern Europe []. This expansion cost an estimated 40 million lives—roughly 10% of the world’s population at the time. Yet, for the women who survived the initial slaughter, the Mongol “system” had planned a fate that many contemporary chroniclers described as worse than death.
The Three Waves of Selection
The Mongol army did not merely conquer; they processed. When a city fell, particularly one that had dared to resist, the population was marched onto the open plains and systematically divided. Husbands were torn from wives, and daughters from fathers, in a scene that Persian historian Juvayni described with palpable horror []. The fate of the women was then decided in three distinct, increasingly cruel waves.
Wave One: The Intellectual and Skilled Theft The first selection involved identifying women with specific skills. Weavers, seamstresses, and artisans who could work leather or cloth were spared execution, but their “freedom” was nonexistent. They were loaded onto carts and shipped thousands of miles to Mongol camps, where they would spend the remainder of their lives as forced laborers []. They effectively vanished from history, their talents repurposed to maintain the mobile cities of the Mongol war machine.
Wave Two: The Distribution of Spoils The second wave treated women as a form of military currency. Young women and girls were sorted by appearance and handed out as “rewards” to officers and loyal soldiers []. This was the engine of the Mongol army; the promise of women was what kept the soldiers riding across the harsh steppes. Some were forced into marriages, while others became concubines in massive household camps managed by the soldiers’ primary wives.
Wave Three: The Industrialized Slave Trade The final wave involved those not selected for skills or personal use. These women were sold into the open slave markets of Central Asia. The Mongol trade routes, often praised for spreading culture and technology, were also the highways for a human trafficking industry of unprecedented scale []. Many were placed in “caravan hostels”—roadside rest stops where they were forced to serve every merchant and traveler who passed through the doors.
The 1237 Oirat Atrocity: A Political Weapon
In 1237, Ogedei Khan, the son of Genghis, committed an act that even war-hardened historians struggled to describe. He ordered the rounding up of 4,000 girls from the Oirat tribe. Crucially, the Oirat were not enemies; they were a Mongol tribe living under his own rule [].

In an open field, in front of their fathers and husbands, these girls—some as young as seven—were stripped and subjected to mass assault by Mongol soldiers. Two girls died during the ordeal. The survivors were divided: some were added to the Khan’s personal collection, others were sent to the caravan hostels, and the remainder were left on the field for any soldier to take. This was not a random act of drunken fury, though Ogedei was a notorious alcoholic []. It was a cold-blooded political maneuver. By humiliating the Oirat leadership and breaking their spirit, Ogedei was able to seize the territory previously managed by his deceased sister, Checheyigen [].
Women as Weapons of War
The Mongols also pioneered a form of psychological and physical warfare that utilized captured women as tactical assets. During sieges, the Mongols would force prisoners—including women and children—to march at the front of the army. These “human shields” forced defenders on city walls to make a soul-crushing choice: shoot their own family members or allow the Mongol army to reach the gates [].
In some instances, prisoners were dressed in Mongol armor to trick defenders into wasting their arrows on their own people. Women were also forced to perform back-breaking labor during sieges, such as carrying dirt and rubble to fill moats under heavy fire []. The goal was to break the psychological spirit of the city before the real fighting even began. Messengers were sent ahead to new targets to describe in graphic detail what had happened to the women of the last city that resisted, effectively winning battles through pure terror [].
The Genetic Legacy and the Yasa Code
The impact of this systematic exploitation is not just found in history books; it is etched into the biology of the modern world. A 2003 genetic study found that approximately 8% of men across the former Mongol Empire—about 16 million people—share a nearly identical Y chromosome traced back to Genghis Khan and his close male relatives []. This genetic dominance did not occur through romance, but through the massive scale of concubinage and forced unions that defined the era.
Interestingly, Genghis Khan’s own legal code, the Yasa, contained surprisingly advanced protections for Mongol women, prohibiting kidnapping and rape []. However, these laws were never intended for foreign women. To the Mongols, a woman captured in war was “spoils,” a commodity with no legal standing []. After Genghis’s death, even the protections for Mongol women began to erode, as evidenced by Ogedei’s treatment of the Oirat girls.
From Hungary to China: A Continental Tragedy
This system was not confined to the East. When Batu Khan invaded Europe in 1241, the same patterns of “sorting and shipping” followed. William of Rubruck, a Franciscan monk who traveled to the Mongol capital of Karakorum, met a French woman named Paquette who had been captured in Hungary and forced to march across an entire continent []. By the time he met her, she considered herself “well enough off” simply because she had survived the march and had been given a husband rather than being sold into the hostels [].
The Mongol Empire was a machine that required fuel, and that fuel was often the lives and bodies of women from every corner of the known world—Chinese, Persian, Russian, Hungarian, and Arab []. While history remembers the great Khans for their conquests and the “Pax Mongolica,” the foundation of that peace was built on a system of human trafficking and forced labor that redrew the genetic and social map of the world. The suffering of these millions of nameless women is not a footnote to the Mongol story; it is the very fabric of the empire itself [].
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