the medical knowledge during the time of Genghis k. and the Mongolian empire essay In the time of Genghis K. and the Mongolian Empire, medical knowledge in Persia, India, and China changed because when the Mongols invaded Europe, they took over cultures that had a great amount of medical knowledge. When this happened the Mongols used it to their advantage and created hospitals and training centers, they then exchanged their knowledge and understanding of the products, and the medicine soon became more developed and specialized. When the Mongolians created hospitals and training centers, “they encouraged the expansion of medical knowledge. Institutions in China employed doctors from India and the Middle East in addition to Chinese healers”. Their knowledge was then spread out throughout the empire and was the probable cause of medical training in Europe. Kublai Khan then “diversified medical knowledge by founding an institution for the study of Western medicine under the direction of a Christian scholar. Using Chinese illustrations, a man named Rashid al-Din created the first known book about Chinese medicine outside of China in 1313”. Although Chinese practices were welcomed by some cultures others did not. Say for instance, the Middle East, they did not accept acupuncture because it needed too much physical contact between the patient and the physician. But they did accept Pulse Diagnosis where “the physician only had to touch the patient’s wrist to diagnose an illness and give them a treatment. Using this novel method, doctors could treat female patients without violating the honor of her family”. The Mongolian Empire also was economically successful because they exchanged knowledge and understanding of the products they were distributing. For example say a person purchases medicine; it cannot be helpful to the purchaser if he or she does not know how to use it. Doctors were also “exchanged between parts of Europe to disperse knowledge. Persian and Arabian doctors traveled to China, and Chinese doctors went to the Middle East and the far western parts of the Mongolian Empire”.