The Most Brutal Empires the World Has Ever Seen — Fexingo History

Tamerlane's Tower of Skulls: The Horror of Isfahan 1387

5 min · 28. Juni 2026
Episode Tamerlane's Tower of Skulls: The Horror of Isfahan 1387 Cover

Beschreibung

In 1387, the city of Isfahan rose against its Timurid overlord. Tamerlane's retribution would become the stuff of legend — a tower of 70,000 human skulls built from the heads of the city's defenders. This episode unpacks what really happened during the sack of Isfahan, drawing on the eyewitness accounts of Ibn 'Arabshah and the Zafarnama, and explores the strategic calculus behind terror as a tool of empire. Was the tower literal, symbolic, or both? We look at the Muzzafarid rebellion, Tamerlane's shifting alliances, and the way Timurid propaganda and horror blended into a single, unforgettable image. Along the way, we consider how later conquerors — from the Mongols to the Ottomans — used similar displays of mass violence to send a message without wasting resources on prolonged sieges. This is a story of brutality, but also of calculation: Tamerlane knew that terror could be more efficient than mercy. #Tamerlane #Timurid #Isfahan #TowerOfSkulls #Muzzafarids #ShahMansur #Zafarnama #IbnArabshah #SiegeOfIsfahan1387 #TimuridTerror #MedievalIran #BrutalEmpires #History #FexingoHistory #WorldHistory #Warfare #Propaganda #MassViolence Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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164 Folgen

Episode The Mongol Siege of Nishapur 1221: Genghis Khan's Vengeance Cover

The Mongol Siege of Nishapur 1221: Genghis Khan's Vengeance

In 1221, the Mongol army under Genghis Khan's youngest son Tolui besieged the wealthy Persian city of Nishapur. The city had made a fatal error: it had killed a Mongol envoy and a son-in-law of the Khan. The Mongols demanded surrender; the city refused. When the walls fell, the punishment was absolute. Lucas and Luna explore the siege's details—the hasty fortifications, the Mongol siege engines, the three days of slaughter, and the deliberate destruction of the city's qanats to ensure it could never rise again. They also examine the aftermath: the counting of skulls, the fate of survivors, and how Nishapur became a cautionary tale across the Islamic world. Along the way, they touch on the Yassa law of Genghis Khan, the role of envoys in Mongol diplomacy, and the contested numbers in the primary sources of Juvayni and Ibn al-Athir. #MongolEmpire #Nishapur #GenghisKhan #Tolui #SiegeWarfare #Qanat #Juvayni #IbnAlAthir #Yassa #MongolDiplomacy #SkullTowers #PersianHistory #KhwarezmianEmpire #MedievalWarfare #Catapult #MongolInvasion #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

18. Juli 20267 min
Episode The Mongol Yassa Law That Governed an Empire Cover

The Mongol Yassa Law That Governed an Empire

In this episode of The Most Brutal Empires the World Has Ever Seen, Lucas and Luna explore the Yassa, the legal code of the Mongol Empire attributed to Genghis Khan. They discuss how the Yassa blended customary law with harsh penalties to maintain order across the largest contiguous empire in history. The conversation covers the origins of the Yassa under Genghis, its role in unifying nomadic tribes, specific laws such as the prohibition of washing clothes in water (to conserve resources) and the death penalty for theft, and how the code was enforced through the imperial guard and provincial governors. They also touch on the fragmentary survival of the Yassa in chronicles like Juvayni and Rashid al-Din, and the debate over whether it was a formal written code or a body of customary precedents. #MongolEmpire #Yassa #GenghisKhan #MongolLaw #Juvayni #RashidalDin #SteppeEmpire #MongolSociety #Tumen #Noyan #Kharash #IbnBattuta #WilliamofRubruck #InnerAsia #MedievalHistory #WorldHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

18. Juli 20267 min
Episode Ashoka's Rock Edicts and the Mauryan Empire's Secret Police Cover

Ashoka's Rock Edicts and the Mauryan Empire's Secret Police

Long before Ashoka's Dhamma, the Mauryan Empire had a brutal intelligence network. This episode dives into the shadowy world of Mauryan espionage as described by Kautilya in the Arthashastra. We explore the network of spies, informants, and secret agents that kept Chandragupta and Bindusara in power — from 'fire-spies' who infiltrated enemy camps to 'householder agents' who posed as farmers. Discover how this surveillance state targeted corruption, monitored officials, and crushed dissent, all while operating under the guise of a benevolent empire. We contrast this with Ashoka's later shift toward non-violence and ask: did the secret police survive the Dhamma revolution? A side of Mauryan rule rarely discussed, grounded in the pages of the Arthashastra and Greek accounts like Megasthenes' Indica. #MauryaEmpire #Arthashastra #Kautilya #ChandraguptaMaurya #Bindusara #Ashoka #SecretPolice #Espionage #AncientIndia #Megasthenes #Indica #Pataliputra #Dhamma #IntelligenceNetwork #History #FexingoHistory #WorldHistory #BrutalEmpires Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Gestern7 min
Episode Ashoka's Rock Edicts: The Words That Defined an Empire Cover

Ashoka's Rock Edicts: The Words That Defined an Empire

In this episode, we explore Ashoka's rock edicts—inscriptions carved on pillars and cliffs across the Mauryan Empire after the bloody Kalinga War. Lucas and Luna discuss the discovery of these edicts by James Prinsep in the 1830s, the translation of Brahmi script, and the content of Major Rock Edict XIII, which describes Ashoka's remorse and conversion to Dhamma. They examine how Ashoka used Prakrit, the vernacular language, to spread his message of non-violence, religious tolerance, and social welfare across diverse regions. The edicts reveal a ruler who shifted from conquest to moral governance, appointing 'Dhamma Mahamattas' to enforce his policies. This episode also touches on the controversy over whether Ashoka truly became a pacifist or maintained a pragmatic approach. A detailed look at the political and ethical legacy of one of history's most unique imperial experiments. #Ashoka #Maurya #RockEdicts #BrahmiScript #JamesPrinsep #Prakrit #Dhamma #KalingaWar #Piyadasi #EdictXIII #AncientIndia #History #FexingoHistory #IndianHistory #Epigraphy #Buddhism #NonViolence #MauryanEmpire Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Gestern10 min
Episode Ashoka's Rock Edicts: The Words That Shaped an Empire Cover

Ashoka's Rock Edicts: The Words That Shaped an Empire

In episode 160 of The Most Brutal Empires, we explore the revolutionary governance of Ashoka the Great after the Kalinga War. Lucas and Luna discuss the Major and Minor Rock Edicts — inscriptions carved on pillars and cliff faces across the Mauryan Empire — which promoted non-violence, religious tolerance, and moral law. We delve into specific edicts, like Rock Edict XIII’s remorse over Kalinga and Rock Edict XII’s call for harmony among sects. The episode also covers the Dhamma Mahamattas, the empire-wide officials who enforced Ashoka's reforms, and the linguistic challenge of using Prakrit and Brahmi script to reach a diverse population. How did a repentant conqueror use stone as a medium for ethical revolution? Tune in for a focused look at one of history's most ambitious communication campaigns. #Ashoka #MauryanEmpire #RockEdicts #Dhamma #Kalinga #Prakrit #Brahmi #EdictXIII #EdictXII #DhammaMahamattas #Piyadasi #Devanampiya #Buddhism #AncientIndia #EmperorAshoka #History #FexingoHistory #IndianHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

16. Juli 20267 min