The Mongol Empire: How Nomads Conquered the World — Fexingo History

Mongol Empire's Failed Invasion of Japan: The Kamikaze and the Yuan

5 min · 25. juni 2026
episode Mongol Empire's Failed Invasion of Japan: The Kamikaze and the Yuan cover

Beskrivelse

Mongol emperor Khubilai Khan twice attempted to invade Japan, in 1274 and 1281, launching massive armadas from Korea and southern China. The first invasion landed at Hakata Bay on Kyushu, where samurai clans led by the Sō family and the Shōni clan fought fierce defensive battles. A storm that night wrecked many Mongol ships, forcing a retreat. The second invasion, after years of preparation and diplomatic demands, was even larger: a combined fleet of perhaps 4,000 ships carrying over 100,000 men. The Japanese had built a stone wall along Hakata Bay, and they defended it with coordinated attacks by samurai like Takezaki Suenaga. A typhoon—the famous 'kamikaze' or divine wind—devastated the Mongol fleet in August 1281, stranding thousands of soldiers who were hunted down. The failed invasions strengthened the Kamakura shogunate's legitimacy and the idea of Japan as divinely protected, but the cost of war bankrupted many samurai lords, contributing to the shogunate's decline decades later. This episode explores the invasions, the leaders—Khubilai, Kublai's Korean allies, the Kamakura regent Hōjō Tokimune—and the legacy of the divine wind myth that persisted into World War II. #MongolInvasionOfJapan #KhubilaiKhan #Kamikaze #DivineWind #HakataBay #KamakuraShogunate #HōjōTokimune #YuanDynasty #Korea #Samurai #TakezakiSuenaga #1274 #1281 #MongolFleet #StoneWall #FexingoHistory #History #MedievalHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Alle episoder

127 episoder

episode The Mongol Empire's Census: Counting People for Conquest cover

The Mongol Empire's Census: Counting People for Conquest

In this episode of The Mongol Empire: How Nomads Conquered the World, Lucas and Luna dive into one of the most underappreciated tools of Mongol domination: the census. While Genghis Khan united the steppe through cavalry and blood oaths, it was his successors—especially Ögedei and Möngke—who realized that to rule an empire, you need to know who you're ruling. We explore the first systematic census of the Mongol Empire in the 1230s, how the darughachi (imperial agents) counted households in China, Persia, and the Russian steppes, and how this data was used to allocate troops, taxes, and the famed Yam postal relays. We also touch on resistance to counting: revolts in the Caucasus, evasion in the forests of Siberia, and the philosophical clash between nomadic freedom and bureaucratic order. Specific names include Ögedei Khan, Möngke Khan, Shigi Qutuqu, and Rashid al-Din. The episode reveals how a simple administrative act—counting people—helped hold together the largest contiguous land empire in history. #MongolEmpire #Census #ÖgedeiKhan #MöngkeKhan #ShigiQutuqu #Darughachi #Qubchur #Yam #CentralAsia #SteppeHistory #Taxation #Bureaucracy #RashidAlDin #JamiAlTawarikh #13thCentury #History #FexingoHistory #AdministrativeHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

29. juni 20265 min
episode The Mongol Empire's Postal System: How the Yam Network Connected an Empire cover

The Mongol Empire's Postal System: How the Yam Network Connected an Empire

In this episode of The Mongol Empire: How Nomads Conquered the World, Lucas and Luna explore the Yam — the Mongol Empire's extraordinary postal and intelligence network that stretched from the shores of the Pacific to the plains of Hungary. They delve into how Genghis Khan and his successors built a system of relay stations, riders, and horses that could move messages across the empire at speeds not seen again until the 19th century. Along the way, they discuss the institution of jamchi (postal riders), the use of paiza (metal passes granting access and authority), and the Yam's role in facilitating trade, espionage, and governance across diverse cultures. Lucas also shares the story of the European envoy André de Longjumeau, who traveled the Yam in the 1240s, and explains how the system influenced later postal networks in India and the Ottoman Empire. This episode offers a fresh look at one of the Mongol Empire's most durable innovations — a communications revolution that reshaped Eurasia. #Yam #MongolEmpire #PostalSystem #GenghisKhan #Paiza #Jamchi #SilkRoad #PaxMongolica #CentralAsia #Karakorum #Khanbaliq #AndrédeLongjumeau #RelayStations #Espionage #Communications #History #FexingoHistory #NomadicEmpire Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går7 min
episode Genghis Khan's Tomb: The Steppe's Greatest Mystery cover

Genghis Khan's Tomb: The Steppe's Greatest Mystery

In this episode of The Mongol Empire: How Nomads Conquered the World, Lucas and Luna delve into one of history's most enduring enigmas: the location of Genghis Khan's tomb. After his death in 1227 during a campaign against the Tanguts, the great khan was buried in secret, likely near his birthplace in the Khentii Mountains of present-day Mongolia. The funeral procession killed everyone they encountered to maintain secrecy, and legend says a river was diverted over his grave. We explore the accounts from The Secret History of the Mongols, Marco Polo, and Rashid al-Din, the role of the Ordos region's 'Eight White Yurts' kept by the Darkhat clan, and modern searches by archaeologists like Maury Kravitz and the controversial Japanese expedition in the 1990s. Was the tomb deliberately hidden? Will it ever be found? And what might it contain, from the Golden Whip to the paiza of his empire? Tune in for a respectful, speculative journey into the steppe's greatest secret. #GenghisKhan #MongolTomb #KhentiiMountains #DarkhatClan #EightWhiteYurts #Ordos #TheSecretHistoryOfTheMongols #MarcoPolo #RashidAlDin #GoldenWhip #Paiza #MongolBurial #SteppeHistory #MongolEmpire #Archaeology #History #FexingoHistory #Podcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går5 min
episode The Mongol Empire's Reluctant Bureaucrat: Yelü Chucai cover

The Mongol Empire's Reluctant Bureaucrat: Yelü Chucai

In this episode of The Mongol Empire: How Nomads Conquered the World, Lucas and Luna explore the life and legacy of Yelü Chucai—a Khitan Confucian scholar who became one of Genghis Khan's most trusted advisers. After the conquest of the Jin Dynasty, Yelü Chucai convinced the Khan to tax rather than massacre, saving millions of lives and laying the groundwork for a bureaucratic administration. We dive into his role in the Mongol court, his advocacy for Chinese-style governance, and his conflicts with Mongol traditionalists who preferred to turn farmland into pasture. We also examine his influence on Ögedei Khan's reign, his reforms of the tax system, and his creation of a civil service examination. Plus, we discuss the limits of his influence after his death and the eventual Mongol shift toward Chinese governance under Khubilai. A detailed look at how one scholar- official steered the empire from destruction toward administration. #YelüChucai #Khitan #Confucian #GenghisKhan #ÖgedeiKhan #JinDynasty #MongolEmpire #CentralAsia #Taxation #Bureaucracy #CivilService #Khanbaliq #Karakorum #History #FexingoHistory #MongolConquest #SilkRoad #SteppeEmpire Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

27. juni 20267 min
episode The Chagatai Khanate: Central Asia's Mongol Heartland cover

The Chagatai Khanate: Central Asia's Mongol Heartland

While the Yuan, Ilkhanate, and Golden Horde often dominate the story, the Chagatai Khanate was the Mongol Empire's geographic and cultural core—the steppe heartland where traditions of nomadic rule endured longest. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how Genghis Khan's second son, Chagatai, shaped a khanate that bridged settled and pastoral worlds, from the oases of the Tarim Basin to the pastures of the Tian Shan. They delve into the khanate's internal struggles between conservative steppe warriors and urbanized Muslim elites, its role in the fragmentation of Mongol unity, and its legacy through Timur (Tamerlane), who claimed Chagatai legitimacy. Along the way, they discuss the Chagatai language's literary flowering, the rise of the Moghul khans in the east, and the surprising endurance of Mongol identity in Central Asia centuries after the empire's decline. #ChagataiKhanate #GenghisKhan #CentralAsia #MongolEmpire #Timur #Moghulistan #TarimBasin #TianShan #ChagataiLanguage #SteppeNomads #Almaligh #Transoxiana #Kashgar #SilkRoad #History #FexingoHistory #MedievalAsia #MongolSuccessorStates Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

27. juni 20267 min