Why the Mongol Empire Split Apart So Quickly — Fexingo History
In the early 1250s, just as the Mongol Empire was reaching its greatest extent under Möngke Khan, a rebellion erupted in the heart of the empire — not from a rival prince or a conquered kingdom, but from a village of common herders and farmers in the Altai Mountains. This is the story of the Jagun Rebellion, a peasant uprising that forced Möngke to divert resources from the conquest of Song China and exposed deep cracks in the empire's administrative structure. Lucas and Luna explore how over-taxation, the yam system's burden on local communities, and the arrogance of darughachi officials sparked a revolt that spread across three valleys. They discuss the rebel leader, a former caravan guard named Toghan, who used smoke signals and captured yam horses to coordinate attacks. The rebellion lasted only 18 months, but its suppression came at a cost: Möngke enacted the first empire-wide tax reforms, including the census reforms of 1252 and the establishment of famine relief granaries. Yet the episode also reveals how the revolt foreshadowed later fractures — the northern valleys aligned with the Golden Horde, while the southern ones supported the Yuan. Specific details include the Tarim Basin's grain shortages, the role of Uyghur scribes, and the execution of Toghan in Karakorum. This is a micro-history of a forgotten revolt that shaped the empire's decline. #MongolEmpire #JagunRebellion #MöngkeKhan #PeasantRevolt #AltaiMountains #YamSystem #Darughachi #Toghan #Karakorum #Census1252 #TarimBasin #UyghurScribes #GoldenHorde #YuanDynasty #FamineRelief #History #FexingoHistory #CentralAsia Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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