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

The Mongol Yoke: How Russia's Princes Became Tax Collectors for the Khan

9 min · 16. juni 2026
episode The Mongol Yoke: How Russia's Princes Became Tax Collectors for the Khan cover

Description

Before Ivan the Terrible, before Peter the Great, Russia answered to the Khan. For over two centuries, the Mongol Empire's Golden Horde ruled the Rus' principalities not through direct occupation, but through a brutal system of extraction: the Baskak system, the census, and the yarlyk. This episode of The Most Brutal Empires walks through the mechanics of how Mongol tax-farmers and their local enforcers—princes like Alexander Nevsky and Ivan Kalita—pitted brother against brother, burned cities that resisted (Riazan, Vladimir, Kozelsk), and bent the Orthodox Church to their will. We explore the Novgorod tribute crisis of 1257, the Mongol census (chislo), the role of darughachi and baskaki, and how the legacy of the 'Tatar Yoke' shaped Russian autocracy. Lucas and Luna untangle the myth from the evidence: Was the yoke as heavy as the chronicles claim? And did Mongol rule accidentally forge the unified Russian state? #GoldenHorde #MongolYoke #AlexanderNevsky #IvanKalita #Baskak #Darughachi #Novgorod #Riazan #Kozelsk #Chislo #MongolEmpire #RussianHistory #KievanRus #Taxation #MedievalHistory #BatuKhan #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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138 episodes

episode The Mongol Kharash: Human Shields and Siege Terror artwork

The Mongol Kharash: Human Shields and Siege Terror

Lucas and Luna explore the Mongols' most chilling siege tactic: the kharash, or human shield. Used at Nishapur, Baghdad, and across Central Asia, this method forced captured civilians to absorb arrows, trigger traps, and build siege works before their own execution. Lucas explains how the tactic evolved from nomadic strategy into systematic terror, citing Juvayni and Ibn al-Athir. He details the kharash at the siege of Herat in 1221, where Tolui executed the entire garrison after using locals as shields. The episode also examines the Yassa law that authorized this brutality, and debates whether it was a military necessity or calculated atrocity. Listeners learn how the kharash became a Mongol trademark, spreading fear and collapsing morale before a single arrow flew. This episode is a deep dive into one of history's most ruthless weapons: the weaponization of the innocent. #Mongol #Kharash #HumanShield #SiegeWarfare #Tolui #Herat1221 #Nishapur #Baghdad1258 #GenghisKhan #Yassa #Juvayni #IbnalAthir #MongolEmpire #MedievalWarfare #Atrocity #History #FexingoHistory #BrutalEmpires Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

5. juli 20268 min
episode Genghis Khan and the Art of Mongol Siege Warfare artwork

Genghis Khan and the Art of Mongol Siege Warfare

We've covered Mongol brutality in individual sieges, but never the system itself. Lucas walks Luna through how Genghis Khan turned steppe horsemen into the world's most devastating siege force. He explains the Yassa law that mandated engineers be spared, the kharash human-shield tactics, the adoption of Chinese trebuchets and Persian siege towers, and the terrifying speed of Mongol field fortifications. They talk about the siege of Nishapur—where Tolui used captive engineers to build a wall around the city before attacking—and the siege of Baghdad, where Hulagu employed a siege train that included thousands of Chinese artillerymen. Lucas also highlights the Mongol skill at psychological warfare: false retreats, severed heads catapulted over walls, and the 'offer of submission' that was really a command. Luna asks how the Mongols learned siegecraft so quickly, and Lucas traces it to the conquest of the Jin Dynasty, where they captured entire Chinese engineering corps. The episode ends with a reflection on how Genghis Khan's siege innovations shaped warfare for centuries. #GenghisKhan #MongolSiege #SiegeWarfare #Yassa #Kharash #Nishapur #Baghdad1258 #Tolui #Hulagu #ChineseEngineers #Trebuchet #MongolEmpire #SteppeHorsemen #PsychologicalWarfare #JinDynasty #MilitaryHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

5. juli 202610 min
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The Mongol Empire wasn't just built on cavalry charges and siege engines; its success depended on a sophisticated intelligence and communication network that was centuries ahead of its time. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the yam system, the Mongol relay station network that spanned thousands of miles, and the intelligence-gathering operations that kept Genghis Khan and his successors informed of enemy movements, political intrigues, and economic conditions. They discuss the role of the jarghuchi (route judges) and the kheshig (imperial guard) in running the yam, the use of paizas (passport tablets), the integration of Chinese and Persian postal systems, and specific intelligence coups like the Mongol advance into Europe under Subutai. Drawing on sources like the Secret History of the Mongols, Juvayni, and Marco Polo, they reveal how the Yam was the empire's nervous system—and an instrument of control that allowed a nomadic power to rule the largest contiguous land empire in history. #MongolEmpire #YamSystem #GenghisKhan #MongolIntelligence #SilkRoad #Jarghuchi #Paiza #Kheshig #Subutai #MongolEspionage #SecretHistoryOfTheMongols #Juvayni #MarcoPolo #CentralAsia #SteppeHistory #EmpireBuilding #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday6 min
episode Genghis Khan's Siege of Wall: The Mongol Conquest of the Jin Dynasty artwork

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Yesterday8 min
episode The Roman-Parthian Wars: Crassus and the Disaster at Carrhae artwork

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In 53 BCE, Rome suffered one of its most humiliating defeats at the Battle of Carrhae. The wealthiest man in Rome, Marcus Licinius Crassus, led seven legions into the deserts of Mesopotamia against the Parthian Empire—and was utterly destroyed by an army of mounted archers and cataphracts. This episode follows the campaign from its political origins in the First Triumvirate, through the fateful decision to march through the desert, to the gruesome aftermath where Crassus's head was used as a prop in a play. We explore Parthian military tactics, the role of the Suren clan under General Surena, and how this disaster reshaped Roman foreign policy for centuries. Along the way, we touch on the controversy over whether Parthian archers really used the 'Parthian shot,' the mysterious fate of the captured legionaries (some say they founded a Chinese town), and the broader cultural impact of Rome's first major clash with a true eastern empire. #RomanParthianWars #BattleOfCarrhae #Crassus #Surena #ParthianShot #MarcusLiciniusCrassus #FirstTriumvirate #ParthianEmpire #Cataphract #RomanLegions #Mesopotamia #AncientWarfare #RomanHistory #ParthianHistory #Carrhae53BC #History #FexingoHistory #BrutalEmpires Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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