Why the Mongol Empire Split Apart So Quickly — Fexingo History

The Mongol Empire's Unique Siege Engineers

6 min · 24. juni 2026
episode The Mongol Empire's Unique Siege Engineers cover

Description

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Mongol Empire's remarkable use of specialized siege engineers from China and the Middle East. When the Mongols invaded the Jin dynasty, they captured Chinese siege experts who built trebuchets, battering rams, and gunpowder weapons. Later, under Hulegu, they employed Persian engineers to undermine Baghdad's walls. These engineers, often organized into separate units, were key to Mongol conquests of fortified cities. Lucas explains how engineers were transferred between khanates, spreading technology like counterweight trebuchets and early cannons. He also discusses the siege of Nishapur in 1221, where Genghis Khan's daughter commanded engineers after her husband's death, and the 1258 siege of Baghdad, where Chinese and Persian engineers worked side by side. The episode reveals how the empire's fragmentation disrupted this expertise, contributing to the collapse of centralized Mongol military power. Listeners will learn about specific figures like Guo Kan, a Chinese engineer who served Hulegu in Persia, and the role of the kheshig in protecting these specialists. #MongolEmpire #SiegeEngineers #GuoKan #ChineseTechnology #PersianEngineering #Hulegu #Baghdad1258 #Nishapur1221 #Trebuchet #Gunpowder #Kheshig #GenghisKhan #JinDynasty #YuanDynasty #Ilkhanate #CentralAsia #MedievalWarfare #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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All episodes

118 episodes

episode The Mongol Empire's Succession Crisis: Why Every Khan's Death Sparked Civil War artwork

The Mongol Empire's Succession Crisis: Why Every Khan's Death Sparked Civil War

Episode 118 takes a close look at the Mongol Empire's fatal flaw: a succession system that made every ruler's death a trigger for civil war. Lucas and Luna explore how the Yassa code, the kurultai tradition, and Chinggis Khan's own legacy of favouritism toward Tolui and Jochi created a powder keg that exploded after each great khan's death. They trace this through the Toluid Civil War between Kublai and Ariq Böke, the Jochid-Toluid tensions under Berke and Hulagu, and Ögedei's failed attempts to secure succession for his line. Along the way, they examine specific kurultais — the 1251 gathering that elevated Möngke and purged Ögedeids, and the 1260 showdown at Xanadu vs Karakorum — and how the lack of a clear heir led to decades of fratricidal conflict. The episode also touches on the role of powerful women like Sorghaghtani Beki in manipulating the system, and how the appanage system gave each prince the resources to wage succession wars. Finally, they connect this instability to the empire's rapid fragmentation into the four khanates, arguing that the succession crisis was not just a symptom but the primary cause of Mongol decline. #MongolEmpire #SuccessionCrisis #Kurultai #Yassa #ToluidCivilWar #KublaiKhan #AriqBöke #MöngkeKhan #SorghaghtaniBeki #Berke #Hulagu #Ögedei #Jochi #ChinggisKhan #GoldenHorde #Ilkhanate #CentralAsia #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

24. juni 202610 min
episode The Mongol Empire's Unique Siege Engineers artwork

The Mongol Empire's Unique Siege Engineers

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Mongol Empire's remarkable use of specialized siege engineers from China and the Middle East. When the Mongols invaded the Jin dynasty, they captured Chinese siege experts who built trebuchets, battering rams, and gunpowder weapons. Later, under Hulegu, they employed Persian engineers to undermine Baghdad's walls. These engineers, often organized into separate units, were key to Mongol conquests of fortified cities. Lucas explains how engineers were transferred between khanates, spreading technology like counterweight trebuchets and early cannons. He also discusses the siege of Nishapur in 1221, where Genghis Khan's daughter commanded engineers after her husband's death, and the 1258 siege of Baghdad, where Chinese and Persian engineers worked side by side. The episode reveals how the empire's fragmentation disrupted this expertise, contributing to the collapse of centralized Mongol military power. Listeners will learn about specific figures like Guo Kan, a Chinese engineer who served Hulegu in Persia, and the role of the kheshig in protecting these specialists. #MongolEmpire #SiegeEngineers #GuoKan #ChineseTechnology #PersianEngineering #Hulegu #Baghdad1258 #Nishapur1221 #Trebuchet #Gunpowder #Kheshig #GenghisKhan #JinDynasty #YuanDynasty #Ilkhanate #CentralAsia #MedievalWarfare #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

24. juni 20266 min
episode The Mongol Empire's Lost Prince: Ariq Böke's Four-Year War artwork

The Mongol Empire's Lost Prince: Ariq Böke's Four-Year War

In 1260, when Möngke Khan died, two brothers claimed the Mongol throne: Kublai and Ariq Böke. While history remembers Kublai as the great Khan who conquered China, his younger brother Ariq Böke led a fierce four-year civil war from Karakorum, backed by the traditionalist steppe elite. This episode dives into Ariq Böke's forgotten rebellion — his base at Karakorum, his alliance with the Ögedeid and Chagataid princes, his use of the Yassa to legitimize his rule, and the critical battles at Xanadu and the Selenge River. We explore how Ariq Böke's defeat not only cemented Kublai's power but also deepened the fracture between the Toluid house and the other Chinggisid lines, setting the stage for Kaidu's later revolt. Along the way, we meet key figures like the loyalist general Alandar and the defector Qadan, and examine how the kurultai system itself became a weapon in the war. This is the story of the khan who almost was — the last serious challenger to Kublai from within the Mongol heartland. #MongolEmpire #AriqBöke #KublaiKhan #Karakorum #Yassa #Kurultai #ToluidCivilWar #SelengeRiver #Xanadu #Qadan #Alandar #Ögedeid #Chagataid #SteppePolitics #Chinggisid #FexingoHistory #History #CentralAsia Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday10 min
episode The Mongol Empire's Last Stand: The Battle of the Indus artwork

The Mongol Empire's Last Stand: The Battle of the Indus

In 1299, nearly four decades after the Mongol Empire's fragmentation, the Chagatai Khanate launched a massive invasion of the Delhi Sultanate. This episode follows the campaign of Qutlugh Khwaja, a Chagatai prince, and his confrontation with Sultan Alauddin Khalji at the banks of the Indus River. We explore the military tactics of both sides, including Alauddin's innovative use of a standing army and war elephants against Mongol cavalry. The battle's outcome halted Mongol expansion into India and marked the last major Mongol attempt to conquer the subcontinent. We also discuss the political context within the Chagatai Khanate, the role of the Mamluk Sultanate in supporting Delhi, and how this clash shaped the future of South Asia. #MongolEmpire #ChagataiKhanate #DelhiSultanate #AlauddinKhalji #BattleOfTheIndus1299 #QutlughKhwaja #MongolInvasionOfIndia #IndianHistory #CentralAsianHistory #MedievalWarfare #WarElephants #IndusRiver #MamlukSultanate #KhaljiDynasty #SiegeOfDelhi #MongolCavalry #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday7 min
episode The Mongol Empire's Trade War: Kaidu's Copper Coins vs Kublai's Paper Chao artwork

The Mongol Empire's Trade War: Kaidu's Copper Coins vs Kublai's Paper Chao

In the late 13th century, as the Mongol Empire fractured, a forgotten economic war erupted between Kublai Khan's Yuan dynasty and the rebellious Ögedeid prince Kaidu. While Kublai pushed paper money (chao) across China, Kaidu minted copper coins in Central Asia, backed by Silk Road silver. This episode digs into the coin hoards of Almalyk, the collapse of the ortogh merchant partnerships, and how currency became a weapon of sovereignty. Discover why Kaidu's coins bore Chinese script but rejected Chinese rule, and how trade sanctions nearly bankrupted the Chagatai Khanate before Tarmashirin's reforms. Featuring the mint at Taraz, the Battle of Beshbalik, and the surprising role of Uyghur merchants in keeping the eastern Silk Road alive. #MongolEmpire #Kaidu #KublaiKhan #YuanDynasty #ChagataiKhanate #SilkRoad #CopperCoin #PaperMoney #Chao #Almalyk #Ortogh #Beshbalik #Taraz #Tarmashirin #CentralAsia #EconomicHistory #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

22. juni 20266 min