How the Mongols Changed Trade, War, and Globalization — Fexingo History

Mongol Bridges: Engineering the Silk Road

6 min · 3 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Mongol Bridges: Engineering the Silk Road

Descripción

In episode 75 of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore the overlooked engineering marvels of the Mongol Empire: bridges. From the treacherous Yellow River crossings to the stone arch bridges of Persia and the floating bridges of the Yuan dynasty, the Mongols built infrastructure that tied the largest land empire together. Learn how teams of Chinese engineers, Persian masons, and local laborers constructed bridges that enabled trade, troop movement, and communication across the Silk Road. Discover the Battle of the Yellow River Bridge 1232, where Mongol engineers used pontoons to outflank the Jin army. Lucas explains the role of the yam system in bridge maintenance, the use of tamgha taxes for construction, and how Khubilai Khan's reign saw a bridge-building boom. The episode ends with the mystery of the vanished bridge of Karakorum—a legend of a stone bridge across the Orkhon River. This is a deep dive into the physical links that made the Mongol Empire work. #MongolBridges #SilkRoad #MongolEmpire #YellowRiver #KhubilaiKhan #YamSystem #BattleOfTheYellowRiverBridge1232 #YuanDynasty #OrkhonRiver #Karakorum #ChineseEngineering #PersianMasons #FloatingBridge #Pontoons #Tamgha #PaxMongolica #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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119 episodios

Portada del episodio The Mongol Conquest of Khwarezm: Genghis Khan's Revenge War

The Mongol Conquest of Khwarezm: Genghis Khan's Revenge War

In 1218, the Khwarezmian Empire controlled a vast swath of Central Asia and Persia, stretching from the Caspian Sea to the Indus River. When Shah Muhammad II executed Genghis Khan's envoys and plundered a Mongol trade caravan, he set off a chain of events that would lead to the complete destruction of his empire within two years. Lucas and Luna explore this turning point in Mongol history: the diplomatic insult that forced Genghis's hand, the unprecedented logistics of moving an army across the Tian Shan mountains in winter, the siege of the ancient city of Otrar where the governor Inalchuq had sparked the conflict, the devastating sack of Bukhara where a fire destroyed much of the city's famed library, the fall of the capital Samarkand, and the Shah's desperate flight to an island in the Caspian Sea. Along the way, they discuss Genghis's innovative use of Chinese siege engineers, the role of the Khwarezmian prince Jalal al-Din in mounting a last stand at the Indus River, and how this war fundamentally changed Mongol strategy from raiding to permanent conquest. This episode covers the key figures, battles, and consequences of a war that reshaped Eurasia. #Khwarezm #GenghisKhan #MongolEmpire #Otrar #Bukhara #Samarkand #JalalAlDin #Inalchuq #ShahMuhammadII #SiegeOfOtrar #SiegeOfBukhara #BattleOfTheIndus #MongolSiegeWarfare #CentralAsia #History #FexingoHistory #MedievalHistory #Conquest Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

25 de jun de 20268 min
Portada del episodio Temujin vs Jamukha: The Blood Brother War That Created Genghis Khan

Temujin vs Jamukha: The Blood Brother War That Created Genghis Khan

Before he was Genghis Khan, Temujin fought his closest friend and blood brother Jamukha in a steppe civil war that forged the Mongol Empire. This episode explores their childhood oath as anda, the political fractures that turned allies into enemies, and the brutal Battle of Dalan Balzhut (1187) where Temujin suffered his first major defeat. We look at how Jamukha's traditional tribal aristocracy clashed with Temujin's meritocratic vision, and how the betrayal of key allies—like the shift of the Jurkin and later the Jalayir—determined the war's outcome. The legend of Jamukha's execution by being broken without spilling blood is examined as both historical fact and symbolic ritual. No one has covered this pivotal relationship that shaped the unifier of the Mongols. #History #FexingoHistory #GenghisKhan #Jamukha #MongolEmpire #SteppeWarfare #Anda #BloodBrother #DalanBalzhut #Temujin #MongolCivilWar #CentralAsia #SecretHistory #Khalkha #TribalAlliance #MongolConquest #HistoricalPodcast #SteppePolitics Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer6 min
Portada del episodio Mongol Siege Warfare Engineers Who Conquered Castles

Mongol Siege Warfare Engineers Who Conquered Castles

The Mongols are famous for horse archers and steppe tactics, but how did they crack the walls of China, Persia, and Eastern Europe? This episode follows the engineers—Chinese, Persian, Muslim—who built the Mongols' siege machinery. We meet Guo Kan, the Chinese commander whose counterweight trebuchets smashed Baghdad; the Persian brothers who defected with advanced mining techniques; and the Kipchak slaves who taught the Mongols to build floating bridges. From the Khwarazmian cities to the fortresses of the Caucasus, we trace how Genghis Khan and his successors integrated foreign expertise into a mobile siege corps that changed warfare. Along the way, we confront a dark controversy: the myth of the 'secret Arab powder' that supposedly blew up castles, and the reality of Mongol adaptability under leaders like Möngke and Hulagu. A story of cultural exchange, ruthless efficiency, and the forgotten architects of conquest. #MongolSiegeWarfare #GuoKan #CounterweightTrebuchet #MongolEngineers #SiegeOfBaghdad #Hulagu #GenghisKhan #MöngkeKhan #Khwarazm #Karakorum #ChinDynasty #IslamicScience #History #FexingoHistory #MilitaryHistory #Globalization #MedievalWarfare #CulturalExchange Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer8 min
Portada del episodio Mongol Paper Money and the Birth of Fiat Currency

Mongol Paper Money and the Birth of Fiat Currency

Before the Mongol Empire, paper money was a curiosity. Under Khubilai Khan's Yuan dynasty, it became the lifeblood of a continental economy. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how the Mongols created the world's first large-scale fiat currency system — forcing merchants from Persia to Venice to accept chao, or paper notes, backed not by gold or silver but by the authority of the khagan. They trace the journey from early Chinese prototypes under the Song and Jin dynasties to Khubilai's radical expansion, supported by Marco Polo's awestruck descriptions. The system used mulberry-bark paper, official seals, and draconian counterfeiting laws. It financed Mongol armies, built roads, and facilitated Silk Road trade — but it also created inflation crises, especially in the Ilkhanate under Ghazan Khan. Lucas explains why Persian historian Rashid al-Din both praised and warned against paper money, and how the Yuan experiment collapsed with the dynasty. This episode offers a fresh lens on Mongol statecraft: an empire that conquered with horses but ruled with printing presses. #MongolPaperMoney #Chao #KhubilaiKhan #YuanDynasty #FiatCurrency #MarcoPolo #RashidAlDin #Ilkhanate #GhazanKhan #SilkRoadTrade #MulberryBarkPaper #Counterfeiting #EconomicHistory #PaxMongolica #SongDynasty #JinDynasty #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Portada del episodio The Mongols at Ain Jalut: How the Mamluks Broke the Invincible Army

The Mongols at Ain Jalut: How the Mamluks Broke the Invincible Army

In 1260, the seemingly unstoppable Mongol army suffered its first decisive defeat at the Battle of Ain Jalut in Palestine. This episode unpacks the clash between the Ilkhanate under Kitbuqa and the Mamluk Sultanate under Qutuz and Baybars. We explore the strategic gambles, the use of the famed Mamluk 'fake retreat' tactic, the role of the Qutuz-Baybars partnership, and the long-term consequences: halting Mongol expansion into North Africa, reshaping the Islamic world's power balance, and cementing the Mamluks as a major force. We also touch on the political chaos after Möngke Khan's death that left Hulagu with a fraction of his army. Specific details include the spring at Ain Jalut (Goliath's Spring), the defection of the Ayyubid prince al-Ashraf Musa, and the execution of Kitbuqa after the battle. #BattleOfAinJalut #MongolEmpire #MamlukSultanate #Kitbuqa #Qutuz #Baybars #Ilkhanate #HulaguKhan #MongolWarfare #MamlukTactics #Palestine #AinJalut #MedievalHistory #Crusades #MongolExpansion #History #FexingoHistory #MilitaryHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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