How the Mongols Changed Trade, War, and Globalization — Fexingo History
In the 1240s, the Mongol Empire turned its attention to Tibet, a land fragmented among Buddhist sects and local lords. While later Tibetan accounts depict the encounter as a peaceful submission where the Sakya lama Köden met Prince Kötön and offered spiritual allegiance, Mongol sources and recent scholarship hint at a more complex reality: military campaigns, hostage-taking, and the imposition of darughachi administrators. This episode unpacks the contrasting narratives from the Tibetan 'Mountain Doctrine' and the Persian chronicle 'Tarikh-i Jahan-gusha' by Juvayni, exploring how Tibet became part of the Mongol sphere without a single decisive battle. We discuss the role of the Sakya sect, the paiza system, and the census that followed, revealing how the Mongols integrated the high plateau into their empire through a mix of force and diplomacy. Lucas and Luna examine the legacy of this conquest—how it shaped Tibetan Buddhism's relationship with Mongol power and set the stage for the later Yuan dynasty's patronage of the lamas. #MongolEmpire #Tibet #Sakya #Köden #PrinceKötön #Tarikh-iJahan-gusha #Juvayni #MountainDoctrine #Darughachi #Paiza #Census #Buddhism #YuanDynasty #13thCentury #CentralAsia #TibetanHistory #Conquest #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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