The Mongol Empire: How Nomads Conquered the World — Fexingo History
Mongol emperor Khubilai Khan twice attempted to invade Japan, in 1274 and 1281, launching massive armadas from Korea and southern China. The first invasion landed at Hakata Bay on Kyushu, where samurai clans led by the Sō family and the Shōni clan fought fierce defensive battles. A storm that night wrecked many Mongol ships, forcing a retreat. The second invasion, after years of preparation and diplomatic demands, was even larger: a combined fleet of perhaps 4,000 ships carrying over 100,000 men. The Japanese had built a stone wall along Hakata Bay, and they defended it with coordinated attacks by samurai like Takezaki Suenaga. A typhoon—the famous 'kamikaze' or divine wind—devastated the Mongol fleet in August 1281, stranding thousands of soldiers who were hunted down. The failed invasions strengthened the Kamakura shogunate's legitimacy and the idea of Japan as divinely protected, but the cost of war bankrupted many samurai lords, contributing to the shogunate's decline decades later. This episode explores the invasions, the leaders—Khubilai, Kublai's Korean allies, the Kamakura regent Hōjō Tokimune—and the legacy of the divine wind myth that persisted into World War II. #MongolInvasionOfJapan #KhubilaiKhan #Kamikaze #DivineWind #HakataBay #KamakuraShogunate #HōjōTokimune #YuanDynasty #Korea #Samurai #TakezakiSuenaga #1274 #1281 #MongolFleet #StoneWall #FexingoHistory #History #MedievalHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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