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

How Mongol Sheep Transformed Steppe Empire

7 min · 25. touko 2026
jakson How Mongol Sheep Transformed Steppe Empire kansikuva

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When we think of the Mongol Empire, we picture horse archers and siege engines. But behind every rider was something far more essential: sheep. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how sheep — not just horses — made Mongol conquest possible. They discuss the five-animal policy of Genghis Khan, the role of sheep in the nomadic diet and military logistics, and how wool felt (koshma) became the backbone of the yurt industry. The conversation touches on the economic importance of sheep caravans along the Silk Road, the use of sheep dung as fuel on the treeless steppe, and how the Mongol appetite for lamb influenced trade routes as far as Persia. Along the way, they consider a modern question: does the Mongolian tradition of sheep herding survive today? Specific terms include: koshma, airag, khorkhog, borts, tumen, yam, and the Gobi Desert. A light donation segment asks listeners to support ad-free history at buy me a coffee dot com slash fexingo. #MongolSheep #SteppeEmpire #GenghisKhan #NomadicEconomy #Koshma #Yurt #SilkRoad #History #FexingoHistory #MongolEmpire #Borts #Airag #Khorkhog #GobiDesert #FiveAnimals #MongolCuisine #SheepCaravan #MongoliaToday Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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When we think of the Mongol Empire, we think of conquest, trade, and the Pax Mongolica. But there's a darker legacy: the Black Death. In this episode, Lucas and Luna trace how Mongol military campaigns and trade networks inadvertently created the perfect conditions for Yersinia pestis to leap from the steppe into Eurasia. They discuss the siege of Caffa in 1346—where Mongol armies catapulted plague-ridden corpses over the walls—and the scholarly debate over whether that event actually caused the pandemic. They explore the role of the Silk Road, the marmot populations of Central Asia, and the genetic evidence linking the Mongol expansion to the spread of the plague. They also touch on how the Ilkhanate and Yuan dynasty faced their own devastating outbreaks decades before Europe. It's a story of unintended consequences, where an empire that connected the world also brought it to its knees. #BlackDeath #MongolEmpire #YersiniaPestis #Caffa1346 #PaxMongolica #SilkRoad #Ilkhanate #YuanDynasty #PlagueHistory #PandemicOrigins #CentralAsia #BubonicPlague #Biowarfare #MongolSiege #Crimea #Genoese #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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jakson The Mongol Conquest of Tibet: Diplomacy, Buddhism, and the Sakya Lama kansikuva

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Eilen6 min
jakson The Mongol Siege of Aleppo: Hulagu's Engineers and the Fall of Islam's Fortress kansikuva

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In January 1260, the Mongol army under Hulagu Khan arrived at the walls of Aleppo, one of the most heavily fortified cities in the Islamic world. This episode unpacks the siege itself — the engineers, the mangonels, the kharagh (human shield tactic), and the role of Hulagu's Christian wife Dokuz Khatun. We follow the collapse of the Ayyubid dynasty, the astonishing resilience of the citadel's defenders, and the brief Mongol occupation that followed. Drawing on the accounts of Ibn al-Amid and contemporary Syriac chronicles, we explore how Aleppo's fall broke the backbone of Syrian resistance and set the stage for the Mongol defeat at Ain Jalut. We also consider how the city's mixed population — Muslims, Christians, Jews — experienced the conquest, and what the famous burning of the Great Mosque says about Mongol siege warfare. This is a focused look at a single, pivotal battle that rewrote the map of the Middle East. #MongolEmpire #HulaguKhan #SiegeOfAleppo #AyyubidDynasty #DokuzKhatun #Mangonel #Kharagh #IbnAlAmid #SyriacChronicles #AinJalut #Ilkhanate #MedievalSiege #SyriaHistory #GreatMosqueAleppo #MongolWarfare #History #FexingoHistory #SiegeEngineering Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Eilen10 min
jakson Genghis Khan's Spies and the Secret Intelligence Network That Built an Empire kansikuva

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Before the Mongol Empire conquered half the world, Genghis Khan built an invisible weapon: a shadowy intelligence network of spies, scouts, and informants stretching from China to Persia. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Mongol khan's secret intelligence operations — how Genghis Khan used merchants, envoys, and stealthy desert scouts to gather battlefield intelligence, sabotage enemy alliances, and identify weak points in fortified cities. We look at the role of the yurtchi (court chronicler) and the jamchi (postal relay agents) who doubled as information gatherers, and the infamous Mongol 'spy ring' that infiltrated the Khwarezmian Empire before the invasion. We also discuss the legend of the night raid on Bukhara, the use of captured engineers turned spies, and how Mongol intelligence practices influenced later empires like the Ilkhanate and Yuan dynasty. This episode draws on The Secret History of the Mongols, Juvayni's Tarikh-i Jahan-gusha, and Rashid al-Din's Jami' al-tawarikh. A fresh angle on Mongol statecraft that reveals how information was the true weapon of empire. #MongolSpies #GenghisKhan #MongolIntelligence #Yurtchi #Jamchi #Khwarezm #Bukhara #Tarikh-iJahan-gusha #RashidAlDin #Juvayni #SilkRoad #MongolEmpire #CentralAsia #SteppeWarfare #AncientEspionage #PaxMongolica #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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