The Mongols vs Europe: What Almost Changed Western History — Fexingo History

The Mongol Bridge of Boats at Muhi 1241

5 min · 29. kesä 2026
jakson The Mongol Bridge of Boats at Muhi 1241 kansikuva

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In April 1241, on the Sajó River near Muhi, Hungary, the Mongol army under Batu Khan and Subutai used a devastatingly simple piece of engineering to trap King Béla IV's army: a bridge of boats. This episode examines the construction, tactics, and aftermath of that river crossing, drawing on the Carmen Miserabile of Rogerius of Apulia and the Historia Salonitana of Thomas of Split. We discuss the timing of the crossing under cover of darkness, the use of catapults on the east bank to suppress Hungarian defenders, and the subsequent encirclement that led to one of the worst defeats in medieval Hungarian history. The episode also explores the broader implications: how Mongol bridge-building skills, honed on the steppe and in China, allowed them to overcome Europe's rivers, which Christian armies had long relied on as defensive barriers. We touch on the controversial claim that the bridge was actually a pontoon bridge, not a permanent stone structure, and what that means for understanding Mongol logistical genius. #Mongols #BattleOfMuhi #Subutai #BatuKhan #BélaIV #SajóRiver #BridgeOfBoats #MongolTactics #Hungary1241 #CarmenMiserabile #RogeriusOfApulia #ThomasOfSplit #MongolEngineering #RiverCrossing #MedievalWarfare #FexingoHistory #History #MongolInvasionEurope Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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jakson The Mongol Siege of Trogir 1242 King Bela's Narrow Escape kansikuva

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In the winter of 1242, as Mongol armies under Kadan swept through Croatia and reached the Adriatic, King Béla IV of Hungary fled to the fortified island city of Trogir. This episode reconstructs the siege that nearly cost Europe one of its last great kings. We examine how Trogir's geography—a walled city on a tiny island between the mainland and the larger island of Čiovo—made it nearly impregnable to Mongol cavalry and siegecraft. Lucas and Luna walk through the key sources: Thomas of Split's *Historia Salonitana*, which describes how the Mongols tried to build a causeway to reach the city, and how the citizens held firm. We also explore the political context—Béla had just lost his army at the Battle of Mohi and was running out of allies. The Mongol failure at Trogir marked the southernmost point of the invasion and helped convince Kadan that further pursuit was futile. Why didn't the Mongols just starve the city out? What role did the arrival of spring and news from the east play? This episode offers a granular look at a pivotal moment that historians often skip. Includes close readings of medieval chronicles, analysis of siege engineering on rocky Adriatic shores, and the strategic calculus that turned the Mongols back north. #SiegeOfTrogir #KingBelaIV #MongolInvasion #Kadan #HistoriaSalonitana #ThomasOfSplit #Adriatic #1242 #Croatia #MongolCavalry #MedievalHistory #SiegeWarfare #Dalmatia #FexingoHistory #History #MilitaryHistory #MedievalEurope #MongolEmpire Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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jakson The Mongol Siege of Zagreb: Europe's Last Stand in 1242 kansikuva

The Mongol Siege of Zagreb: Europe's Last Stand in 1242

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jakson The Mongol Siege of Székesfehérvár 1242: A King's Last Stand kansikuva

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In early 1242, as the Mongol army swept through Hungary, King Béla IV made a desperate stand at Székesfehérvár, the coronation city of Hungarian kings. This episode reconstructs the siege through the eyewitness accounts of Rogerius of Apulia in his *Carmen Miserabile* and Thomas of Split's *Historia Salonitana*. We explore the city's formidable fortifications, the Mongol tactics using naphtha and siege engines, and the failed assault that allowed Béla to escape to the Adriatic. We also examine the controversial role of the Johannite Knights and the nearby Cistercian abbey, and ask: was this the point where the Mongol advance in Europe truly stalled? Featuring details on the *Yam* communication system, the *tumen* structure, and the political turmoil in Karakorum that shaped Batu Khan's decisions. A deep dive into a lesser-known but pivotal moment of the 1241-42 campaign. #Székesfehérvár #BélaIV #MongolInvasion #1242 #RogeriusOfApulia #CarmenMiserabile #ThomasOfSplit #HistoriaSalonitana #BatuKhan #Subutai #Yam #SiegeWarfare #Naphtha #JohanniteKnights #Hungary #MedievalEurope #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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jakson Mongol Siege of Esztergom 1242: The Cathedral That Survived kansikuva

Mongol Siege of Esztergom 1242: The Cathedral That Survived

In January 1242, as Mongol armies swept through Hungary, they reached Esztergom, the kingdom's richest city and seat of the archbishop. While most of the city was sacked and burned, the stone cathedral atop Castle Hill held out—a rare Mongol failure in an otherwise devastating campaign. This episode pieces together the siege from the accounts of Rogerius of Apulia and Thomas of Split, explores why the Mongols couldn't take the fortress, and examines what it reveals about their strategic limits in Europe. We also look at the devastating winter that followed, the role of the Danube's frozen bridges, and how Esztergom's resilience became a symbol of resistance. No repeats of previous episodes' ground: this is a deep dive into a single, pivotal siege that has only been mentioned in passing before. #Mongols #Esztergom #Hungary1242 #Siege #BatuKhan #Subutai #RogeriusOfApulia #ThomasOfSplit #Cathedral #Danube #WinterCampaign #MedievalWarfare #Fortification #GoldenHorde #CarmenMiserabile #HistoriaSalonitana #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

13. heinä 20267 min
jakson Mongol Army Winter Tactics in Hungary 1241-1242 kansikuva

Mongol Army Winter Tactics in Hungary 1241-1242

When the Mongols invaded Hungary in 1241, they crossed the frozen Carpathian passes in deep winter, a feat that stunned medieval Europe. This episode explores how Batu Khan and Subutai used the bitter cold as a weapon, moving heavy siege equipment and cavalry over ice roads to attack cities like Pest and Esztergom while the rivers were solid. We look at the logistical miracle of keeping horses fed on the frozen steppe, the use of captured local guides to navigate snow-covered terrain, and how the Hungarian king Béla IV's forces, accustomed to summer campaigns, were caught off guard by the speed of the Mongol advance. We also examine the cultural contrast: Mongol nomads were adapted to extreme cold, while European knights struggled with frostbite and supply breakdown. Drawing on the chronicle of Rogerius of Apulia and archaeological evidence from mass graves, we unpack how winter warfare nearly broke Hungary—and why the Danube thaw in March 1242 may have saved what was left of the kingdom. #MongolInvasion #WinterWarfare #BatuKhan #Subutai #Hungary1241 #Pest #Esztergom #RogeriusOfApulia #CarpathianPasses #IceRoads #BélaIV #MedievalWarfare #Logistics #FrozenDanube #MassGraves #NomadicTactics #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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