Why the Mongol Empire Split Apart So Quickly — Fexingo History

The Mongol Empire's Postal System Collapse

6 min · Eilen
jakson The Mongol Empire's Postal System Collapse kansikuva

Kuvaus

The Yam, Chinggis Khan's legendary postal relay system, was the nervous system that held the Mongol Empire together — and its breakdown was a major factor in the empire's fragmentation. In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna trace the Yam from its origins under Ögedei Khan through its peak under Möngke, then examine the rot that set in during the Toluid Civil War and the subsequent rival khanates. They explore how the Jochids, Chagataids, and Tolui's descendants weaponized the relay stations for military intelligence and economic warfare, how the Paper Money Disaster under Khubilai disrupted Yam funding, and how climate change — especially the droughts and cold snaps of the late 13th century — made maintaining the network across the vast Eurasian steppe impossible. Specific stations like Almalyk, Beshbalik, and the Yam routes across the Gobi Desert feature, along with the roles of darughachi (imperial overseers) and the Mongols' use of the Uyghur script for administrative communication. A turning point: the loss of the Yam's centralized authority after Möngke's death in 1259, when no single khan could command the loyalty of all post riders, allowing local lords to seize infrastructure for their own purposes. The episode closes with a reflection on how the very efficiency that once united the empire became a tool for its dissolution. #MongolEmpire #Yam #PostalSystem #Ögedei #MöngkeKhan #ToluidCivilWar #Khubilai #Jochid #Chagataid #Almalyk #Beshbalik #GobiDesert #Darughachi #UyghurScript #ClimateChange #Steppe #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Kommentit

0

Ole ensimmäinen kommentoija

Rekisteröidy nyt ja liity Why the Mongol Empire Split Apart So Quickly — Fexingo History-yhteisöön!

Aloita maksutta

14 vrk ilmainen kokeilu

Kokeilun jälkeen 7,99 € / kuukausi. · Peru milloin tahansa.

  • Podimon podcastit
  • 20 kuunteluaikaa / kuukausi
  • Lataa offline-käyttöön

Kaikki jaksot

123 jaksot

jakson The Chagatai Khanate's Unlikely Conversion to Islam kansikuva

The Chagatai Khanate's Unlikely Conversion to Islam

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the pivotal moment when the Chagatai Khanate, the most stubbornly shamanistic and Buddhist of the Mongol successor states, officially converted to Islam under Khan Mubarak Shah in 1266. They trace the internal pressures from Transoxiana's Muslim merchants and the Sufi Sayyid Arif, the role of the Jochid and Ilkhanate conversions in creating a domino effect, and how this shift fractured the khanate into a Muslim west and Buddhist east. They also discuss the paradox that the conversion helped the Chagatai Khanate survive Kaidu's wars but ultimately led to its cultural split. The episode covers Mubarak Shah's short reign, the backlash from the Moghulistan nomads, and the long-term consequences for the Silk Road trade network. #ChagataiKhanate #MubarakShah #MongolEmpire #Islam #Transoxiana #Moghulistan #SayyidArif #Sufi #SilkRoad #Kaidu #Jochid #Ilkhanate #Conversion #Buddhism #Shamanism #CentralAsia #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

27. kesä 20267 min
jakson The Mongol Empire's Postal System Collapse kansikuva

The Mongol Empire's Postal System Collapse

The Yam, Chinggis Khan's legendary postal relay system, was the nervous system that held the Mongol Empire together — and its breakdown was a major factor in the empire's fragmentation. In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna trace the Yam from its origins under Ögedei Khan through its peak under Möngke, then examine the rot that set in during the Toluid Civil War and the subsequent rival khanates. They explore how the Jochids, Chagataids, and Tolui's descendants weaponized the relay stations for military intelligence and economic warfare, how the Paper Money Disaster under Khubilai disrupted Yam funding, and how climate change — especially the droughts and cold snaps of the late 13th century — made maintaining the network across the vast Eurasian steppe impossible. Specific stations like Almalyk, Beshbalik, and the Yam routes across the Gobi Desert feature, along with the roles of darughachi (imperial overseers) and the Mongols' use of the Uyghur script for administrative communication. A turning point: the loss of the Yam's centralized authority after Möngke's death in 1259, when no single khan could command the loyalty of all post riders, allowing local lords to seize infrastructure for their own purposes. The episode closes with a reflection on how the very efficiency that once united the empire became a tool for its dissolution. #MongolEmpire #Yam #PostalSystem #Ögedei #MöngkeKhan #ToluidCivilWar #Khubilai #Jochid #Chagataid #Almalyk #Beshbalik #GobiDesert #Darughachi #UyghurScript #ClimateChange #Steppe #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Eilen6 min
jakson The Jagun Rebellion: Mongol Empire's First Peasant Revolt kansikuva

The Jagun Rebellion: Mongol Empire's First Peasant Revolt

In the early 1250s, just as the Mongol Empire was reaching its greatest extent under Möngke Khan, a rebellion erupted in the heart of the empire — not from a rival prince or a conquered kingdom, but from a village of common herders and farmers in the Altai Mountains. This is the story of the Jagun Rebellion, a peasant uprising that forced Möngke to divert resources from the conquest of Song China and exposed deep cracks in the empire's administrative structure. Lucas and Luna explore how over-taxation, the yam system's burden on local communities, and the arrogance of darughachi officials sparked a revolt that spread across three valleys. They discuss the rebel leader, a former caravan guard named Toghan, who used smoke signals and captured yam horses to coordinate attacks. The rebellion lasted only 18 months, but its suppression came at a cost: Möngke enacted the first empire-wide tax reforms, including the census reforms of 1252 and the establishment of famine relief granaries. Yet the episode also reveals how the revolt foreshadowed later fractures — the northern valleys aligned with the Golden Horde, while the southern ones supported the Yuan. Specific details include the Tarim Basin's grain shortages, the role of Uyghur scribes, and the execution of Toghan in Karakorum. This is a micro-history of a forgotten revolt that shaped the empire's decline. #MongolEmpire #JagunRebellion #MöngkeKhan #PeasantRevolt #AltaiMountains #YamSystem #Darughachi #Toghan #Karakorum #Census1252 #TarimBasin #UyghurScribes #GoldenHorde #YuanDynasty #FamineRelief #History #FexingoHistory #CentralAsia Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Eilen6 min
jakson The Battle of Vâliyân: How a Desert Fortress Killed Mongol Unity kansikuva

The Battle of Vâliyân: How a Desert Fortress Killed Mongol Unity

In 1221, as Genghis Khan rampaged through Khwarezm, one fortress held out long enough to break the Mongol succession. Vâliyân, a desert stronghold in modern Turkmenistan, forced Genghis to summon his sons Jochi, Chagatai, and Ögedei for a joint siege. But the battle exposed the simmering rivalry between Jochi and Chagatai — a feud that Genghis himself had to mediate. This episode digs into the forgotten siege of Vâliyân, the bitter argument between the brothers at a victory feast, and how Genghis's uneasy compromise set the stage for the empire's fragmentation. We explore the strategic significance of the fortress, the tension between Jochi's legitimacy and Chagatai's pride, and why Genghis's final words about leadership failed to hold the empire together. Listeners will meet the key figures — Genghis, Jochi, Chagatai, Ögedei, and the Khwarezmshah Jalal al-Din — and understand how a single desert outpost in 1221 planted the seeds of the Mongol Empire's collapse decades later. #MongolEmpire #GenghisKhan #Vâliyân #Jochi #Chagatai #Ögedei #Khwarezmia #SiegeWarfare #MongolSuccession #BattleOfValiyan #CentralAsia #DesertFortress #JalalAlDin #Barbarossa #History #FexingoHistory #MongolUnity #EmpireFragmentation Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

25. kesä 20269 min
jakson Möngke Khan: The Last Great Khan Who Held the Empire Together kansikuva

Möngke Khan: The Last Great Khan Who Held the Empire Together

Before the empire fractured into warring khanates, there was Möngke Khan — the grandson of Chinggis who briefly re-unified Mongol power and nearly finished the conquest of Song China. This episode explores his ambitious reforms: the census that taxed every nomad and farmer, the standardized postal relay that connected Karakorum to Persia, and the campaign that Hulegu took to Baghdad under Möngke's orders. We also dig into the succession crisis that followed his death in 1259 — how the siege of Diaoyu Fortress became a hinge point, and how the Toluid Civil War between Kublai and Ariq Böke shattered the single empire for good. Featuring the Buddhist monk Haiyun, the Confucian advisor Liu Bingzhong, and the friction between Möngke's traditionalist policies and Kublai's sinophilic leanings. #MöngkeKhan #MongolEmpire #ToluidCivilWar #Karakorum #DiaoyuFortress #KublaiKhan #AriqBöke #Hulegu #Baghdad1258 #YuanDynasty #SongDynasty #Haiyun #LiuBingzhong #MongolCensus #PostalRelaySystem #CentralAsia #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

25. kesä 20267 min