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

Mongol Siege Warfare: The Engineers Who Conquered Fortresses

7 min · 12 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Mongol Siege Warfare: The Engineers Who Conquered Fortresses

Descripción

In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna dive into one of the most surprising aspects of Mongol conquest: how steppe nomads became masters of siege warfare. From the Great Wall to Baghdad, the Mongols didn't just rely on cavalry — they systematically absorbed Chinese, Persian, and Muslim engineers, deployed massive trebuchets, and used psychological warfare to break the most formidable fortifications. We follow the career of the Chinese general Guo Kan, who directed sieges from the Pamirs to the Mediterranean, and examine the tactical innovations that made Mongol sieges so devastating, including the use of captured labor, diversion dams, and terror tactics. The episode also confronts the human cost: the massacres that followed many sieges, and the historical debates over casualties. Specific battles include the sieges of Kaifeng (1233), Nishapur (1221), and Baghdad (1258). We also touch on the legacy of Mongol siege techniques in later gunpowder empires. #MongolSiegeWarfare #GuoKan #SiegeOfKaifeng #SiegeOfBaghdad #Trebuchet #ChineseEngineers #PersianEngineers #MongolEmpire #GenghisKhan #Hulagu #Subotai #CompositeBow #Yassa #Mangonel #PaxMongolica #History #FexingoHistory #MilitaryHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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109 episodios

episode The Mongol Empire's Legal Revolution: The Yassa Code artwork

The Mongol Empire's Legal Revolution: The Yassa Code

In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore the Mongol Empire's legal code known as the Yassa, or Great Law. Often misunderstood as a single written document, the Yassa was actually an evolving set of decrees attributed to Genghis Khan that governed everything from military organization to religious tolerance. Lucas walks Luna through how the Yassa was created at the quriltai of 1206, how it was transmitted orally and in writing, and how it shaped the empire's unity across Eurasia. Specific provisions are discussed: the death penalty for deserters and horse thieves, tax exemptions for scholars and religious leaders, and the famous rule that ambassadors must not be harmed—a key to Mongol diplomacy. The episode also covers how the Yassa influenced later legal systems, including the Timurid and Mughal empires, and why no complete copy survives today. Listeners learn about the roles of Shigi Qutuqu, Genghis's adopted son and chief judge, and Rashid al-Din, the Persian historian who recorded fragments of the law. The conversation finishes with a reflection on whether the Yassa was truly a revolutionary legal system or a codification of steppe customs. #Yassa #GenghisKhan #MongolEmpire #MongolLaw #ShigiQutuqu #RashidAlDin #quriltai #SteppeCustoms #MedievalLaw #CentralAsia #MongolConquests #LegalHistory #PaxMongolica #Karakorum #Ilkhanate #ChagataiKhanate #TimuridEmpire #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

20 de jun de 20268 min
episode The Silk Road Under Mongol Rule: Safety, Trade, and Travel artwork

The Silk Road Under Mongol Rule: Safety, Trade, and Travel

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how the Mongol Empire transformed the Silk Road from a dangerous patchwork of warring states into a single, relatively safe corridor for trade and travel. They discuss the Pax Mongolica, the Yam postal relay system, the ortogh merchant partnerships, and the role of paper money (chao) in facilitating commerce. Specific figures like Marco Polo, Rabban Bar Sauma, and Ögedei Khan appear, along with places such as Khanbaliq, Karakorum, and Samarkand. The episode also touches on the spread of ideas, technologies, and germs along the Silk Road, including the Black Death. Listeners will come away understanding how Mongol policies—standardized weights, protected caravans, religious tolerance—created the first true global economy. #SilkRoad #PaxMongolica #MongolEmpire #Yam #Ortogh #Chao #MarcoPolo #RabbanBarSauma #ÖgedeiKhan #Khanbaliq #Karakorum #Samarkand #BlackDeath #Trade #Globalization #History #FexingoHistory #CentralAsia Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer5 min
episode Mongol Hunting and the Kublai: How Steppe Game Forged an Empire artwork

Mongol Hunting and the Kublai: How Steppe Game Forged an Empire

Before the Mongol Empire conquered half the world, Genghis Khan spent years perfecting the art of the kublai—the massive, empire-wide winter hunting campaigns that did far more than fill bellies. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how the Mongol hunting tradition was a military training ground, a logistical proving ground, and a political stage. They track a single hunt from its start with scouts fanning out across the steppe to the climax where Genghis himself directs the slaughter. Along the way, they unpack how the kublai taught commanders like Subotai to coordinate tumens across hundreds of miles, how the ritual of releasing animals became a lesson in resource management, and how a disastrous hunt in 1227 may have triggered a succession crisis. The conversation ties these practices to the Yam system, the Yassa code, and the empire's obsession with data collection. This is the forgotten foundation of Mongol power: the hunt that was never just a hunt. #MongolEmpire #Kublai #GenghisKhan #SteppeHunting #MongolWarfare #Subotai #Yassa #YamSystem #MongolLogistics #SecretHistoryOfTheMongols #Juvayni #MongolHunting #MongolSuccession #MongolTraining #CentralAsia #History #FexingoHistory #MongolTactics Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer7 min
episode Mongol Postal Relay: The Yam System That Connected Eurasia artwork

Mongol Postal Relay: The Yam System That Connected Eurasia

Before the Mongol Empire, a message from China to Persia could take months or years. Under Genghis Khan and his successors, the Yam — a relay system of horse stations stretching from Karakorum to the Black Sea — cut that journey to weeks. This episode explores the Yam's structure: how riders called jamchi swapped mounts every 25 to 40 miles, carrying paiza tablets that guaranteed passage and provisions. We look at the scale — over 1,400 stations under Khubilai Khan — and the cost, which strained local populations forced to supply horses and grain. Marco Polo described it with admiration; William of Rubruck used it. But the system also enabled rapid military coordination and intelligence gathering, tying together an empire of 24 million square kilometers. We discuss the toll on commoners, the corruption that crept in, and how the Yam influenced later postal systems like the Ottoman ulak and Russian yamshchik. Specific figures: Ögedei Khan expanded the Yam in the 1230s; Möngke Khan added stations to Persia; under Ghazan Khan, the Ilkhanate reformed it. Sources include Juvayni, Marco Polo, and the Secret History of the Mongols. #Yam #MongolEmpire #Jamchi #Paiza #PostalRelay #ÖgedeiKhan #KhubilaiKhan #MarcoPolo #WilliamOfRubruck #SilkRoad #SteppeLogistics #Karakorum #Ilkhanate #GhazanKhan #MongolCommunications #History #FexingoHistory #CentralAsia Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

18 de jun de 20267 min
episode Mongol Draft Animals and the Conquest of Eurasia artwork

Mongol Draft Animals and the Conquest of Eurasia

Long before the Mongol composite bow or the siege engineers, the empire ran on four legs. This episode dives into the unsung workhorses of the steppe — the horses, oxen, camels, yaks, and even sheep that moved the Mongols across Eurasia. Lucas and Luna explore how Mongol ponies could survive on snow, how Bactrian camels enabled the Silk Road, and how animal logistics shaped the Yam system, military campaigns, and daily life. They touch on the role of mares' milk, the preference for geldings, and the shock of Chinese chroniclers seeing Tartars live on blood and milk. A specific focus: the 'camel corps' in the Khwarazmian campaign and the use of yak trains in Tibet. The episode also confronts the ecological cost — overgrazing, deforestation, and the limits of animal power. No prior episodes have covered draft animals as a distinct topic. #MongolEmpire #SteppeLogistics #DraftAnimals #HorseCulture #BactrianCamel #Yak #MongolPony #SilkRoad #YamSystem #GenghisKhan #Khwarazm #CentralAsia #MareMilk #GobiDesert #AnimalPower #History #FexingoHistory #EurasianHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

18 de jun de 20265 min