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