The Secret Communication Network of the Mongol Empire — Fexingo History

The Yam's River Patrols: Mongol Postal Security on the Inland Waterways

5 min · 10 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio The Yam's River Patrols: Mongol Postal Security on the Inland Waterways

Descripción

When we think of the Mongol Yam, we imagine riders galloping across the steppe. But the empire's rivers and canals were just as vital—and just as guarded. In this episode, we follow the little-known story of the Mongol river patrols: armed boats that protected postal barges, enforced the Yassa, and even collected tolls on the Grand Canal. We meet the 'water yamchi'—the boatmen who doubled as couriers—and the naval inspectors who answered directly to Khanbalik. Through the Yuan shi and the writings of the Venetian merchant Marco Polo, we uncover how Khubilai Khan's engineers built locks and dredged channels to keep the postal system moving, even as rebellions like the Red Turbans used the same waterways to ambush imperial convoys. Along the way, we ask: did these patrols speed communication or simply add another layer of bureaucracy? The answer may surprise you. #Yam #MongolEmpire #KhubilaiKhan #GrandCanal #YuanDynasty #RiverPatrol #MarcoPolo #YuanShi #Yassa #PostalHistory #InlandWaterways #RedTurbanRebellion #Khanbalik #ChineseHistory #SteppeEmpire #Logistics #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Secret Communication Network of the Mongol Empire — Fexingo History!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

160 episodios

episode The Yam's Secret Scroll: Mongol Ciphers and Crypto-Communications artwork

The Yam's Secret Scroll: Mongol Ciphers and Crypto-Communications

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore a little-known facet of the Mongol Yam postal system: its use of cryptography and secret communications. While the Yam is famous for speed and relay stations, the Mongols also developed sophisticated methods to protect sensitive messages. We delve into the use of the 'Uighur script cipher', a simple substitution cipher used by Mongol chancelleries, and the 'Phags-pa script', a universal script created by Khubilai Khan's imperial scholar that functioned as a form of cryptographic encoding for official communications. We also discuss the famous 'paiza' tablets with tamgha seals, which served as both credentials and a primitive authentication system, and how the Mongols' reliance on multilingual secretaries (bitikchi) from conquered peoples created both security and vulnerability. Along the way, we touch on Marco Polo's descriptions of the Yam's secrecy protocols, and the fate of a Mongol spy whose encoded message was intercepted by Mamluks. Finally, we reflect on how the Mongol Empire's vast scale forced them to innovate in ways that presaged modern intelligence networks. #MongolEmpire #Yam #Cryptography #PhagsPaScript #UighurScript #Bitikchi #Paiza #Tamgha #MarcoPolo #KhubilaiKhan #Mamluk #Spycraft #SecretHistory #CentralAsia #13thCentury #History #FexingoHistory #CommunicationHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer7 min
episode The Yam's Tax Revolt: How Mongol Postal Burdens Sparked Uprisings artwork

The Yam's Tax Revolt: How Mongol Postal Burdens Sparked Uprisings

The Mongol Yam postal system was the empire's circulatory system, but its enormous cost—horses, grain, labor—fell on local communities. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the hidden ledger of resentment: the corvée duties, the requisition quotas, the bribery and extortion that turned the Yam into a flashpoint for rebellion. From the 13th-century peasant uprisings in northern China to the tax revolts that weakened the Ilkhanate, they trace how a system designed for control bred the very chaos it was meant to suppress. Drawing on the Yuan shi, Rashid al-Din's Jami' al-tawarikh, and Juvayni's chronicles, they examine specific rebellions in Hebei and Khorasan, the role of corrupt yamchi, and the reforms attempted by Khubilai and Ghazan. A story of unintended consequences: how the world's greatest communication network became a catalyst for its own collapse. #MongolEmpire #Yam #PostalSystem #TaxRevolt #YuanDynasty #Ilkhanate #KhubilaiKhan #GhazanKhan #YuanShi #RashidAlDin #Juvayni #PeasantUprising #Corvee #Khorasan #Hebei #FexingoHistory #History #CentralAsia Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer9 min
episode The Yam's Forgotten Women Spies of the Mongol Post artwork

The Yam's Forgotten Women Spies of the Mongol Post

In this episode, Lucas and Luna uncover a hidden chapter of Mongol intelligence: the women who served as spies and couriers within the Yam system. Drawing on the Yuan shi and The Secret History of the Mongols, they explore the story of Khutulun, the wrestling princess who commanded postal routes, and lesser-known female yamchi who gathered gossip and monitored officials. They discuss how Mongol women, unlike their sedentary counterparts, enjoyed mobility and influence, and how the empire leveraged this for surveillance. The conversation also touches on the paiza credentials that some women held, the role of khatuns like Töregene in managing postal networks during regencies, and the eventual loss of women's roles as the Yam became more bureaucratic. A rarely told perspective on the Mongol Empire's secret communications. #MongolEmpire #Yam #WomenSpies #Khutulun #YuanShi #SecretHistoryOfTheMongols #Paiza #FemaleCouriers #Töregene #MongolWomen #SteppeHistory #Intelligence #CentralAsia #13thCentury #Khanbalik #History #FexingoHistory #Podcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

14 de jul de 20264 min
episode The Yam's Baggage Train: Mongol Postal Supply Logistics artwork

The Yam's Baggage Train: Mongol Postal Supply Logistics

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the unseen backbone of the Mongol Empire's Yam postal system: the supply logistics that kept thousands of riders and horses fed, equipped, and moving across the steppe. Drawing on the Yuan shi, Marco Polo's accounts, and the Jami' al-tawarikh, they reveal how the empire managed grain depots, fodder allocations, and livestock rotation at relay stations from Karakorum to Khanbalik. The discussion zeroes in on the practical challenges of provisioning a network that stretched 25,000 miles, including the role of local communities in tax obligations known as alban, the use of camels in arid zones, and the specialized yamchi handlers who maintained remounts. Lucas connects these supply chains to broader Mongol statecraft—how Ögedei Khan's edicts standardized station resources, and how Khubilai Khan's reforms introduced civilian contractors. The episode also touches on the lesser-known 'baggage yam' (aghtachi) that moved heavy goods, and the ecological impact of grazing demands on the steppe. #MongolEmpire #YamPostalSystem #SupplyLogistics #YuanShi #MarcoPolo #JamiAltawarikh #OgedeiKhan #KhubilaiKhan #yamchi #aghtachi #SteppeLogistics #MongolHorses #CentralAsiaHistory #Karakorum #Khanbalik #FexingoHistory #History #MongolPostalRelay Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

14 de jul de 20267 min
episode The Yam's Last Ride: How the Mongol Postal System Outlived the Empire artwork

The Yam's Last Ride: How the Mongol Postal System Outlived the Empire

The Mongol postal system, the Yam, is famous as the empire's circulatory system, but what happened to it after the Mongol Empire fragmented? In this episode, Lucas and Luna trace the Yam's surprising afterlife across Asia. They explore how the Timurids revived the Yam in Central Asia, with Tamerlane using it to project power from Samarkand. In China, the Ming dynasty under the Hongwu Emperor adopted the Yuan postal network wholesale, renaming it the Yizhan and extending it to the southern coast. The Mughals in India, founded by Babur who claimed descent from both Timur and Genghis Khan, established their own version, the Dak Chowki, which later evolved into the British Raj's postal system. Lucas discusses the Russian Empire's adaptation, the Yamskaya povinnost, which endured until the 19th century and gave its name to hundreds of Russian towns. The episode also touches on the Safavids and the Ottomans, who hybridized the Yam with their own traditions. By the end, the listener understands that the Yam didn't truly collapse—it dispersed, mutated, and merged into the postal DNA of half the world. #MongolPostalSystem #Yam #TimuridEmpire #MingDynasty #MughalEmpire #RussianEmpire #Tamerlane #Hongwu #Babur #YamskayaPovinnost #DakChowki #SilkRoad #PostalHistory #CentralAsia #History #FexingoHistory #EmpireLegacy #GlobalHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

13 de jul de 20267 min