Why Every Great Empire Eventually Falls — Fexingo History

The Inca Empire: A Collapse Without Writing

6 min · 1 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio The Inca Empire: A Collapse Without Writing

Descripción

When Francisco Pizarro and 168 conquistadors toppled the Inca Empire in 1533, they exploited a civilization already fractured by civil war. But how did a state that stretched 4,000 kilometers along the Andes—mastering terrace farming, quipu record-keeping, and a road network rivaling Rome's—fall so fast? This episode follows the final decade of the Inca: the deadly smallpox sweeping south before the Spanish, the brothers Huáscar and Atahualpa tearing the empire apart in a succession war, and the ambush at Cajamarca where a room full of gold sealed the empire's fate. We examine the quipu—knotted cords that recorded everything from census data to epic poetry—and the paradox of a civilization that thrived without a written language. Why did native allies flock to the Spanish? What role did the mitma policy of forced relocation play in undermining loyalty? And could the Inca have survived if they'd sent a diplomatic mission instead of a war party? We look at the decisive battle of Quipaipán, the murder of Atahualpa, and the tragic last stand of Manco Inca at Ollantaytambo. A story of disease, betrayal, and the terrifying speed of imperial collapse. #IncaEmpire #SpanishConquest #Atahualpa #Huáscar #FranciscoPizarro #Cajamarca #Quipu #Smallpox #Ollantaytambo #MancoInca #Andes #Tawantinsuyu #Mitma #ColonialHistory #EmpireCollapse #IndigenousHistory #WorldHistory #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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129 episodios

episode The Inca Empire: A Collapse Without Writing artwork

The Inca Empire: A Collapse Without Writing

When Francisco Pizarro and 168 conquistadors toppled the Inca Empire in 1533, they exploited a civilization already fractured by civil war. But how did a state that stretched 4,000 kilometers along the Andes—mastering terrace farming, quipu record-keeping, and a road network rivaling Rome's—fall so fast? This episode follows the final decade of the Inca: the deadly smallpox sweeping south before the Spanish, the brothers Huáscar and Atahualpa tearing the empire apart in a succession war, and the ambush at Cajamarca where a room full of gold sealed the empire's fate. We examine the quipu—knotted cords that recorded everything from census data to epic poetry—and the paradox of a civilization that thrived without a written language. Why did native allies flock to the Spanish? What role did the mitma policy of forced relocation play in undermining loyalty? And could the Inca have survived if they'd sent a diplomatic mission instead of a war party? We look at the decisive battle of Quipaipán, the murder of Atahualpa, and the tragic last stand of Manco Inca at Ollantaytambo. A story of disease, betrayal, and the terrifying speed of imperial collapse. #IncaEmpire #SpanishConquest #Atahualpa #Huáscar #FranciscoPizarro #Cajamarca #Quipu #Smallpox #Ollantaytambo #MancoInca #Andes #Tawantinsuyu #Mitma #ColonialHistory #EmpireCollapse #IndigenousHistory #WorldHistory #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

1 de jul de 20266 min
episode The War That Broken the Samurai: The Genpei War and the Rise of the Shogun artwork

The War That Broken the Samurai: The Genpei War and the Rise of the Shogun

This episode explores the Genpei War (1180-1185), the decisive conflict that ended the Heian period and established the first shogunate in Japan. Lucas and Luna discuss the key figures: Minamoto no Yoritomo, his brother Yoshitsune, and the Taira clan leader Taira no Kiyomori. They cover the pivotal naval battle of Dan-no-ura, where Yoshitsune's tactical genius—using the tide to outflank the Taira fleet—led to a decisive Minamoto victory. The episode also examines the role of the warrior class, the samurai code of honor (bushidō), and how the aftermath led to the Kamakura shogunate, a feudal military government that would rule Japan for centuries. Listeners will gain insight into how a single war reshaped Japanese society, shifting power from the imperial court to military warlords. #GenpeiWar #Minamoto #Taira #Samurai #Shogunate #HeianPeriod #KamakuraShogunate #Dan-no-ura #MinamotoNoYoritomo #MinamotoNoYoshitsune #TairaNoKiyomori #Bushido #FeudalJapan #JapaneseHistory #History #FexingoHistory #War #Collapse Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer7 min
episode The Fall of the Grand Canal: Water, Grain, and Ming Collapse artwork

The Fall of the Grand Canal: Water, Grain, and Ming Collapse

The Ming Dynasty didn't fall because of Manchu invaders alone—it drowned in a crisis of its own making: the collapse of the Grand Canal. This episode traces how the 1,100-mile waterway, once the economic spine of China, began to silt up in the late 16th century. We examine the Yellow River's devastating course changes, the breakdown of the grain tribute system, the rise of private smuggling, and the desperate policy failures of the Wanli and Chongzhen emperors. Key figures include the eunuch admiral Zheng He (whose treasure fleets depended on canal grain), the reformer Zhang Juzheng, and the rebel leader Li Zicheng, whose army marched on Beijing as grain supplies failed. We also look at the Little Ice Age's role in exacerbating drought and famine, and compare the Ming dilemma to earlier canal-dependent empires like the Sui and Tang. How does a state that literally runs on water survive when the water turns against it? #History #GrandCanal #MingDynasty #FexingoHistory #YellowRiver #GrainTribute #LittleIceAge #ZhengHe #ZhangJuzheng #LiZicheng #WanliEmperor #Chongzhen #CanalCollapse #ClimateHistory #Infrastructure #China #Waterways #Collapse Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer6 min
episode The Fall of the Western Roman Economy: Why the Solidus Couldn't Save Rome artwork

The Fall of the Western Roman Economy: Why the Solidus Couldn't Save Rome

Why did the Western Roman Empire collapse while the Eastern half survived for another thousand years? This episode looks past the usual barbarian invasion narrative and focuses on an overlooked factor: economics. Hosts Lucas and Luna examine the Roman monetary system, focusing on the gold solidus introduced by Constantine. They trace how the solidus stabilized the Eastern economy but inadvertently accelerated decline in the West, where tax collection in kind collapsed and the state hoarded gold. The conversation covers the role of the annona, the decline of long-distance trade, and the rise of the landed aristocracy at the expense of the imperial treasury. Key figures include Constantine, Diocletian, and the sixth-century Eastern emperor Anastasius, whose monetary reforms helped revive the East. A specific turning point: the year 476 is less important than the fiscal unraveling that made it inevitable. The episode draws on recent scholarship by Peter Heather and Michael McCormick to argue that Rome fell not because of one catastrophic blow, but because its economic foundations quietly eroded. #RomanEmpire #Solidus #Constantine #Diocletian #Anastasius #WesternRomanEmpire #EasternRomanEmpire #Annona #Taxation #GoldCoinage #LateAntiquity #PeterHeather #MichaelMcCormick #FiscalCrisis #EconomicHistory #Collapse #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

29 de jun de 20267 min
episode The Mongol Empire's Fracture: Why Genghis's Legacy Couldn't Hold artwork

The Mongol Empire's Fracture: Why Genghis's Legacy Couldn't Hold

Genghis Khan united the Mongol tribes and built the largest contiguous land empire in history. But within a generation, his descendants tore it apart. This episode explores the Mongol Empire's collapse from within: the succession crisis after Ogedei's death, the rivalry between Kublai and his brother Ariq Boke, the division into four khanates, and the role of the Yassa legal code. We discuss the Battle of Ain Jalut, where the Mamluks stopped Mongol expansion, and the eventual fragmentation into the Yuan, Ilkhanate, Chagatai, and Golden Horde. Lucas and Luna examine how personal ambition, cultural assimilation, and administrative overreach turned a unified conquest machine into warring states. Was the empire doomed by its own success? Listen to find out. #MongolEmpire #GenghisKhan #KublaiKhan #AriqBoke #Ogedei #Yassa #BattleOfAinJalut #Mamluks #YuanDynasty #Ilkhanate #GoldenHorde #ChagataiKhanate #SuccessionCrisis #MongolCollapse #Kurultai #EmpireFracture #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

29 de jun de 20267 min