Byzantine Secrets: How the Empire Survived for 1,000 Years — Fexingo History

The Varangian Guard Who Burned a Viking Settlement

5 min · 17 jun 2026
aflevering The Varangian Guard Who Burned a Viking Settlement artwork

Beschrijving

In 1043, a Byzantine fleet sailed into the Baltic Sea and burned a Viking trading post to the ground. This was not an imperial conquest — it was a mercenary rebellion. The Varangian Guard, supposedly loyal to the emperor in Constantinople, turned on their own empire after a single man was murdered in a street brawl. Lucas and Luna explore the strange story of Ingvar the Far-Traveled, a Swede who led a fleet of Varangians eastward into the heart of Kievan Rus, only to encounter a Byzantine tax collector named Hrani. What started as a trading dispute ended with a massacre of Byzantine officials, a retaliatory raid on the Viking town of Birka, and a diplomatic crisis that nearly brought the Empire of the Romans and the Rus into war. Along the way, they discuss the shadowy figure of Harald Hardrada, the mysterious disappearance of the Varangian fleet, and the surprising role of the Byzantine navy in policing the trade routes of the Baltic. This episode sheds light on a little-known chapter of Byzantine-Viking relations, where loyalty was bought with silver, and honor was repaid in fire. #VarangianGuard #IngvarTheFarTraveled #ByzantineEmpire #KievanRus #Birka #Vikings #HaraldHardrada #BalticSea #ByzantineNavy #Hrani #TaxCollector #TradeRoutes #1043 #MercenaryRebellion #FexingoHistory #ByzantineSecrets #MedievalHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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aflevering The Varangian Guard: Vikings Who Fought for Byzantium artwork

The Varangian Guard: Vikings Who Fought for Byzantium

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the fascinating history of the Varangian Guard, the elite mercenary unit composed primarily of Scandinavians and later Anglo-Saxons that served the Byzantine emperors for centuries. They discuss how these northern warriors first arrived in Constantinople via the Rus' trade routes, their fearsome reputation with the two-handed axe, and their pivotal role in imperial politics and battlefield campaigns from the late 10th century onward. The conversation covers key figures like Harald Hardrada, who served in the Guard before becoming King of Norway, and Emperor Basil II, who formally established the Guard after a Rus' contingent helped him crush a rebellion. Lucas and Luna delve into the cultural exchange between Norsemen and Byzantines, the writing of runic inscriptions in Hagia Sophia, and the Guard's eventual decline after the Fourth Crusade. They also touch on the Varangians' loyalty based on gold and prestige, and how these 'axe-wielding barbarians' became a symbol of imperial power in Constantinople. #VarangianGuard #ByzantineEmpire #VikingsInByzantium #HaraldHardrada #BasilII #Rus #Constantinople #Mercenaries #HagiaSophiaRunes #MedievalHistory #ByzantineMilitary #Norse #AngloSaxons #FourthCrusade #ImperialBodyguard #FexingoHistory #History #Byzantium Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

6 jul 20268 min
aflevering Byzantine Chariot Racing: The Blues and Greens artwork

Byzantine Chariot Racing: The Blues and Greens

Long before football hooligans, there were the Byzantine chariot factions — the Blues and Greens — who packed the Hippodrome of Constantinople with tens of thousands of roaring fans. But these were no mere sports teams. They were political parties, street gangs, theological blocs, and sometimes the spark that toppled emperors. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how a chariot race turned into the Nika Revolt of 532, nearly ending Justinian I's reign before Theodora's famous speech rallied the court. They delve into the factions' complex ties to the imperial government, their role in spreading religious doctrine like Monophysitism, and how the Hippodrome served as the only place where the common people could directly voice dissent to the emperor. From the venetoi and prasinoi colors to the dangerous power of the demes, discover how Byzantium's passion for racing shaped its politics for centuries. #ByzantineEmpire #ChariotRacing #Hippodrome #NikaRevolt #BluesAndGreens #JustinianI #Theodora #Constantinople #ByzantinePolitics #ByzantineCulture #Monophysitism #Demes #Venetoi #Prasinoi #LateAntiquity #HorseRacing #HistoryOfSports #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Gisteren7 min
aflevering Byzantium's Water Lifeline: The Aqueducts That Saved Constantinople artwork

Byzantium's Water Lifeline: The Aqueducts That Saved Constantinople

Constantinople sat on a peninsula nearly surrounded by sea, but fresh water was always scarce. In this episode, Lucas and Luna trace the empire's ambitious solution: a network of aqueducts, cisterns, and underground reservoirs that kept the city alive through sieges and drought. They explore the massive Valens Aqueduct, built in the 4th century and still standing today, the Basilica Cistern with its 336 marble columns, and the little-known open-air cistern of Aetius. The conversation reveals how Byzantine engineers adapted Roman hydraulic technology, how the water system became a strategic asset during the Arab sieges of the 7th and 8th centuries, and how the loss of the aqueducts after the Fourth Crusade contributed to the city's decline. Along the way, they touch on the mysterious 'Water Commissioners' who managed supply, the legend of the cistern of Philoxenos, and the surprising role of water in imperial ceremony. A story of concrete, gravity, and survival. #ByzantineEmpire #Constantinople #ValensAqueduct #BasilicaCistern #HydraulicEngineering #RomanAqueducts #ByzantineWaterSystem #CisternOfPhiloxenos #AetiusCistern #TheodosianWalls #SiegeOfConstantinople #FourthCrusade #ByzantineTechnology #AncientInfrastructure #History #FexingoHistory #ConstantinopleWater #MediterraneanHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Gisteren7 min
aflevering Byzantium's Blueprint: The Theodosian Walls That Held Back an Empire artwork

Byzantium's Blueprint: The Theodosian Walls That Held Back an Empire

In this episode of Byzantine Secrets, Lucas and Luna explore the engineering marvel that saved Constantinople more than a dozen times: the Theodosian Walls. They trace the walls' construction under Theodosius II against the backdrop of the Hunnic threat, then dive into the triple-line defense system—the moat, proteichisma, mesoteichion, and the great wall with its 62 towers. They discuss how the walls forced Attila the Hun to negotiate rather than attack, and how they repelled Avar, Persian, and Arab sieges for centuries. Lucas explains the military innovations in siege warfare that eventually made the walls obsolete, including the Ottoman use of giant bombards under Mehmed II’s siege in 1453. The episode also touches on the daily life of the wall garrisons, the role of the Drungarius of the Walls, and the walls' transformation into housing and gardens in later centuries. Finally, they reflect on what the walls symbolize: Byzantine resilience, sophistication, and the illusion of invincibility. #ByzantineSecrets #TheodosianWalls #Constantinople #ByzantineEmpire #SiegeOfConstantinople #AttilaTheHun #MehmedII #MilitaryArchitecture #LateAntiquity #MedievalHistory #Fortifications #HagiaSophia #FexingoHistory #HistoryPodcast #DeepDive #EmpireSurvival #Walls #Mediterranean Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

4 jul 20266 min
aflevering The Byzantine Silk Monopoly: How an Empire Weaved Power artwork

The Byzantine Silk Monopoly: How an Empire Weaved Power

When silkworms first arrived in the Byzantine Empire around 553 AD, they transformed not just fashion, but the entire economy and geopolitics of the Mediterranean. This episode traces the story from two Persian monks smuggling silkworm eggs into Constantinople to the establishment of state-run silk workshops that produced the legendary purple silks worn by emperors and given as diplomatic gifts. We delve into the Book of the Eparch's regulations for silk merchants, the role of the kommerkiarioi (imperial customs agents), and how silk became a tool of soft power, funding wars and buying alliances. From Justinian's secret project to the later Comnenian reforms, discover how Byzantine silk was worth more than gold—and how its loss to Norman and Venetian competition signaled the empire's decline. #ByzantineEmpire #SilkRoad #JustinianI #Silkworm #HagiaSophia #Constantinople #MediterraneanTrade #ByzantineTextiles #EconomicHistory #Diplomacy #BookOfTheEparch #Kommerkiarioi #MacedonianDynasty #ComnenianRestoration #SoftPower #LuxuryGoods #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

4 jul 20266 min