The Golden Horde: Mongol Rule Over Russia Explained — Fexingo History

The Black Death's Grim Reckoning for the Golden Horde

8 min · 4 jul 2026
aflevering The Black Death's Grim Reckoning for the Golden Horde artwork

Beschrijving

In 1346, the Black Death arrived at the gates of the Golden Horde's Crimean trading city of Caffa, where a Mongol army under Khan Janibeg was besieging Genoese merchants. The plague spread through the Horde's steppe camps and its capital Sarai, killing Khan Janibeg and two of his sons in quick succession. This episode traces how the pandemic devastated the Jochid ulus, crippling its military, trade, and administrative networks. We explore the controversial account of plague corpses being catapulted into Caffa—one of the earliest known instances of biological warfare. We also examine the subsequent Great Troubles, as the Horde's population collapsed, its tax revenues dried up, and rival khans and emirs fought for control. Figures like Mamai emerge from the chaos. The conversation draws on accounts from Ibn al-Wardi and the Novgorod First Chronicle, and weighs the long-term demographic and political effects that left the Horde vulnerable to internal strife and ultimately to Timur's devastating campaigns. This is the story of how a pandemic, not just a conqueror, reshaped the steppe empire. #BlackDeath #GoldenHorde #Caffa #KhanJanibeg #Mamai #Plague #BiologicalWarfare #Sarai #Crimea #GreatTroubles #JochidUlus #IbnAlWardi #NovgorodChronicle #PandemicHistory #SteppeEmpire #Medieval #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Reacties

0

Wees de eerste die een reactie plaatst

Meld je nu aan en word lid van de The Golden Horde: Mongol Rule Over Russia Explained — Fexingo History community!

Probeer gratis

Probeer 14 dagen gratis

€ 9,99 / maand na proefperiode. · Elk moment opzegbaar.

  • Podcasts die je alleen op Podimo hoort
  • 20 uur luisterboeken / maand
  • Gratis podcasts

Alle afleveringen

150 afleveringen

aflevering The Horde's Steppe Hunt: Mongol Falconry and Royal Sport artwork

The Horde's Steppe Hunt: Mongol Falconry and Royal Sport

In this episode of The Golden Horde: Mongol Rule Over Russia Explained, Lucas and Luna take to the steppe to explore falconry—the quintessential Mongol sport that was far more than a pastime. From Chinggis Khan's legendary hunting campaigns to the sophisticated gerfalcon trade that stretched from the Arctic to Sarai, they uncover how falconry served as military training, diplomatic currency, and a symbol of steppe authority. Learn about the massive battue hunts (nerge) that could involve entire armies, the prized gyrfalcons from the Siberian taiga, and how Khan Uzbek's love of falconry influenced Jochid politics. Discover the role of the qushchi (falconers) in the Horde's court, the export of live birds to Egypt and India, and the surprising fact that Marco Polo's accounts of Mongol hunting were often dismissed as fantasy. This episode provides a fresh window into the culture, economy, and mindset of the Golden Horde. #GoldenHorde #MongolFalconry #SteppeHunting #JochidUlus #ChinggisKhan #KhanUzbek #Sarai #Qushchi #Nerge #Gyrfalcon #MarcoPolo #MongolCulture #FalconryHistory #CentralAsia #MedievalHistory #SteppeEmpire #Hunting #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

11 jul 20267 min
aflevering The Horde's Steppe Tatar: Military Slavery and the Mamluks artwork

The Horde's Steppe Tatar: Military Slavery and the Mamluks

In this episode of The Golden Horde: Mongol Rule Over Russia Explained, Lucas and Luna explore a deeply entangled story of steppe warriors becoming sultans in Egypt. The Mamluk Sultanate, long a rival of the Mongols, was itself built from Turkic slave-soldiers from the same steppe that fed the Horde's armies. We follow the rise of the Bahri Mamluks, their defeat of the Ilkhanate at the Battle of Ain Jalut in 1260, and the complex military slave trade that connected Sarai to Cairo. We also discuss Berke Khan's alliance with the Mamluks against the Ilkhan Hulagu, the role of the Kipchak steppe as a source of recruits, and how the Horde's own system of military slavery (the *ghulam* system) shaped both its army and its economy. Along the way, we consider the irony of a slave-soldier elite that eventually ruled one of the most powerful Islamic empires of the Middle Ages. #GoldenHorde #Mamluks #MilitarySlavery #AinJalut #BerkeKhan #Ilkhanate #KipchakSteppe #Sarai #Cairo #BahriMamluks #Hulagu #MongolEmpire #History #FexingoHistory #SteppeHistory #SlaveSoldiers #MedievalWarfare #CentralAsia Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Gisteren7 min
aflevering The Horde's Last Khan: Ahmed's Stand at the Ugra River artwork

The Horde's Last Khan: Ahmed's Stand at the Ugra River

In 1480, nearly two and a half centuries after Batu Khan's invasion, the Golden Horde faced its final reckoning. This episode follows Khan Ahmed, the last effective ruler of the Great Horde, as he marched on Moscow to enforce tribute that had gone unpaid for years. We explore the standoff at the Ugra River, where Ivan III of Russia and Ahmed faced off across a frozen river for months—until Ahmed suddenly retreated, ending Mongol rule over Russia without a major battle. We unpack the political chaos within the Horde: the competing khanates in Crimea, Kazan, and Astrakhan that had fractured Jochid unity; the role of the Crimean Khan, Meñli I Giray, who allied with Ivan; and Ahmed's tragic end, killed by his supposed ally, the Siberian Khan Ibak. Drawing on the Nikon Chronicle, Sigismund von Herberstein's accounts, and Russian folk memories of the 'Great Stand,' we examine why Ahmed's retreat marked the symbolic end of the 'Tatar Yoke'—and how the Golden Horde's legacy lived on in the steppe. This is the Horde's last act, a story of geopolitics, missed opportunities, and the slow death of a once-great empire. #GoldenHorde #KhanAhmed #UgraRiver #IvanIII #GreatHorde #Moscow #CrimeanKhanate #MeñliIGiray #SiberianKhanate #Ibak #NikonChronicle #TatarYoke #1480 #Steppe #MedievalHistory #RussianHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Gisteren6 min
aflevering The Horde's Steppe Census: Mongol Numbers That Shaped Russia artwork

The Horde's Steppe Census: Mongol Numbers That Shaped Russia

In this episode, Lucas and Luna dive into one of the most systematic and least understood instruments of Mongol rule: the census. Far from a mere headcount, the Mongol census — called the chislo — was a sophisticated administrative tool that catalogued every household, skilled artisan, and draftable man across the Russian principalities. Lucas explains how Mongol census-takers, the chislyaki, arrived with armed escorts and scribes, demanding detailed declarations from princes and peasants alike. He traces the census from its origins under the Great Khan Mongke, through its implementation by Khan Berke in the 1250s, to its role in extracting the vykhod tribute and levying troops for the Horde's campaigns. Luna asks about resistance — and Lucas recounts the 1257 uprising in Novgorod, where the city's veche initially refused the census, only to be crushed by Alexander Nevsky, who enforced Mongol demands to preserve his own power. The conversation also explores how the census affected daily life: families hidden in the forests, false declarations, and the eerie efficiency of the Mongol bureaucracy. For the listener who thinks Mongol rule was just raids and tribute, this episode shows the quiet, relentless machinery of imperial control. #GoldenHorde #MongolCensus #RussianHistory #Chislo #Chislyaki #Baskak #Darughachi #Vykhod #Novgorod #AlexanderNevsky #KhanBerke #Sarai #MongolEmpire #MedievalRussia #Tribute #History #FexingoHistory #Steppe Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

9 jul 20265 min
aflevering The Horde's Last Stand: Edigu's Steppe Empire Reborn artwork

The Horde's Last Stand: Edigu's Steppe Empire Reborn

The Golden Horde was supposed to be finished. After the Great Troubles, the Battle of Blue Waters, and Tokhtamysh's catastrophe against Timur, the Jochid ulus seemed destined for collapse. But one man rebuilt it from the ashes: Edigu, a Mongol emir of the Manghut tribe who restored Horde power in the early 1400s. This episode follows Edigu's rise from a warlord in Timur's shadow to the de facto ruler of Sarai. We explore his military campaigns against Vytautas of Lithuania, his crushing of the Rus' tribute revolts, and his chilling siege of Moscow in 1408. Edigu reformed the Horde's administration, coinage, and military, reimposing the yasak tribute and even forcing Moscow to pay off a huge ransom. Yet his greatest legacy is the Nogai Horde, which his family founded and which dominated the steppe long after Edigu's death. For the first time on the show, we look at the Horde's late-era resilience through Edigu's steppe pragmatism. #GoldenHorde #Edigu #SteppeEmpire #JochidUlus #Moscow1408 #NogaiHorde #Vytautas #Sarai #Manghut #Timur #Yasak #MedievalRussia #SteppeHistory #HordeRevival #MongolEmpire #FexingoHistory #CentralAsia #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

9 jul 20266 min