Why Every Great Empire Eventually Falls — Fexingo History
The Delhi Sultanate once ruled the heart of India, but by 1398 it was a shadow of itself. This episode unpacks its collapse through the lens of Tughlaq rule—Muhammad bin Tughlaq's disastrous token currency and Deccan capital shift, Firuz Shah Tughlaq's costly canal projects and slave corps, and the crumbling iqta system that turned governors into warlords. Then comes Timur's invasion: a brutal sack of Delhi that left the city in ruins and the sultanate a carcass. We contrast this with the resilience of the Vijayanagara Empire to the south, which absorbed northern refugees and prospered. Along the way, we meet Ibn Battuta, who witnessed Tughlaq's court firsthand; explore how Timur used Mongol-style psychological warfare; and ask whether the sultanate's fall was inevitable or just badly managed. A story of ambition, drought, and a sultan who minted coins that nobody trusted. #DelhiSultanate #Timur #MuhammadbinTughlaq #FiruzShahTughlaq #TughlaqDynasty #IbnBattuta #Vijayanagara #SackOfDelhi #TokenCurrency #IqtaSystem #MongolInvasions #MedievalIndia #1398 #History #FexingoHistory #EmpireCollapse #SouthAsia #WarAndSociety Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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