The Mongol Empire: How Nomads Conquered the World — Fexingo History

The Mongol Empire's Secret Weapon: Feigned Retreat and Steppe Tactics

6 min · 19. juli 2026
episode The Mongol Empire's Secret Weapon: Feigned Retreat and Steppe Tactics cover

Beskrivelse

In Episode 167 of The Mongol Empire: How Nomads Conquered the World, Lucas and Luna dive into the single battle tactic that made the Mongols unbeatable for decades: the feigned retreat. They trace its origins from the steppe hunts of Genghis Khan's youth to its devastating use at the Battle of the Indus (1221) against Jalal al-Din Mingburnu, the Battle of Legnica (1241) against the Poles, and the Battle of Mohi (1241) against the Hungarians. Along the way, they discuss the psychological impact on European knights, the Mongol use of whistling arrows and smoke signals to coordinate the retreat, and the role of Subutai and Jebe in perfecting the tactic. They also touch on the limits of the feigned retreat—why it failed at Ayn Jalut (1260) against the Mamluks. Specific terms include the nerge (steppe hunt), the tumen, and the Mongol compound bow. This episode offers a fresh angle on Mongol military superiority, focusing not on numbers or cruelty but on discipline and deception. #FeignedRetreat #MongolTactics #Subutai #BattleOfLegnica #BattleOfMohi #BattleOfTheIndus #JalalAlDin #AynJalut #MongolEmpire #SteppeWarfare #GenghisKhan #Nerge #Tumen #MongolBow #WhistlingArrows #History #MilitaryHistory #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til å kommentere

Registrer deg nå og bli medlem av The Mongol Empire: How Nomads Conquered the World — Fexingo History sitt community!

Prøv gratis

Prøv gratis i 14 dager

99 kr / Måned etter prøveperioden. · Avslutt når som helst.

  • Eksklusive podkaster
  • 20 timer lydbøker i måneden
  • Gratis podkaster

Alle episoder

168 Episoder

episode The Mongol Empire's Religious Policy: Tolerance as a Weapon cover

The Mongol Empire's Religious Policy: Tolerance as a Weapon

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how the Mongol Empire used religious tolerance as a deliberate policy to control conquered populations. They examine the 13th-century Mongol approach to faith, from Genghis Khan's Yassa decreeing freedom of worship to the Ilkhanate's embrace of Islam under Ghazan Khan. The conversation covers the presence of Nestorian Christians, Buddhists, and Muslims at the Mongol court, the famous 1254 debate at Karakorum orchestrated by Möngke Khan, and how the Mongols balanced shamanistic traditions with the religions of their subjects. They also touch on the controversial tax exemption for clergy across the empire and the long-term effects of Mongol tolerance on trade and cultural exchange along the Silk Road. This episode offers a nuanced look at how an empire often remembered for conquest also pioneered a unique system of religious pluralism. #MongolEmpire #ReligiousTolerance #GenghisKhan #MöngkeKhan #GhazanKhan #Yassa #Karakorum #NestorianChristianity #Buddhism #Islam #Shamanism #SilkRoad #Ilkhanate #YuanDynasty #WilliamOfRubruck #Juvayni #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

19. juli 20266 min
episode The Mongol Empire's Secret Weapon: Feigned Retreat and Steppe Tactics cover

The Mongol Empire's Secret Weapon: Feigned Retreat and Steppe Tactics

In Episode 167 of The Mongol Empire: How Nomads Conquered the World, Lucas and Luna dive into the single battle tactic that made the Mongols unbeatable for decades: the feigned retreat. They trace its origins from the steppe hunts of Genghis Khan's youth to its devastating use at the Battle of the Indus (1221) against Jalal al-Din Mingburnu, the Battle of Legnica (1241) against the Poles, and the Battle of Mohi (1241) against the Hungarians. Along the way, they discuss the psychological impact on European knights, the Mongol use of whistling arrows and smoke signals to coordinate the retreat, and the role of Subutai and Jebe in perfecting the tactic. They also touch on the limits of the feigned retreat—why it failed at Ayn Jalut (1260) against the Mamluks. Specific terms include the nerge (steppe hunt), the tumen, and the Mongol compound bow. This episode offers a fresh angle on Mongol military superiority, focusing not on numbers or cruelty but on discipline and deception. #FeignedRetreat #MongolTactics #Subutai #BattleOfLegnica #BattleOfMohi #BattleOfTheIndus #JalalAlDin #AynJalut #MongolEmpire #SteppeWarfare #GenghisKhan #Nerge #Tumen #MongolBow #WhistlingArrows #History #MilitaryHistory #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

19. juli 20266 min
episode The Mongol Empire's Paper Empire: Bureaucracy and Administration cover

The Mongol Empire's Paper Empire: Bureaucracy and Administration

When Genghis Khan united the Mongol tribes, he relied not only on cavalry and charisma but also on a surprisingly sophisticated administrative apparatus. This episode explores how the Mongols governed their vast empire—from the Uighur script they adopted for their language to the darughachi officials who oversaw conquered cities. Lucas and Luna discuss the roles of the yam system in transmitting decrees, the qubchur tax that funded campaigns, and the delicate balance between local autonomy and imperial control. They also examine the administrative reforms of Ögedei Khan and the later Yuan dynasty's attempts to integrate Chinese civil service traditions. Learn how the Mongol Empire became an information superhighway of its time, using paper, seals, and a network of scribes to hold together the largest contiguous land empire in history. This episode draws on primary sources like The Secret History of the Mongols and the travel accounts of William of Rubruck. #MongolEmpire #GenghisKhan #ÖgedeiKhan #YuanDynasty #UighurScript #YamSystem #Qubchur #Darughachi #Paiza #MongolBureaucracy #MongolAdministration #TheSecretHistoryOfTheMongols #WilliamOfRubruck #CentralAsia #Steppe #History #FexingoHistory #WorldHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går6 min
episode Möngke Khan: The Forgotten Emperor Who Held the Mongol Empire Together cover

Möngke Khan: The Forgotten Emperor Who Held the Mongol Empire Together

Before Kublai and after Genghis, one man stood at the center of the Mongol Empire during its most critical decade. In this episode of The Mongol Empire: How Nomads Conquered the World, we explore the life and reign of Möngke Khan — Genghis's grandson, the fourth Great Khan, and the ruler who nearly unified the entire Mongol world under a single vision. We follow his rise from a quiet, battle-hardened prince to the architect of the largest coordinated campaigns in Mongol history: the assault on the Song Dynasty in the south, the destruction of the Nizari Ismaili state in Persia, and the invasion of the Levant. Along the way, we uncover Möngke's administrative reforms, his redistribution of lands and powers among the imperial family, his religious tolerance and tax policies, and his final, fatal wound at the Siege of Diaoyucheng in 1259. We also confront the controversies: was Möngke's death a mere accident, or did it mark the point where the empire began to fracture irreversibly? Drawing on The Secret History of the Mongols, the chronicles of Juvayni, Rashid al-Din, and the travels of William of Rubruck, this episode brings to light the man who held the Mongol Empire together — and whose absence broke it apart. #MöngkeKhan #MongolEmpire #GreatKhan #Diaoyucheng #SongDynasty #NizariIsmailis #Alamut #WilliamofRubruck #Juvayni #RashidalDin #TheSecretHistoryoftheMongols #SiegeofDiaoyucheng #ToluidSuccession #Karakorum #KublaiKhan #HulaguKhan #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går7 min
episode The Mongol Empire's Last Stand in Syria: Ayn Jalut 1260 cover

The Mongol Empire's Last Stand in Syria: Ayn Jalut 1260

In 1260, the Mongol Empire seemed unstoppable. Hulagu Khan had sacked Baghdad, crushed the Nizari Ismailis at Alamut, and turned his gaze toward Syria and Egypt. But at a place called Ayn Jalut—Goliath's Spring—the Mamluks of Egypt, led by Qutuz and the brilliant general Baybars, used Mongol tactics against them. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Battle of Ayn Jalut, a turning point that shattered the myth of Mongol invincibility, preserved the Islamic world, and kept the Mongols out of Africa. They discuss how the Mamluk sultanate rose from slave soldiers to empire builders, the decisive role of feigned retreats and the mangonel, and the political fallout after the battle—including Baybars's assassination of Qutuz. They also examine the Mongols' failed alliance with the Crusaders, the strategic importance of Ain Jalut, and how the Mamluks went on to dominate the region for centuries. This is the story of how a slave army stopped the world's greatest conquering machine. #BattleOfAynJalut #MongolEmpire #Mamluks #Baybars #Qutuz #HulaguKhan #Kitbuqa #Syria1260 #MongolInvasion #IslamicHistory #MilitaryHistory #AinJalut #MamlukSultanate #MongolTactics #Crusaders #History #FexingoHistory #CentralAsia Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

17. juli 20265 min