The Mongol Empire: How Nomads Conquered the World — Fexingo History
In 1258, when Hulagu Khan's Mongols sacked Baghdad, they didn't just destroy buildings — they systematically harvested the city's vast libraries, dragging tens of thousands of manuscripts back to Maragheh. This episode traces the fate of Baghdad's intellectual treasures: how books were rescued by the vizier Ibn al-Alqami, how they were carried east to Hulagu's observatory at Maragheh, and how the Mongol court's own Persian historian, Rashid al-Din, later used those very manuscripts to write his monumental world history. We examine the controversy around just how much was truly lost versus what was preserved and relocated, and meet the fascinating figure of Nasir al-Din al-Tusi, the scholar who convinced Hulagu to spare Maragheh's observatory. For listeners who've heard about the siege but never what happened to the books. #SiegeOfBaghdad #HulaguKhan #IbnAlAlqami #NasirAlDinAlTusi #MaraghehObservatory #RashidAlDin #AbbasidLibraries #HouseOfWisdom #MongolBookRaiding #Baghdad1258 #IslamicGoldenAge #ManuscriptPreservation #Ilkhanate #CentralAsia #HistoryOfScience #FexingoHistory #MongolEmpire #CulturalDestruction Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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