The Mongols vs Europe: What Almost Changed Western History — Fexingo History
In the winter of 1242, as Mongol armies under Kadan swept through Croatia and reached the Adriatic, King Béla IV of Hungary fled to the fortified island city of Trogir. This episode reconstructs the siege that nearly cost Europe one of its last great kings. We examine how Trogir's geography—a walled city on a tiny island between the mainland and the larger island of Čiovo—made it nearly impregnable to Mongol cavalry and siegecraft. Lucas and Luna walk through the key sources: Thomas of Split's *Historia Salonitana*, which describes how the Mongols tried to build a causeway to reach the city, and how the citizens held firm. We also explore the political context—Béla had just lost his army at the Battle of Mohi and was running out of allies. The Mongol failure at Trogir marked the southernmost point of the invasion and helped convince Kadan that further pursuit was futile. Why didn't the Mongols just starve the city out? What role did the arrival of spring and news from the east play? This episode offers a granular look at a pivotal moment that historians often skip. Includes close readings of medieval chronicles, analysis of siege engineering on rocky Adriatic shores, and the strategic calculus that turned the Mongols back north. #SiegeOfTrogir #KingBelaIV #MongolInvasion #Kadan #HistoriaSalonitana #ThomasOfSplit #Adriatic #1242 #Croatia #MongolCavalry #MedievalHistory #SiegeWarfare #Dalmatia #FexingoHistory #History #MilitaryHistory #MedievalEurope #MongolEmpire Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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