The Mongols vs Europe: What Almost Changed Western History — Fexingo History

The Mongol Economic Shocks That Reshaped Medieval Europe

7 min · I går
episode The Mongol Economic Shocks That Reshaped Medieval Europe cover

Beskrivelse

When the Mongols invaded Europe in 1241–42, they didn't just defeat armies and sack cities. They sent shockwaves through the continent's economic system, disrupting trade routes, collapsing silver supplies, and triggering inflation that reshaped kingdoms. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the hidden economic consequences of the Mongol invasion: how the disruption of the Volga trade route starved European mints of silver, how the sudden influx of looted wealth destabilized local markets, and how the rise of the Golden Horde forced a reorientation of European commerce toward the Baltic and Atlantic. Drawing on recent scholarship by historian Jingjing Yan, they examine the monetary crisis in Hungary and Poland, the collapse of the silver-based penny, and the surprising link between Mongol conquests and the birth of the Hanseatic League. Specific figures include Béla IV's currency reforms, the mint shutdowns in Silesia, and the first recorded instance of European inflation driven by Asian bullion flows. This is economic history at the sharp end of the steppe. #MongolEconomics #SilverCrisis #GoldenHorde #BelaIV #Hungary1241 #Poland1241 #HanseaticLeague #JingjingYan #VolgaTrade #MedievalEconomy #Inflation #MintShutdown #Silesia #BulgarSilver #BalticTrade #History #FexingoHistory #EconomicHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Alle episoder

126 Episoder

episode The Mongol Bridge of Boats at Muhi 1241 cover

The Mongol Bridge of Boats at Muhi 1241

In April 1241, on the Sajó River near Muhi, Hungary, the Mongol army under Batu Khan and Subutai used a devastatingly simple piece of engineering to trap King Béla IV's army: a bridge of boats. This episode examines the construction, tactics, and aftermath of that river crossing, drawing on the Carmen Miserabile of Rogerius of Apulia and the Historia Salonitana of Thomas of Split. We discuss the timing of the crossing under cover of darkness, the use of catapults on the east bank to suppress Hungarian defenders, and the subsequent encirclement that led to one of the worst defeats in medieval Hungarian history. The episode also explores the broader implications: how Mongol bridge-building skills, honed on the steppe and in China, allowed them to overcome Europe's rivers, which Christian armies had long relied on as defensive barriers. We touch on the controversial claim that the bridge was actually a pontoon bridge, not a permanent stone structure, and what that means for understanding Mongol logistical genius. #Mongols #BattleOfMuhi #Subutai #BatuKhan #BélaIV #SajóRiver #BridgeOfBoats #MongolTactics #Hungary1241 #CarmenMiserabile #RogeriusOfApulia #ThomasOfSplit #MongolEngineering #RiverCrossing #MedievalWarfare #FexingoHistory #History #MongolInvasionEurope Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

29. juni 20265 min
episode The Mongol Economic Shocks That Reshaped Medieval Europe cover

The Mongol Economic Shocks That Reshaped Medieval Europe

When the Mongols invaded Europe in 1241–42, they didn't just defeat armies and sack cities. They sent shockwaves through the continent's economic system, disrupting trade routes, collapsing silver supplies, and triggering inflation that reshaped kingdoms. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the hidden economic consequences of the Mongol invasion: how the disruption of the Volga trade route starved European mints of silver, how the sudden influx of looted wealth destabilized local markets, and how the rise of the Golden Horde forced a reorientation of European commerce toward the Baltic and Atlantic. Drawing on recent scholarship by historian Jingjing Yan, they examine the monetary crisis in Hungary and Poland, the collapse of the silver-based penny, and the surprising link between Mongol conquests and the birth of the Hanseatic League. Specific figures include Béla IV's currency reforms, the mint shutdowns in Silesia, and the first recorded instance of European inflation driven by Asian bullion flows. This is economic history at the sharp end of the steppe. #MongolEconomics #SilverCrisis #GoldenHorde #BelaIV #Hungary1241 #Poland1241 #HanseaticLeague #JingjingYan #VolgaTrade #MedievalEconomy #Inflation #MintShutdown #Silesia #BulgarSilver #BalticTrade #History #FexingoHistory #EconomicHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går7 min
episode The Mongols and the Dominican Friar Who Walked into the Steppe cover

The Mongols and the Dominican Friar Who Walked into the Steppe

In 1245, a Dominican friar named Julian set out from Hungary to find the legendary 'Magna Hungaria'—the ancestral homeland of the Magyars somewhere east of the Volga. What he found instead was the Mongol army, already preparing for the invasion of Europe. Julian's journey, recorded in his reports to the papal curia, gives us one of the few eyewitness accounts of Mongol preparations from a European perspective. This episode follows Julian's two voyages, his encounter with a Mongol envoy bearing an ultimatum for King Béla IV, and the grim prophecy he delivered to the Hungarian court—a warning that went unheeded until it was too late. We discuss Julian's sources, the accuracy of his observations, and what his story reveals about European intelligence-gathering and denial before the storm of 1241. #FriarJulian #MagnaHungaria #MongolInvasion #BélaIV #Dominican #1241 #Hungary #Volga #MongolUltimatum #EuropeanIntelligence #Carpathians #BatuKhan #Subutai #MedievalHistory #Steppe #PapalCuria #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går8 min
episode The Mongol Siege Engine That Changed European Fortification cover

The Mongol Siege Engine That Changed European Fortification

In 1241, as Mongol armies swept through Hungary and Poland, European chroniclers recorded something terrifying: siege engines that could hurl naphtha-soaked projectiles and breach walls faster than any trebuchet known in the West. This episode explores the Mongol use of Chinese and Persian siege technology — traction trebuchets, counterweight designs, and incendiary weapons — and how their effectiveness forced a revolution in European castle-building after the invasion. Lucas and Luna dig into the specific machines deployed at Esztergom, Pest, and Oradea, drawing on the accounts of Rogerius of Apulia and Thomas of Split, as well as modern reconstructions by Timothy May and Stephen Pow. They examine the Chinese origins of Mongol siegecraft, the role of captured engineers from the Khwarazmian Empire, and the post-1241 shift from wooden motte-and-bailey forts to stone concentric castles in Central Europe. The episode argues that the Mongol threat, though brief, left a permanent mark on military architecture from Hungary to Silesia. #MongolSiegecraft #SiegeOfEsztergom1241 #RogeriusOfApulia #ThomasOfSplit #TimothyMay #StephenPow #ChineseTrebuchet #Naphtha #CastleDesign #MotteAndBailey #ConcentricCastle #Hungary1241 #Poland1241 #MedievalWarfare #BattleOfMuhi #IncendiaryWeapons #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

27. juni 20267 min
episode The Mongol Fleet That Never Was: Invasion Plans for Japan cover

The Mongol Fleet That Never Was: Invasion Plans for Japan

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Mongol invasions of Japan in 1274 and 1281, a campaign that nearly changed the course of East Asian history. They discuss Kublai Khan's demand for submission from the Kamakura shogunate, the construction of a massive fleet in Korea and China, the samurai's first encounters with Mongol tactics at the battles of Bun'ei and Kōan, and the role of the legendary 'kamikaze' typhoons that destroyed the Mongol fleets. The conversation also covers the logistical challenges of the invasions, the political situation in Japan under the Hōjō regency, and the long-term consequences, including the decline of the Kamakura shogunate. Listeners will hear about key figures like Kublai Khan, Hōjō Tokimune, and the Korean king Wonjong, as well as the military innovations and cultural impact of these invasions. #MongolEmpire #KublaiKhan #KamakuraShogunate #Samurai #Bun'ei #Kōan #Kamikaze #HōjōTokimune #YuanDynasty #Japan #MongolInvasions #KoreanFleet #Tsushima #History #FexingoHistory #MongolFleet #Typhoon #EastAsianHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

27. juni 20267 min