The Most Brutal Empires the World Has Ever Seen — Fexingo History

The Zulu Kingdom's Bloody Rise Under Shaka

9 min · 31. mai 2026
episode The Zulu Kingdom's Bloody Rise Under Shaka cover

Beskrivelse

In the early 19th century, a small chiefdom in southeastern Africa transformed into a militaristic empire that reshaped the continent. This episode explores the rise of the Zulu Kingdom under Shaka kaSenzangakhona, from his exile and military reforms to the brutal mfecane wars that depopulated vast regions. We discuss the iklwa short stabbing spear, the buffalo horns formation, and the amabutho regimental system that turned farmers into disciplined warriors. Shaka's innovations in logistics, intelligence, and total warfare created a state that could mobilize tens of thousands of fighters within days. But his reign also saw the destruction of rival chiefdoms, the displacement of millions, and a legacy of terror that echoes in Zulu oral traditions. We also touch on the contested narratives: was Shaka a military genius or a tyrant? How do we weigh African sources against colonial accounts? Specific terms like Dingiswayo, Nandi, Isandlwana (foreshadowing later episodes), and the role of the amakhanda homesteads bring this period to life. A nuanced look at an empire built on speed, discipline, and absolute control. #ZuluKingdom #ShakaZulu #mfecane #iklwa #buffalohorns #amabutho #Dingiswayo #Nandi #SouthAfricanHistory #19thCentury #MilitaryHistory #AfricanEmpires #BrutalEmpires #FexingoHistory #MfecaneWars #Isandlwana #Warfare #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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138 Episoder

episode The Mongol Kharash: Human Shields and Siege Terror cover

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I går8 min
episode Genghis Khan and the Art of Mongol Siege Warfare cover

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We've covered Mongol brutality in individual sieges, but never the system itself. Lucas walks Luna through how Genghis Khan turned steppe horsemen into the world's most devastating siege force. He explains the Yassa law that mandated engineers be spared, the kharash human-shield tactics, the adoption of Chinese trebuchets and Persian siege towers, and the terrifying speed of Mongol field fortifications. They talk about the siege of Nishapur—where Tolui used captive engineers to build a wall around the city before attacking—and the siege of Baghdad, where Hulagu employed a siege train that included thousands of Chinese artillerymen. Lucas also highlights the Mongol skill at psychological warfare: false retreats, severed heads catapulted over walls, and the 'offer of submission' that was really a command. Luna asks how the Mongols learned siegecraft so quickly, and Lucas traces it to the conquest of the Jin Dynasty, where they captured entire Chinese engineering corps. The episode ends with a reflection on how Genghis Khan's siege innovations shaped warfare for centuries. #GenghisKhan #MongolSiege #SiegeWarfare #Yassa #Kharash #Nishapur #Baghdad1258 #Tolui #Hulagu #ChineseEngineers #Trebuchet #MongolEmpire #SteppeHorsemen #PsychologicalWarfare #JinDynasty #MilitaryHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går10 min
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episode Genghis Khan's Siege of Wall: The Mongol Conquest of the Jin Dynasty cover

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episode The Roman-Parthian Wars: Crassus and the Disaster at Carrhae cover

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In 53 BCE, Rome suffered one of its most humiliating defeats at the Battle of Carrhae. The wealthiest man in Rome, Marcus Licinius Crassus, led seven legions into the deserts of Mesopotamia against the Parthian Empire—and was utterly destroyed by an army of mounted archers and cataphracts. This episode follows the campaign from its political origins in the First Triumvirate, through the fateful decision to march through the desert, to the gruesome aftermath where Crassus's head was used as a prop in a play. We explore Parthian military tactics, the role of the Suren clan under General Surena, and how this disaster reshaped Roman foreign policy for centuries. Along the way, we touch on the controversy over whether Parthian archers really used the 'Parthian shot,' the mysterious fate of the captured legionaries (some say they founded a Chinese town), and the broader cultural impact of Rome's first major clash with a true eastern empire. #RomanParthianWars #BattleOfCarrhae #Crassus #Surena #ParthianShot #MarcusLiciniusCrassus #FirstTriumvirate #ParthianEmpire #Cataphract #RomanLegions #Mesopotamia #AncientWarfare #RomanHistory #ParthianHistory #Carrhae53BC #History #FexingoHistory #BrutalEmpires Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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