Why Every Great Empire Eventually Falls — Fexingo History
When Lucas and Luna explore the fall of empires, they usually look at vast economic collapses or sweeping military defeats. But this episode lingers on a single fort: Sinhagad, the Maratha stronghold that changed hands not through siege or starvation, but through a whisper. In 1670, the Maratha commander Tanaji Malusare scaled a cliff at night with trained monitor lizards, surprising the Mughal garrison. Lucas unpacks the meticulous intelligence network behind the operation — how Maratha spies (harkaras) used coded messages in bhakri bread, how they mapped every water source and blind spot, and how a single traitor inside the fort paved the way. The conversation then widens: what happens when an empire's internal security relies on local loyalties, and how the Mughals under Aurangzeb lost the information war in the Deccan. Lucas contrasts Mughal over-centralisation with Maratha agility, citing the 1674 capture of Raigad and the subsequent Maratha intelligence reforms. Luna asks how this echoes other empires — and Lucas draws a line to the Roman use of speculatores and the Mongol yam system. A tight, specific look at how intelligence, not just armies, decides survival. #Sinhagad #MarathaEmpire #TanajiMalusare #MughalEmpire #Aurangzeb #IntelligenceHistory #SiegeWarfare #Deccan #Shivaji #Raigad #Harkaras #MilitaryHistory #EmpireCollapse #FexingoHistory #History #Espionage #Fortress #InformationWar Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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