How the Mongols Changed Trade, War, and Globalization — Fexingo History

Mongol Bridges: Engineering the Silk Road

6 min · 3 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Mongol Bridges: Engineering the Silk Road

Descripción

In episode 75 of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore the overlooked engineering marvels of the Mongol Empire: bridges. From the treacherous Yellow River crossings to the stone arch bridges of Persia and the floating bridges of the Yuan dynasty, the Mongols built infrastructure that tied the largest land empire together. Learn how teams of Chinese engineers, Persian masons, and local laborers constructed bridges that enabled trade, troop movement, and communication across the Silk Road. Discover the Battle of the Yellow River Bridge 1232, where Mongol engineers used pontoons to outflank the Jin army. Lucas explains the role of the yam system in bridge maintenance, the use of tamgha taxes for construction, and how Khubilai Khan's reign saw a bridge-building boom. The episode ends with the mystery of the vanished bridge of Karakorum—a legend of a stone bridge across the Orkhon River. This is a deep dive into the physical links that made the Mongol Empire work. #MongolBridges #SilkRoad #MongolEmpire #YellowRiver #KhubilaiKhan #YamSystem #BattleOfTheYellowRiverBridge1232 #YuanDynasty #OrkhonRiver #Karakorum #ChineseEngineering #PersianMasons #FloatingBridge #Pontoons #Tamgha #PaxMongolica #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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94 episodios

episode Mongol Paper Money How Khubilai Khan Invented Fiat Currency artwork

Mongol Paper Money How Khubilai Khan Invented Fiat Currency

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore one of the most radical economic experiments in history: the Mongol invention of paper money under Khubilai Khan. They trace how the Yuan dynasty introduced fiat currency — chao — backed not by gold or silver but by state authority and the threat of execution for counterfeiters. The conversation covers the role of the Ortogh merchant partnerships in spreading paper notes along the Silk Road, the disastrous inflation caused by overprinting under later Yuan emperors, and the reception of this strange new money by foreign travelers like Marco Polo. Lucas explains how the Mongol currency system connected China to Persia, forcing the Ilkhanate under Ghazan Khan to attempt its own version of paper money — leading to economic collapse. The hosts also touch on the philosophical shift: a move from commodity money to a state-controlled medium of exchange. This episode reveals how the Mongols accidentally pioneered modern monetary policy, with consequences that still shape global finance. #MongolPaperMoney #KhubilaiKhan #Chao #YuanDynasty #FiatCurrency #Ortogh #MarcoPolo #SilkRoad #Ilkhanate #GhazanKhan #Inflation #Counterfeiting #EconomicHistory #PaxMongolica #MedievalTrade #WorldHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

12 de jun de 20267 min
episode Mongol Siege Warfare: The Engineers Who Conquered Fortresses artwork

Mongol Siege Warfare: The Engineers Who Conquered Fortresses

In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna dive into one of the most surprising aspects of Mongol conquest: how steppe nomads became masters of siege warfare. From the Great Wall to Baghdad, the Mongols didn't just rely on cavalry — they systematically absorbed Chinese, Persian, and Muslim engineers, deployed massive trebuchets, and used psychological warfare to break the most formidable fortifications. We follow the career of the Chinese general Guo Kan, who directed sieges from the Pamirs to the Mediterranean, and examine the tactical innovations that made Mongol sieges so devastating, including the use of captured labor, diversion dams, and terror tactics. The episode also confronts the human cost: the massacres that followed many sieges, and the historical debates over casualties. Specific battles include the sieges of Kaifeng (1233), Nishapur (1221), and Baghdad (1258). We also touch on the legacy of Mongol siege techniques in later gunpowder empires. #MongolSiegeWarfare #GuoKan #SiegeOfKaifeng #SiegeOfBaghdad #Trebuchet #ChineseEngineers #PersianEngineers #MongolEmpire #GenghisKhan #Hulagu #Subotai #CompositeBow #Yassa #Mangonel #PaxMongolica #History #FexingoHistory #MilitaryHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

12 de jun de 20267 min
episode The Mongol Tumen: How Genghis Khan Built the World's Most Efficient Army artwork

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Genghis Khan's military machine wasn't just about ferocity — it was a ruthlessly efficient decimal organization built around the tumen, a 10,000-man unit that could maneuver, communicate, and sustain itself across vast distances. This episode breaks down how the Mongol army was structured: from the smallest arban of ten men to the mingghan (1,000) and tumen, each led by commanders chosen for merit, not birth. Lucas and Luna explore the keshik (imperial guard) as a training ground for future generals, the logistics that allowed an army to move faster than any before, and the psychological warfare that often made surrender the only sane option. They also touch on controversial debates: how much of Mongol success was innovation versus adoption from steppe tradition? And how did the death toll from Mongol conquests — estimated as high as 40 million — square with their reputation for religious tolerance and law? This episode gives context for later conversations on specific battles and sieges, grounding everything in the organizational genius that made the Mongol war machine possible. #MongolEmpire #GenghisKhan #Tumen #MilitaryHistory #Keshik #SteppeWarfare #CompositeBow #Arban #Mingghan #DecimalOrganization #Subotai #MongolArmy #Logistics #PsychologicalWarfare #SilkRoad #CentralAsia #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer8 min
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When we think of Mongol military might, we picture horse archers thundering across the steppe. But the empire's logistical backbone was something else entirely: the Bactrian camel. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how the Mongols used these shaggy, two-humped beasts to move supplies, yurts, and entire armies across Central Asia. We trace the breeding of Bactrian camels in the Gobi Desert, their superior cold-weather resilience over dromedaries, and how a single camel could carry 300 kilograms of grain or a dismantled yurt. We look at the 1253 journey of the Franciscan friar William of Rubruck, who described Mongol camel caravans crossing the Tarim Basin, and the later use of camel yam stations on the Silk Road. We also examine the 1221 Battle of the Indus, where Genghis Khan's camel-borne supply train allowed his forces to pursue the Khwarazmian prince Jalal al-Din into the mountains. No composite bows, no siege towers—just woolly, patient beasts that made the largest contiguous empire in history possible. #MongolEmpire #BactrianCamel #SilkRoad #CentralAsia #GenghisKhan #WilliamOfRubruck #JalalAlDin #BattleOfTheIndus #Logistics #YamSystem #TarimBasin #GobiDesert #Khwarazmian #CamelCaravan #Steppe #History #FexingoHistory #MongolLogistics Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer5 min
episode Khubilai's Navy: How the Mongols Tried to Conquer Japan artwork

Khubilai's Navy: How the Mongols Tried to Conquer Japan

In 1274 and 1281, Khubilai Khan launched two massive naval invasions of Japan from Korea and China, mobilizing fleets of thousands of ships and hundreds of thousands of men. This episode explores the logistics, the battles, the legendary typhoons—kamikaze—that destroyed the Mongol armadas, and the political fallout for the Yuan dynasty and Kamakura shogunate. We discuss the shipbuilding program, the role of Korean and Chinese crews, the samurai defense at Hakata Bay, and how the failed invasions shaped Japanese identity and military strategy for centuries. Drawing on the Yuan shi, the Hachiman Gudōkun, and archaeological evidence from Takashima Island, we separate myth from history and consider why the Mongols, masters of land warfare, could not conquer the sea. #KhubilaiKhan #MongolInvasionsOfJapan #KamakuraShogunate #HakataBay #Kamikaze #YuanDynasty #Korea #Samurai #NavalHistory #TakashimaIsland #HachimanGudōkun #YuanShi #1274 #1281 #SilkRoad #CentralAsia #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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