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

The Mongol Siege of Vienna That Never Was: 1241-42 Reconsidered

6 min · 22. juni 2026
episode The Mongol Siege of Vienna That Never Was: 1241-42 Reconsidered cover

Description

In 1241, the Mongol army under Batu Khan and Subutai crushed the Hungarian forces at Mohi and seemed poised to push deep into Western Europe. But then they stopped. For centuries, historians credited the death of Ögedei Khan as the reason — the Mongol princes needed to return to Karakorum for the election of a new khagan. But new research by Stephen Pow and others challenges this narrative. This episode explores the logistical and strategic factors that may have actually saved Vienna: overextended supply lines, the devastation of Hungary as a pastureland, the approaching Hungarian spring thaw, and the surprising resilience of castles like Klis and Trogir in Dalmatia. We examine the Mongol campaign in Austria and the Adriatic coast, the failure to capture Frederick II of Austria at Wiener Neustadt, and the debate over whether Ögedei's death really was the decisive factor. Featuring insights from the Continuatio Sancrucensis, the Historia Salonitana, and the works of Denis Sinor, this episode reopens one of history's great what-ifs. #MongolInvasion #Vienna #ÖgedeiKhan #BatuKhan #Subutai #Kadan #Hungary1241 #WienerNeustadt #ContinuatioSancrucensis #StephenPow #HistoriaSalonitana #DenisSinor #KlisFortress #Trogir #FrederickIIAustria #MongolLogistics #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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134 episodes

episode The Mongol Siege That Nearly Broke Europe: Esztergom 1241 artwork

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