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

The Mongol Siege of Nishapur 1221: Genghis Khan's Revenge

7 min · 29. juni 2026
episode The Mongol Siege of Nishapur 1221: Genghis Khan's Revenge cover

Description

In April 1221, the city of Nishapur in eastern Iran paid a terrible price for the murder of a Mongol prince. Genghis Khan's daughter had been betrothed to the city's ruler, but when the bridegroom was killed and the bride rejected, the Great Khan unleashed his youngest son Tolui with a massive army. Tolui's siege engines battered the walls for days, and when they fell, the massacre was ordered: not a single inhabitant was to be spared. Juvayni, writing decades later, reported that the cats and dogs were killed. The city's skulls were piled into pyramids. Historians estimate 1.7 million dead — likely an exaggeration, but the scale of destruction was immense. This episode explores the siege itself, Genghis Khan's use of terror as deliberate policy, the role of Princess Alaqai Beki (the rejected bride), and how Nishapur's fate sent a chilling message across Persia. We also examine the evidence: what Juvayni and Ibn al-Athir actually wrote, and how modern scholars sift fact from propaganda. #MongolEmpire #GenghisKhan #Nishapur #Tolui #SiegeWarfare #PersianHistory #Juvayni #IbnAlAthir #MedievalHistory #BrutalEmpires #WarCrimes #AlaqaiBeki #Khwarezm #History #FexingoHistory #Podcast #WorldHistory #Massacre Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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126 episodes

episode Tamerlane's Siege of Delhi 1398: The Massacre at the Gates of India artwork

Tamerlane's Siege of Delhi 1398: The Massacre at the Gates of India

In December 1398, Tamerlane descended on Delhi, the capital of the Delhi Sultanate, with a massive army. This episode dives into the brutal three-day sack of the city, where tens of thousands were killed and the city was left in ruins. We explore the military tactics Tamerlane used against Sultan Nasir-ud-Din Mahmud Shah Tughluq's war elephants—including his controversial use of camels with flaming straw—and the aftermath that left Delhi depopulated for decades. Drawing on the Zafarnama and contemporary chronicles, we examine how this campaign fit into Tamerlane's larger strategy of conquest and terror, and why he chose to withdraw rather than annex. We also discuss the legacy of this event in Indian history and its impact on the Tughluq dynasty. Fresh angle not covered in prior episodes. #Tamerlane #Delhi1398 #DelhiSultanate #SiegeOfDelhi #Tughluq #Zafarnama #WarElephants #CamelsWithFire #NasiruddinMahmud #Timurid #Mawarannahr #IndianHistory #MedievalIndia #BrutalEmpires #SiegeWarfare #History #FexingoHistory #Massacre Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

29. juni 20266 min
episode The Mongol Siege of Nishapur 1221: Genghis Khan's Revenge artwork

The Mongol Siege of Nishapur 1221: Genghis Khan's Revenge

In April 1221, the city of Nishapur in eastern Iran paid a terrible price for the murder of a Mongol prince. Genghis Khan's daughter had been betrothed to the city's ruler, but when the bridegroom was killed and the bride rejected, the Great Khan unleashed his youngest son Tolui with a massive army. Tolui's siege engines battered the walls for days, and when they fell, the massacre was ordered: not a single inhabitant was to be spared. Juvayni, writing decades later, reported that the cats and dogs were killed. The city's skulls were piled into pyramids. Historians estimate 1.7 million dead — likely an exaggeration, but the scale of destruction was immense. This episode explores the siege itself, Genghis Khan's use of terror as deliberate policy, the role of Princess Alaqai Beki (the rejected bride), and how Nishapur's fate sent a chilling message across Persia. We also examine the evidence: what Juvayni and Ibn al-Athir actually wrote, and how modern scholars sift fact from propaganda. #MongolEmpire #GenghisKhan #Nishapur #Tolui #SiegeWarfare #PersianHistory #Juvayni #IbnAlAthir #MedievalHistory #BrutalEmpires #WarCrimes #AlaqaiBeki #Khwarezm #History #FexingoHistory #Podcast #WorldHistory #Massacre Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

29. juni 20267 min
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How the Mongols Used Prisoners as Human Shields

Lucas and Luna dive into one of the most chilling tactics of Mongol warfare: the systematic use of captured civilians as human shields during sieges. Drawing on accounts from Juvayni, Ibn al-Athir, and the Secret History of the Mongols, they explore how Genghis Khan and his generals forced prisoners to march ahead of their armies, absorb enemy arrows, fill moats, and breach walls — all before the Mongols committed their own troops. The episode examines specific sieges like Nishapur (1221) and Baghdad (1258), where this brutal practice was deployed on a massive scale, and discusses the psychological impact on defenders who had to choose between killing their own people or letting the enemy advance. Lucas also explains how the Mongol's siege engineering, including captured Chinese and Persian engineers, complemented the human-shield strategy. The conversation touches on broader questions about the ethics of medieval warfare and whether such tactics were uniquely Mongol or part of a longer tradition of total war in the ancient world. A sobering look at one of history's most ruthless military innovations. #MongolEmpire #HumanShields #GenghisKhan #SiegeWarfare #Nishapur #Baghdad1258 #Juvayni #IbnAlAthir #SecretHistoryoftheMongols #SiegeEngineering #TotalWar #MedievalWarfare #MongolTactics #Kharash #SteppeWarfare #WorldHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday10 min
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In 1387, the city of Isfahan rose against its Timurid overlord. Tamerlane's retribution would become the stuff of legend — a tower of 70,000 human skulls built from the heads of the city's defenders. This episode unpacks what really happened during the sack of Isfahan, drawing on the eyewitness accounts of Ibn 'Arabshah and the Zafarnama, and explores the strategic calculus behind terror as a tool of empire. Was the tower literal, symbolic, or both? We look at the Muzzafarid rebellion, Tamerlane's shifting alliances, and the way Timurid propaganda and horror blended into a single, unforgettable image. Along the way, we consider how later conquerors — from the Mongols to the Ottomans — used similar displays of mass violence to send a message without wasting resources on prolonged sieges. This is a story of brutality, but also of calculation: Tamerlane knew that terror could be more efficient than mercy. #Tamerlane #Timurid #Isfahan #TowerOfSkulls #Muzzafarids #ShahMansur #Zafarnama #IbnArabshah #SiegeOfIsfahan1387 #TimuridTerror #MedievalIran #BrutalEmpires #History #FexingoHistory #WorldHistory #Warfare #Propaganda #MassViolence Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday5 min
episode The Mongol Invasion of Khwarezm: Otrar's Fateful Clash artwork

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