Why Civilization Always Rises, Falls, and Begins Again — Fexingo History

The Lost Roman Legions: Did Crassus' Men End Up in China?

8 min · I går
episode The Lost Roman Legions: Did Crassus' Men End Up in China? cover

Description

In 53 BCE, the Roman general Crassus led seven legions into the desert of Carrhae, expecting to conquer Parthia. Instead, he met a catastrophic defeat, his head delivered to the Parthian king. But what happened to the 10,000 Roman prisoners taken that day? Chinese chronicles from the Han dynasty record a strange event: a band of disciplined soldiers fighting with a 'fish-scale formation' for a Central Asian warlord. Were these the lost men of Crassus? And did they settle in a village called Liqian, in modern-day Gansu province? This episode explores the tantalizing but contested theory of Roman legionaries in ancient China. We examine the historical evidence: the Battle of Carrhae, the Han-Tarim Basin campaigns, DNA tests on local villagers, and the skeptical counterarguments. It's a story of empires colliding across the Silk Road, of prisoners turned mercenaries, and of how a ghost story from antiquity refuses to die. Lucas and Luna weigh the case for the Lost Legion, walking the line between historical possibility and popular myth. #LostLegion #BattleOfCarrhae #MarcusLiciniusCrassus #HanDynasty #Liqian #Zhelaizhai #RomanChinaTheory #ParthianEmpire #Surenas #SilkRoad #History #FexingoHistory #AncientRome #AncientChina #Mercenaries #DNATesting #ControversialHistory #Carrhae Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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105 episodes

episode Mauryan Justice: How Ashoka Reformed the Empire's Courts artwork

Mauryan Justice: How Ashoka Reformed the Empire's Courts

Emperor Ashoka is remembered for his dhamma edicts and conversion to non-violence, but his sweeping legal reforms transformed everyday justice across the Mauryan Empire. This episode explores how Ashoka overhauled criminal law, banned torture and arbitrary imprisonment, introduced regular amnesties, and established a system of appeal — centuries before similar ideas appeared in Rome. Lucas and Luna examine edicts that set fixed periods of detention, prohibited mutilation punishments, and created the position of dhamma mahamattas to monitor judicial fairness. They also discuss the practical challenges of enforcing these reforms in a realm spanning from Kandahar to Bengal, and the fragile balance between imperial mercy and political control. Drawing on the Pillar Edicts, rock inscriptions, and accounts from Megasthenes, they ask: was Ashoka's justice system a genuine humanitarian revolution, or a strategic tool to pacify a conquered empire? The conversation raises a sobering question about whether moral governance can survive its founder. #Ashoka #MauryanEmpire #AncientIndia #LegalHistory #Dhamma #PillarEdicts #CriminalJustice #Pataliputra #Kalinga #Megasthenes #Prakrit #Brahmi #TortureBan #HistoryOfLaw #HumanRights #AncientCivilization #FexingoHistory #WorldHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

19. juni 20269 min
episode Pataliputra: The Lost Megacity of the Mauryan Empire artwork

Pataliputra: The Lost Megacity of the Mauryan Empire

Long before Rome or Constantinople, Pataliputra was one of the largest cities in the ancient world — a sprawling capital at the confluence of the Ganges and Son rivers, with a wooden palisade that stretched nine miles, a thousand towers, and a palace that awed Greek ambassadors. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the rise and fall of the Mauryan capital: how Chandragupta Maurya made it the heart of his empire, how Megasthenes described its bustling markets and administrative grid, how Ashoka built a stone palace there — and what happened after the empire collapsed. We dig into the archaeological puzzle of a city that left almost no stone ruins above ground, the wooden architecture that rotted away, and the mystery of the Mauryan pillar capital recently unearthed. We also touch on the later destruction by the Hepthalites and the city's gradual disappearance from history. A story of power, urbanism, and the fragility of even the greatest cities. #Pataliputra #MauryanEmpire #ChandraguptaMaurya #Ashoka #Megasthenes #Indica #Kumhrar #SonRiver #Ganges #WoodenArchitecture #AncientCities #Archaeology #GuptaEmpire #Hepthalites #WhiteHuns #History #FexingoHistory #UrbanHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday6 min
episode The Lost Roman Legions: Did Crassus' Men End Up in China? artwork

The Lost Roman Legions: Did Crassus' Men End Up in China?

In 53 BCE, the Roman general Crassus led seven legions into the desert of Carrhae, expecting to conquer Parthia. Instead, he met a catastrophic defeat, his head delivered to the Parthian king. But what happened to the 10,000 Roman prisoners taken that day? Chinese chronicles from the Han dynasty record a strange event: a band of disciplined soldiers fighting with a 'fish-scale formation' for a Central Asian warlord. Were these the lost men of Crassus? And did they settle in a village called Liqian, in modern-day Gansu province? This episode explores the tantalizing but contested theory of Roman legionaries in ancient China. We examine the historical evidence: the Battle of Carrhae, the Han-Tarim Basin campaigns, DNA tests on local villagers, and the skeptical counterarguments. It's a story of empires colliding across the Silk Road, of prisoners turned mercenaries, and of how a ghost story from antiquity refuses to die. Lucas and Luna weigh the case for the Lost Legion, walking the line between historical possibility and popular myth. #LostLegion #BattleOfCarrhae #MarcusLiciniusCrassus #HanDynasty #Liqian #Zhelaizhai #RomanChinaTheory #ParthianEmpire #Surenas #SilkRoad #History #FexingoHistory #AncientRome #AncientChina #Mercenaries #DNATesting #ControversialHistory #Carrhae Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday8 min
episode When the Guptas Crumbled: The Rise of the White Huns artwork

When the Guptas Crumbled: The Rise of the White Huns

The Gupta Empire, often called India's Golden Age, didn't just fade away — it was shattered by a series of invasions from Central Asia. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the rise of the Hephthalites, or White Huns, who swept into the Indian subcontinent in the 5th century CE. They trace the Hephthalite origins from the steppes of Central Asia, their conflict with the Sassanid Persians, and their devastating campaigns under rulers like Toramana and his son Mihirakula — the latter remembered in Indian texts as a tyrant who destroyed monasteries and tortured his subjects. Lucas explains how the Gupta emperor Skandagupta managed to repel an early wave, but after his death, the empire crumbled. The conversation also touches on the role of the Aulikara king Yashodharman, who defeated Mihirakula, and the long-term impact of these invasions on trade, Buddhism, and the political fragmentation of northern India. Drawing on numismatic evidence, Chinese pilgrim accounts, and Sanskrit inscriptions like the Mandasor pillar, this episode offers a detailed look at a turning point that ended an era. #Hephthalites #WhiteHuns #GuptaEmpire #Mihirakula #Toramana #Skandagupta #Yashodharman #Aulikara #AlchonHuns #Sassanid #MandasorInscription #Buddhism #CentralAsia #AncientIndia #Numismatics #History #FexingoHistory #EmpireCollapse Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

17. juni 20264 min
episode The Mauryan Secret Police: Spies, Assassins, and the Arthashastra artwork

The Mauryan Secret Police: Spies, Assassins, and the Arthashastra

Before the CIA, before MI6, there was the Mauryan Empire's intelligence network—a sprawling system of spies, informants, and undercover agents that kept Chandragupta Maurya on the throne. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the world of the gudhapurusha as described in Chanakya's Arthashastra. From wealthy courtesans posing as servants to ascetics who moonlighted as assassins, the Mauryan secret police were as ruthless as they were invisible. Lucas breaks down the different types of spies, their recruitment, and how they operated across the empire—monitoring officials, testing loyalties, and eliminating threats. He also discusses the ethical tensions in the Arthashastra, where state security trumped individual rights. The conversation touches on the mandala theory of foreign relations and how spies were used to destabilize rival kingdoms. Finally, they reflect on the legacy of this surveillance state and its echoes in later Indian empires and modern intelligence agencies. #MauryanEmpire #Arthashastra #Chanakya #ChandraguptaMaurya #Gudhapurusha #Spies #SecretPolice #Intelligence #IndianHistory #AncientIndia #MandalaTheory #Kautilya #Espionage #Surveillance #History #FexingoHistory #Pataliputra #Statecraft Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

17. juni 20267 min