Why Every Great Empire Eventually Falls — Fexingo History

Why the Dutch East India Company Really Collapsed

6 min · 4. juli 2026
episode Why the Dutch East India Company Really Collapsed cover

Description

The Dutch East India Company, the VOC, was the most valuable corporation in history—richer than any tech giant today. But it didn't fall because of corruption or bad management alone. In this episode, Lucas and Luna unpack the hidden cost of the VOC's success: the Batavia shipwreck, the spice monopoly's unintended consequences, and how the Company's own dividend policy slowly bled it dry. They trace the arc from the 1602 founding through the Fourth Anglo-Dutch War to the final bankruptcy in 1800, showing how a system built on violence and short-term profit eventually strangled itself. Central figures include Jan Pieterszoon Coen, the ruthless governor-general who built Batavia on a massacre; the Heren XVII, the seventeen directors who refused to reinvest; and the forgotten bookkeepers whose ledgers told the real story. Along the way, they explore the Banda Islands genocide, the rise of private trade by VOC employees, and the moment when Britain's Royal Navy sealed the Company's fate. A quiet, sober look at how empires built on paper money and pepper can fade into ash. #VOC #DutchEastIndiaCompany #Batavia #JanPieterszoonCoen #SpiceTrade #BandaIslands #HerenXVII #FourthAngloDutchWar #Amsterdam #Nutmeg #Pepper #Colonialism #Corporation #Bankruptcy #17thCentury #18thCentury #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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134 episodes

episode Why the Dutch East India Company Really Collapsed artwork

Why the Dutch East India Company Really Collapsed

The Dutch East India Company, the VOC, was the most valuable corporation in history—richer than any tech giant today. But it didn't fall because of corruption or bad management alone. In this episode, Lucas and Luna unpack the hidden cost of the VOC's success: the Batavia shipwreck, the spice monopoly's unintended consequences, and how the Company's own dividend policy slowly bled it dry. They trace the arc from the 1602 founding through the Fourth Anglo-Dutch War to the final bankruptcy in 1800, showing how a system built on violence and short-term profit eventually strangled itself. Central figures include Jan Pieterszoon Coen, the ruthless governor-general who built Batavia on a massacre; the Heren XVII, the seventeen directors who refused to reinvest; and the forgotten bookkeepers whose ledgers told the real story. Along the way, they explore the Banda Islands genocide, the rise of private trade by VOC employees, and the moment when Britain's Royal Navy sealed the Company's fate. A quiet, sober look at how empires built on paper money and pepper can fade into ash. #VOC #DutchEastIndiaCompany #Batavia #JanPieterszoonCoen #SpiceTrade #BandaIslands #HerenXVII #FourthAngloDutchWar #Amsterdam #Nutmeg #Pepper #Colonialism #Corporation #Bankruptcy #17thCentury #18thCentury #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

4. juli 20266 min
episode The Fall of Vijayanagara: When an Empire Forgot Its Enemies artwork

The Fall of Vijayanagara: When an Empire Forgot Its Enemies

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the dramatic collapse of the Vijayanagara Empire, one of the largest and wealthiest empires in Indian history. They focus on the Battle of Talikota in 1565, where a coalition of Deccan sultanates destroyed the capital city of Vijayanagara in a single day. Lucas explains how Vijayanagara's military, once dominant under leaders like Krishnadevaraya, grew complacent and failed to adapt to new gunpowder technologies. The episode delves into the internal rivalries within the imperial family, the betrayal of the Gilani brothers, and the role of the Portuguese in supplying firearms. It also covers the aftermath: the empire's shift to a new capital at Penukonda, its gradual decline, and the rise of successor states like the Nayakas of Madurai and Tanjore. Lucas highlights the empire's administrative innovations, such as the nayankara system, and how the lack of a stable succession plan contributed to its downfall. The conversation ends by reflecting on how the memory of Vijayanagara endures in South Indian culture and politics. #Vijayanagara #BattleOfTalikota #Krishnadevaraya #DeccanSultanates #Nayankara #Penukonda #RamaRaya #AliAdilShah #Portuguese #gunpowder #collapse #India #History #FexingoHistory #empire #Hampi #VijayanagaraEmpire #Talikota Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday9 min
episode Why the Mughal Empire Crumbled Under Aurangzeb artwork

Why the Mughal Empire Crumbled Under Aurangzeb

Lucas and Luna explore the catastrophic final decades of the Mughal Empire under Emperor Aurangzeb. They examine how his relentless military campaigns in the Deccan bled the treasury dry, his reversal of Akbar's religious tolerance policies sparked rebellions from Rajputs to Sikhs to Marathas, and the administrative rot that allowed the British East India Company to eventually take control. Along the way they discuss the jizya tax, the Maratha guerrilla leader Shivaji, the Deccan sultanates, the jagirdari crisis, and the lasting consequences of the Battle of Plassey. A vivid case study in imperial overreach and collapse. #MughalEmpire #Aurangzeb #Shivaji #Maratha #Deccan #Jizya #BattleOfPlassey #BritishEastIndiaCompany #IndianHistory #SikhRebellion #Rajput #JagirdariCrisis #ImperialOverreach #EmpireCollapse #17thCentury #SouthAsianHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday5 min
episode The Fall of the Song Dynasty: When Paper Money Destroyed an Empire artwork

The Fall of the Song Dynasty: When Paper Money Destroyed an Empire

In this episode of Why Every Great Empire Eventually Falls, Lucas and Luna explore how the Song Dynasty—arguably the most advanced economy of the medieval world—was brought down not by invading armies alone, but by its own invention: paper money. They trace the rise of jiaozi, the world's first government-issued banknotes, and show how the Song's innovative financial system turned into a hyperinflationary death spiral. Along the way, they meet Emperor Huizong, the artist-emperor who lost the north; the brilliant but doomed reformer Wang Anshi; the Jurchen Jin dynasty that smashed Kaifeng in the Jingkang Incident; and Kublai Khan's Mongol horde that finished what inflation started. Lucas explains how the Song printed money to pay its bills, debased its currency with iron and copper shortages, and ultimately created a crisis so severe that even its massive population and technical ingenuity couldn't save it. A cautionary tale about monetary policy, fiscal discipline, and the hidden vulnerabilities of complex economies. #SongDynasty #Hyperinflation #Jiaozi #Huizong #WangAnshi #JingkangIncident #Jurchen #JinDynasty #KublaiKhan #MongolConquest #Kaifeng #PaperMoney #EconomicCollapse #MedievalChina #FinancialHistory #History #FexingoHistory #EmpireFall Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

2. juli 20268 min
episode The Fall of Aksum: Why Ethiopia's Ancient Empire Disappeared artwork

The Fall of Aksum: Why Ethiopia's Ancient Empire Disappeared

In this episode, we explore the collapse of the Kingdom of Aksum, one of the great ancient empires that dominated the Red Sea and the Horn of Africa for over a millennium. We dive into environmental factors like soil exhaustion and deforestation, economic shifts as the Persian and later Islamic powers disrupted Red Sea trade routes, and political fragmentation following the rise of the Zagwe dynasty. We discuss the crucial role of King Kaleb's wars in Yemen and the mysterious Queen Gudit who legend says sacked Aksum. Learn how Aksum went from a major trading partner of Byzantium and India to a small kingdom in the Ethiopian highlands, leaving behind its iconic stelae and the legacy of Ezana's conversion to Christianity. We also examine the evidence for climate change and the silting of the port of Adulis. #Aksum #Ethiopia #FallOfEmpires #AncientHistory #RedSea #KingKaleb #QueenGudit #Ezana #Adulis #Zagwe #Christianity #ClimateChange #TradeRoutes #Sassanids #IslamicExpansion #History #FexingoHistory #Collapse Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

1. juli 20266 min