Why Every Great Empire Eventually Falls — Fexingo History

The Seleucid Elephant Collapse: War Elephants and Lost Empire

5 min · 7. juni 2026
episode The Seleucid Elephant Collapse: War Elephants and Lost Empire cover

Description

The Seleucid Empire once ruled from the Mediterranean to the Indus, fielding hundreds of war elephants that terrified its enemies. But when the empire collapsed, its elephant corps vanished into history. This episode traces the rise and fall of Seleucid military dominance through the lens of its most iconic weapon: the Indian war elephant. Lucas and Luna explore how Seleucus I Nicator traded territory for five hundred elephants with Chandragupta Maurya, how Antiochus III used them at the Battle of Magnesia against the Romans, and how the Treaty of Apamea in 188 BCE banned the Seleucids from keeping elephants at all—a unique military disarmament in ancient history. They discuss the logistics of capturing, training, and transporting elephants across thousands of miles, the battle of Raphia where rival elephant corps clashed, and the final decline when the Parthians and Romans dismantled what remained of Seleucid power. Along the way, they touch on the cultural exchange of war elephants from India to the Hellenistic world, and why no other empire ever replicated the Seleucid elephant force. #SeleucidEmpire #WarElephants #SeleucusINicator #ChandraguptaMaurya #AntiochusIII #BattleOfMagnesia #TreatyOfApamea #BattleOfRaphia #Hellenistic #AncientHistory #MilitaryHistory #ElephantWarfare #ParthianEmpire #RomanRepublic #IndianHistory #FexingoHistory #History #Collapse Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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81 episodes

episode The Seleucid Elephant Collapse: War Elephants and Lost Empire artwork

The Seleucid Elephant Collapse: War Elephants and Lost Empire

The Seleucid Empire once ruled from the Mediterranean to the Indus, fielding hundreds of war elephants that terrified its enemies. But when the empire collapsed, its elephant corps vanished into history. This episode traces the rise and fall of Seleucid military dominance through the lens of its most iconic weapon: the Indian war elephant. Lucas and Luna explore how Seleucus I Nicator traded territory for five hundred elephants with Chandragupta Maurya, how Antiochus III used them at the Battle of Magnesia against the Romans, and how the Treaty of Apamea in 188 BCE banned the Seleucids from keeping elephants at all—a unique military disarmament in ancient history. They discuss the logistics of capturing, training, and transporting elephants across thousands of miles, the battle of Raphia where rival elephant corps clashed, and the final decline when the Parthians and Romans dismantled what remained of Seleucid power. Along the way, they touch on the cultural exchange of war elephants from India to the Hellenistic world, and why no other empire ever replicated the Seleucid elephant force. #SeleucidEmpire #WarElephants #SeleucusINicator #ChandraguptaMaurya #AntiochusIII #BattleOfMagnesia #TreatyOfApamea #BattleOfRaphia #Hellenistic #AncientHistory #MilitaryHistory #ElephantWarfare #ParthianEmpire #RomanRepublic #IndianHistory #FexingoHistory #History #Collapse Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

7. juni 20265 min
episode The Aksumite Empire's Coin Crisis and Strategic Decline artwork

The Aksumite Empire's Coin Crisis and Strategic Decline

This episode of Why Every Great Empire Eventually Falls explores a lesser-known collapse: the Aksumite Empire in East Africa. Lucas and Luna examine how Aksum's strategic location on the Red Sea made it a powerful trading hub connecting Rome, India, and the Persian Gulf—and how overreliance on that trade, combined with a devastating coinage crisis under King Armah, led to its unraveling. They discuss the empire's unique coinage system, the rise of Islam, the loss of the port of Adulis, and the political and environmental pressures that forced Aksum into centuries of obscurity. The conversation also touches on the mysterious obelisks of Aksum, the role of King Kaleb's invasion of Yemen, and the legendary Ark of the Covenant tradition. A nuanced look at how empires can fade not with a bang, but with a slow, strategic suffocation. #AksumiteEmpire #AncientEthiopia #CoinCrisis #RedSeaTrade #KingArmah #KingKaleb #Adulis #ObelisksOfAksum #ArkOfTheCovenant #FallOfEmpires #LateAntiquity #RiseOfIslam #History #FexingoHistory #EndOfEmpire #Axum #TradeRoutes #Numismatics Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday9 min
episode The Mauryan Empire's Secret Weapon: Kautilya's Arthashastra artwork

The Mauryan Empire's Secret Weapon: Kautilya's Arthashastra

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore a less-told story of imperial decline: the fall of the Mauryan Empire in ancient India. They focus on the role of Kautilya (Chanakya), the Brahmin strategist who authored the Arthashastra—a ruthless manual of statecraft that held the empire together under Chandragupta Maurya and his grandson Ashoka. The conversation examines how Ashoka's conversion to Buddhism and his policy of non-violence, or ahimsa, may have inadvertently weakened the empire's military readiness and administrative grip. Lucas explains the system of spies, the taxation structure, and the dhamma mahamattas—officers sent to enforce Ashoka's moral code—and how these reforms alienated the warrior class and the economy. They contrast the Mauryan centralized bureaucracy with the more decentralized systems that followed, and discuss whether Ashoka's ethical turn was a noble ideal or a strategic blunder. Specifics include the Battle of Kalinga (261 BCE), the lion capital of Sarnath, the rock and pillar edicts, and the eventual rise of the Shunga dynasty. Fresh angle: not just another Roman or Chinese collapse, but a deep dive into how philosophy and governance interacted to doom an empire. #MauryanEmpire #Arthashastra #Kautilya #Chanakya #AshokaTheGreat #BattleOfKalinga #Dhamma #Ahimsa #ShungaDynasty #AncientIndia #Statecraft #LionCapital #RockEdicts #Pataliputra #Taxila #Buddhism #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday9 min
episode The Abbasid Collapse: How Turkish Slave Soldiers Took Over an Empire artwork

The Abbasid Collapse: How Turkish Slave Soldiers Took Over an Empire

The Abbasid Caliphate was the glittering heart of the Islamic Golden Age — Baghdad's House of Wisdom, Harun al-Rashid's court, a vast empire stretching from Tunisia to Central Asia. So how did it all unravel? In this episode, we trace the caliphate's slow-motion collapse through a single, surprising cause: its own slave soldiers, the Mamluks and ghilmān. We follow the rise of al-Mu'tasim and his Turkish guard, the murder of caliph al-Mutawakkil, the decade-long Anarchy at Samarra, and the eventual takeover by the Buyids and Seljuks. Along the way, we explore the Samarra palaces, the Qarmatian sack of Mecca, and the strange tale of a caliph who tried to move his capital — and lost everything. This is not the story of a single cataclysm, but of a dynasty that gradually ceded all real power, until the caliph became a puppet in his own palace. A classic case of the military tail wagging the imperial dog. #AbbasidCaliphate #Baghdad #Samarra #Mamluks #AlMutawakkil #AlMutadid #HouseOfWisdom #Buyids #Seljuks #Qarmatians #Ghilmān #IslamicGoldenAge #AnarchyAtSamarra #Caliphate #MiddleEastHistory #DeclineOfEmpires #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

5. juni 20267 min
episode Qing Dynasty Silver Crisis: Opium, Corruption, and the End of an Empire artwork

Qing Dynasty Silver Crisis: Opium, Corruption, and the End of an Empire

In this episode, Lucas and Luna dissect the economic collapse that doomed the Qing Dynasty. They trace how Emperor Qianlong's reign of splendor gave way to a devastating silver crisis, triggered by Britain's opium trade and China's addiction to foreign currency. The discussion covers the Canton System's failure, the Opium Wars, the Taiping Rebellion's financial drain, and how modernizing reforms under the Self-Strengthening Movement came too late. Key figures include Commissioner Lin Zexu, who attempted to halt the opium trade, and Empress Dowager Cixi, whose diversion of naval funds symbolized imperial decay. The episode also explores the silver-for-commodity cycle that left China vulnerable to global market shifts, the role of the East India Company, and the collapse of the tribute system. With parallels to earlier episodes on Rome and the Ming, this conversation shows how financial fragility—not just foreign aggression—can bring down a superpower. #QingDynasty #OpiumWars #LinZexu #OpiumTrade #SilverCrisis #EmpressDowagerCixi #TaipingRebellion #CantonSystem #EastIndiaCompany #SelfStrengthening #Qianlong #TreatyOfNanjing #History #FexingoHistory #China #EconomicCollapse #ImperialDecline #Addiction Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

5. juni 20268 min