Why the Mongol Empire Split Apart So Quickly — Fexingo History
In 1260, the Mongol Empire stood at the brink of total domination. Then Möngke Khan died at the siege of Diaoyu, and everything fell apart. This episode looks at the Toluid Civil War that erupted between Kublai and his younger brother Ariq Böke — not as a simple succession dispute, but as a clash of two fundamentally different visions for the empire. Kublai, based in China, wanted to rule as a Chinese emperor, adopting Confucian rituals and settling in his new capital of Khanbaliq (modern Beijing). Ariq Böke, based in Karakorum, defended the old steppe ways, the Yassa code, and the kurultai system. We walk through the key battles: the skirmish at the Selenge River, the siege of Alandar, and the decisive moment when Kublai's Chinese-style supply lines and siege engineers outlasted Ariq's cavalry. We also explore how this war permanently fractured the Toluid family, setting the Chagatai and Jochid khanates on paths to independence. The war ended with Ariq's surrender in 1264, but the empire never recovered — the fracture lines of 1260 became the borders of the successor states. #MongolEmpire #ToluidCivilWar #KublaiKhan #AriqBöke #Karakorum #Khanbaliq #Yassa #Kurultai #SiegeOfDiaoyu #SelengeRiver #Alandar #ChagataiKhanate #Jochid #YuanDynasty #History #FexingoHistory #CentralAsia #SteppeEmpires Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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