• The Mongol Siege of Split 1242: A City's Unexpected Resistance
    2026/06/06
    In 1242, as Mongol forces under Kadan pursued Hungarian King Béla IV across Dalmatia, they laid siege to the walled city of Split (Spalato) on the Adriatic coast. Drawing on the vivid account of Thomas the Archdeacon in his *Historia Salonitana*, this episode reconstructs the siege from the perspective of the defenders — the citizens, the archbishop, and the hastily assembled militia. We explore why Split held when so many other European cities fell: its strong Roman-era fortifications, the arrival of reinforcements led by Béla's rival Prince Daniel of Galicia, and the unexpected role of local Slavic troops. We also examine what the siege reveals about Mongol siegecraft in rough terrain, the limits of their cavalry-based army against well-prepared coastal towns, and how the raid shaped Dalmatian politics for decades. A close look at one small but shocking chapter in the Mongol invasion of Europe. #MongolInvasion #SiegeOfSplit #HistoriaSalonitana #ThomasTheArchdeacon #Kadan #BélaIV #DanielOfGalicia #Dalmatia #AdriaticCoast #MongolSiegecraft #MedievalCroatia #Spalato #1242 #MongolEurope #FexingoHistory #History #MedievalHistory #EasternEurope Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo
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    7 分
  • Mongol Diplomacy and the Franco-Mongol Alliance That Almost Was
    2026/06/05
    In the mid-13th century, Mongol khans from the Ilkhanate sent multiple embassies to European kings, proposing a military alliance against their common enemy—the Mamluks of Egypt and Syria. European monarchs, including Louis IX of France and Edward I of England, entertained these overtures, and for a few decades, a Christian-Mongol pact seemed possible. This episode explores the diplomatic missions, the letters exchanged in Persian and Latin, the cultural misunderstandings, and why the alliance ultimately failed. We discuss key figures like Hulegu, Abaqa, Arghun, and the Nestorian monk Rabban Bar Sauma, who traveled from Persia to Paris and met with the Pope. We also examine the Mongol invasion of Syria in 1260, the Battle of Ain Jalut that halted it, and the missed opportunity that could have reshaped the medieval world. #FrancoMongolAlliance #Ilkhanate #Hulegu #Abaqa #Arghun #RabbanBarSauma #LouisIX #EdwardI #BattleOfAinJalut #Mamluks #Diplomacy #Crusades #NestorianChristianity #MedievalHistory #MongolEmpire #Syria #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo
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    5 分
  • The Mongol Invasion That Brought the Black Death to Europe
    2026/06/05
    In 1346, the Mongol army under Janibeg Khan besieged the Genoese trading port of Kaffa in the Crimea. When plague broke out in their camp, they catapulted infected corpses over the walls. The fleeing Genoese ships carried the disease to Constantinople, Sicily, and the rest of Europe, sparking the Black Death. This episode explores the siege of Kaffa, the evidence from contemporary sources like Gabriele de' Mussi, and the debate over whether the Mongols actually weaponized plague. We discuss the spread of Yersinia pestis along Mongol trade routes, the role of the Golden Horde, and the connections between the Silk Road and the pandemic that killed a third of Europe. A story of war, trade, and unintended consequences that changed world history. #BlackDeath #MongolSiegeOfKaffa #JanibegKhan #GoldenHorde #Crimea #Genoese #GabrieleDeMussi #SilkRoad #YersiniaPestis #1346 #PlagueWeaponization #BiologicalWarfare #Kaffa #Constantinople #PandemicHistory #MedievalHistory #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo
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    9 分
  • The Mongol Siege of Pest 1241: A City Abandoned and Its Fate
    2026/06/04
    In this episode of The Mongols vs Europe, Lucas and Luna revisit the pivotal Mongol siege of Pest in 1241, a critical moment during the first Mongol invasion of Hungary. They explore how King Béla IV's abandoned city fell to Batu Khan and Subutai's forces, the role of the frozen Danube in the Mongol advance, and the harrowing accounts from the Carmen Miserabile by Rogerius of Apulia. The discussion also delves into the tactical decisions that led to the swift destruction of Pest, the aftermath that shaped Hungarian defenses, and the long-term consequences for Central Europe. Specific details include the use of naphtha in Mongol sieges, the dispersal of the Hungarian army, and the siege's context within the broader campaign of 1241–1242. Listeners will gain a concrete understanding of how this siege exemplified Mongol military efficiency and its impact on European medieval history. #MongolSiege #Pest1241 #BatuKhan #Subutai #BelaIV #CarmenMiserabile #Rogerius #MongolInvasion #Hungary #Danube #Naphtha #MongolTactics #MedievalHistory #MongolEmpire #SiegeWarfare #CentralEurope #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo
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    6 分
  • The Mongol Siege of Trier 1287 A Raid That Changed the West
    2026/06/04
    In 1287, a Mongol army under the Golden Horde swept into the Rhineland, besieging the ancient Roman city of Trier. This episode unpacks the raid that nearly destroyed one of Germany's oldest cities, the political chaos of the interregnum that left the Holy Roman Empire vulnerable, and the surprising alliance between the Mongols and the Teutonic Knights. We explore the role of the Archbishop of Trier, the defensive walls that held, and how this forgotten siege reshaped European perceptions of the steppe threat. Drawing on chronicles like the Gesta Treverorum and the Annales Sancti Pantaleonis, we trace the raid's path through the Moselle Valley and ask: what if Trier had fallen? #MongolSiegeOfTrier #GoldenHorde #TeutonicKnights #HolyRomanEmpire #Trier1287 #MoselleValley #NogaiKhan #AnnalesSanctiPantaleonis #GestaTreverorum #ArchbishopBoemund #Interregnum #Rhineland #MedievalWarfare #SiegeWarfare #MongolRaids #Europe #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo
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    7 分
  • The Mongol Woman Who Crowned and Destroyed Empires Töregene Khatun
    2026/06/03
    Töregene Khatun was the Mongol empress who ruled the largest land empire in history as regent after Ögedei Khan's death in 1241. While her regency is often cited as the reason for the Mongol withdrawal from Europe, her story goes far deeper. Born a Naiman tribeswoman, captured and married into the Mongol royal family, she outmaneuvered rivals, appointed her own ministers, and held a kurultai that elected her son Güyük as Great Khan—despite Batu Khan's opposition. She instituted the Yassa law code, expanded the Yam relay system, and maintained the Pax Mongolica across Asia. Yet Persian chroniclers like Juvayni and Rashid al-Din portray her as corrupt and scheming, while the Secret History of the Mongols gives a more complex view. This episode explores Töregene's rise, her five-year regency, her brutal power struggles, and how her rule shaped the Mongol Empire's trajectory—including the fate of Europe. #TöregeneKhatun #MongolEmpire #ÖgedeiKhan #GüyükKhan #BatuKhan #Kurultai #Yassa #Yam #SecretHistoryOfTheMongols #Juvayni #RashidAlDin #MongolWomen #13thCentury #SteppeHistory #PaxMongolica #History #FexingoHistory #Karakorum Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo
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    10 分
  • The Mongol Siege of Zagreb 1242: A City's Last Stand
    2026/06/03
    In the spring of 1242, as Mongol forces under Kadan chased King Béla IV across Croatia, they turned on the city of Zagreb. This episode pieces together the siege from scarce medieval sources—the burning of Gradec, the flight of the bishop, and the desperate stand of a small garrison. We examine how the city's geography delayed the Mongols, what archaeological traces remain, and why Zagreb's fate mattered more than its size. Along the way, we confront a lingering question: was the Mongol withdrawal from Europe already underway, or did stiff resistance like Zagreb's buy time for the West? Drawing on the Chronicon Zagrabiense, Thomas of Split, and later Hungarian chronicles, we reconstruct a forgotten chapter of the 1241–1242 campaign. #MongolInvasion #Zagreb #Kadan #BélaIV #Gradec #ChroniconZagrabiense #ThomasOfSplit #1242 #Siege #MedievalCroatia #MongolCampaign #GoldenHorde #BatuKhan #Subutai #MedievalHistory #MilitaryHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo
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    8 分
  • The Mongol Invention That Conquered Empires The Yam Relay System
    2026/06/02
    The Mongol Empire didn't conquer half the world on horsemanship alone. At the heart of their military machine was an intricate communications network called the Yam — a relay system of horse stations stretching from the Yellow Sea to the Danube. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how the Yam allowed Batu's armies to coordinate across thousands of miles, why it terrified European chroniclers, and how it outlasted the empire itself. They trace the system's origins under Ögedei Khan, its role in the 1241 invasions of Hungary and Poland, and the cultural shockwaves it sent through Latin Christendom — including the first European travelers to ride its routes all the way to Karakorum. Along the way, they examine the paiza passport system, the yamci stationmasters, and the surprising legacy that echoes in modern postal services and the Pony Express. A deep dive into the infrastructure that made Mongol speed legendary. #Yam #MongolEmpire #ÖgedeiKhan #BatuKhan #Karakorum #paiza #yamci #MongolInvasion1241 #MongolCommunications #PaxMongolica #PonyExpress #GiovannidaPianCarpine #WilliamofRubruck #CentralAsia #EurasianHistory #MedievalInfrastructure #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo
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    8 分