How the Mongols Changed Trade, War, and Globalization — Fexingo History

PODCAST · history

How the Mongols Changed Trade, War, and Globalization — Fexingo History

How did a nomadic confederation from the Mongolian steppe forge the largest contiguous land empire in history—and in doing so, reshape trade, warfare, and globalization forever? Join hosts Lucas and Luna as they unravel the epic story of the Mongol Empire, from the rise of Temüjin (Genghis Khan) in the harsh steppes of Central Asia to the splendor of Kublai Khan's Yuan dynasty in China. This show explores the Mongols' revolutionary military tactics—mounted archers, feigned retreats, and siege warfare—that shattered armies from the Yellow Sea to the Danube. It traces the establishment of the Pax Mongolica, a century of relative peace that reopened the Silk Road and enabled the flow of goods, ideas, diseases, and peoples across Eurasia. Delve into the empire's complex legacy: the destruction of cities like Baghdad and Kiev, but also the promotion of religious tolerance, the spread of paper money and gunpowder, and the transmission of Chinese medical knowledge to the Islamic world. Examin

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

How did a nomadic confederation from the Mongolian steppe forge the largest contiguous land empire in history—and in doing so, reshape trade, warfare, and globalization forever? Join hosts Lucas and Luna as they unravel the epic story of the Mongol Empire, from the rise of Temüjin (Genghis Khan) in the harsh steppes of Central Asia to the splendor of Kublai Khan's Yuan dynasty in China. This show explores the Mongols' revolutionary military tactics—mounted archers, feigned retreats, and siege warfare—that shattered armies from the Yellow Sea to the Danube. It traces the establishment of the Pax Mongolica, a century of relative peace that reopened the Silk Road and enabled the flow of goods, ideas, diseases, and peoples across Eurasia. Delve into the empire's complex legacy: the destruction of cities like Baghdad and Kiev, but also the promotion of religious tolerance, the spread of paper money and gunpowder, and the transmission of Chinese medical knowledge to the Islamic world. Examin

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