• The Mongol Empire's Secret Weapon: Horse Archers and Composite Bows — Fexingo History
    Apr 26 2026
    In this episode of The Mongols vs Europe: What Almost Changed Western History, Lucas and Luna delve into the tactical innovations that made the Mongol army unstoppable. They explore the Mongol composite bow—a weapon of laminated horn, sinew, and wood that could outrange European longbows and pierce armor at 200 meters. Lucas explains the rigorous training required from childhood, the stirrup's role in enabling mounted archery, and the disciplined maneuvers like the feigned retreat and the 'sickle formation.' They also discuss how the Mongols integrated captured siege engineers and used psychological warfare, such as launching diseased corpses over walls. The episode highlights the Battle of Mohi (1241), where Subutai's encirclement tactics annihilated a European army that had no answer for Mongol mobility. Luna asks about the differences between Mongol and European bows, and Lucas clarifies that Mongol bows were shorter, recurved, and fired from horseback, while European longbows were taller and required standing. The episode concludes by reflecting on what might have changed if these tactics had been brought fully to Western Europe.

    #MongolHorseArchers #CompositeBow #Subutai #BattleOfMohi #MongolTactics #FeignedRetreat #Yassa #MongolSiegeWarfare #Stirrup #MountedArchery #13thCentury #MedievalWarfare #SteppeNomads #MongolEmpire #History #FexingoHistory #MilitaryHistory #CentralAsia #GenghisKhan #BatuKhan

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    7 min
  • Mongol Europe Invasion That Almost Happened: 1242 — Fexingo History
    Apr 25 2026
    In December 1241, the Mongol army under Batu Khan and Subutai was poised to invade Central Europe. They had crushed Hungary and Poland, and Vienna lay open. Then news arrived from Karakorum: the Great Khan Ögedei had died. What happened next—the sudden Mongol withdrawal—has been debated for centuries. Was it a strategic retreat to secure the succession, or did Europe dodge a bullet? In this episode, we examine the evidence, the timing, and the consequences. We explore the role of Güyük and the Kurultai, the fragile Mongol succession system, and what might have happened if the invasion had continued. We also look at the long-term effects: the weakening of the Golden Horde's western ambitions, the rise of the Rus' under Alexander Nevsky, and the myth of the 'Mongol Yoke'. Join Lucas and Luna as they unravel one of history's great what-ifs, with insights from recent scholarship and the accounts of chroniclers like Matthew Paris and Thomas of Spalato.

    #BatuKhan #Subutai #GedeiKhan #MongolEuropeInvasion #1242 #Kurultai #GoldenHorde #Karakorum #MongolSuccession #AlexanderNevsky #MatthewParis #ThomasOfSpalato #MedievalEurope #MongolEmpire #WhatIfHistory #MilitaryHistory #History #FexingoHistory #GenghisKhan #BattleOfMohi

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    8 min
  • The Golden Horde: How Mongol Rule Remade Russia for 200 Years — Fexingo History
    Apr 25 2026
    After the Mongol invasion of Europe stalled, the westernmost fragment of Genghis Khan's empire became the Golden Horde. For over two centuries, Mongol khans ruled the Rus' principalities from the Volga River to the Black Sea. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how the Golden Horde transformed Russian society, from the census and taxation system to the rise of Moscow, the role of the Orthodox Church, and the shadowy trade in enslaved people. They discuss the Horde's conversion to Islam, the key khans like Berke, Uzbek, and Mamai, and the slow decline that culminated in the Battle of Kulikovo and the eventual standoff on the Ugra River. What did the Mongols actually want from their Russian subjects? Why did Moscow flourish under the Horde's shadow? And how did the experience of Mongol rule shape the autocratic Russian state that followed?

    #GoldenHorde #Mongols #Russia #KievanRus #BerkeKhan #UzbekKhan #Mamai #DmitriDonskoi #BattleOfKulikovo #Moscow #Baskak #Yam #Yarlyk #Census #Islam #SilkRoad #History #FexingoHistory #MongolEmpire #GenghisKhan

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    9 min
  • The Mongol Siege of Baghdad: Science, Faith, and the End of an Age — Fexingo History
    Apr 24 2026
    In 1258, the Mongols under Hulagu Khan sacked Baghdad, then the intellectual and spiritual heart of the Islamic world. This episode explores the fall of the Abbasid Caliphate — a turning point that reshaped Eurasia. We follow the siege itself, from the caliph's miscalculations to the city's systematic destruction. But we also dig into what was lost: the House of Wisdom's manuscripts, the translation movements that preserved Greek philosophy, and the scholarly networks that connected Samarkand to Cordoba. Why did the Mongols spare the scholars? How did the devastation fuel later Mamluk and Ottoman resistance? And what if Baghdad had held — would the Renaissance have happened differently? Lucas and Luna examine primary sources like Ibn al-Athir's chronicles and the accounts of Nasir al-Din al-Tusi, the Persian polymath who advised the Mongols. They also consider the role of the Nizari Ismailis, the 'Assassins', whose fortress of Alamut fell just before Baghdad. A story of empire, knowledge, and the fragility of civilization.

    #SiegeOfBaghdad1258 #HulaguKhan #AbbasidCaliphate #HouseOfWisdom #NasirAlDinAlTusi #Ilkhanate #MongolEmpire #HistoryOfScience #IslamicGoldenAge #NizariIsmailis #Alamut #MamlukSultanate #IbnAlAthir #MedievalBaghdad #CentralAsia #FexingoHistory #History #Podcast #GenghisKhan #BatuKhan
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    8 min
  • The Mongol Invasion That Never Was: Europe's Close Call — Fexingo History
    Apr 24 2026
    In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the pivotal year 1241 when Mongol armies under Batu and Subutai stood at the gates of Central Europe after crushing Polish, German, and Hungarian forces at Legnica and Mohi. With Vienna and the Holy Roman Empire in their sights, the invasion suddenly halted. Why? The answer lies in a distant kurultai triggered by the death of Ögedei Khan in Mongolia. Lucas unpacks the political calculus behind the Mongol withdrawal, the succession crisis that followed, and the lasting what-if: what if the Mongols had pressed on? They also examine the Mongol war machine's logistics—how tens of thousands of horsemen and their herds were sustained across thousands of miles—and the intelligence failures that left European kingdoms blind to the threat. The episode touches on the role of the yam system, the differing strategies of Batu and Subutai, and the legacy of fear that haunted Europe for generations. A nuanced look at one of history's great near misses, grounded in specific events and personalities.

    #MongolInvasion #BatuKhan #Subutai #BattleOfMohi #BattleOfLegnica #GedeiKhan #Kurultai #MongolEmpire #13thCentury #MedievalEurope #HolyRomanEmpire #YamSystem #MongolHorsemen #BelaIV #HenryIIofPoland #CentralEurope #WhatIfHistory #FexingoHistory #GenghisKhan #PaxMongolica
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    7 min
  • The Mongols vs Europe What Almost Changed Western History — Fexingo History
    Apr 23 2026
    In the winter of 1241, a Mongol army under Subutai crossed the frozen Danube and smashed a Hungarian force at the Battle of Mohi. In weeks they had taken Pest and Esztergom. But then, just as Vienna lay open, they turned back. Why? This episode of Fexingo History plunges into that pivotal moment, introducing the Mongol invasion of Europe under Genghis Khan's successors. Lucas and Luna explore the steppe empire's war machine — the decimal army structure, the composite bow, the feigned retreat — and the terrifying speed of their campaigns from China to the Carpathians. We meet Subutai, the brilliant general behind the victories, and the European kings who failed to unite. But the real question is: what stopped the Mongols? A succession crisis? Geography? Or something else? This pilot episode sets the stage for a series that re-examines a near-miss in Western history, one that could have reshaped the continent from the Atlantic to the Urals.

    #MongolInvasion #Subutai #BattleOfMohi #GenghisKhan #OgedeiKhan #BatuKhan #GoldenHorde #MedievalEurope #SteppeEmpire #CompositeBow #FeignedRetreat #Yassa #Karakorum #1241 #13thCentury #MilitaryHistory #History #FexingoHistory #MongolEmpire #BattleOfLegnica
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    7 min