Empire: World History - Legacy: Genghis Khan
Episode Date: February 26, 2025After victory in China, Genghis Khan goes west and takes on the Khwarezmians, surprising his enemy with a daring assault. He conquers all in his path and now controls the biggest empire the world has ...ever seen. But whose shoulders are broad enough to become his successor? Listen to Goalhanger and Wondery's podcast, Legacy, as Afua Hirsch and Peter Frankopan explore the life of Genghis Khan. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hello, Empire listeners. We are jumping in here because we'd love to tell you about one of our fellow goalhanger shows.
Legacy, hosted by historian Peter Frank Bad, who once made a memorable appearance.
on Empire telling Elita Rof is on with the fabulous Afwa Hirsch,
we must get on the show and have yet to get on.
Can I just say, yeah, Afwa's wonderful.
And I think Peter, if memory, said you were talking nonsense.
He would never, he would never.
You know he would and has on numerous occasions.
This is an amazing podcast which delves into the lives of some of the most incredible people
to have ever lived and asks if they have the reputation they deserve.
And so far, they've covered some big ones.
Cleopatra, Gorbachev, Winston Churchill, absolute giants of history, whose legacy still impact us
today. And there's more to come. And this season, they're looking into the life of one of the most
extraordinary leaders of all time, Genghis Khan, the leader of the Mongol Horde and the empire,
which stretched from Eastern Europe to the Sea of Japan, from Siberia to Southeast Asia.
Mongol lands encompassed modern day Korea, China, Russia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Georgia, Armenian, Azerbaijan,
of Iran, Iraq, Turkey, Moldova and Poland, among other territories, and at its peak, ruled over
an estimated 110 million people.
Just let that sink in for one second, 110 million people.
And let me tell you, in this series you're in for a real treat.
Peter, who really is a friend of our podcast, really is.
Franca Manka, one of our best friends.
Love him.
And he's also an expert in Mongolian history, so you couldn't be in better hands at all
with these two hosts.
We're about to play you a clip from episode four of the series.
The Mongols are creeping towards Hungary and the Hungarians.
Well, I mean, afraid is an understatement.
And just to let you know, this clip does contain mentions of rape, violence and murder.
As does most of Mongol history, we should say.
February 1241, Varad, Hungary.
Master Roger races through the city streets in panic, cold air stinging his lungs.
He can still see the peasant dropping to his knees, two arrows embedded in his back.
His final words rasped out through a blood-filled throat.
The Mongols are coming.
Inside the church, his sandals slapped against the bell tower's stone steps.
With trembling hands, he pulls on the ropes, peeling out a warning to the unsuspecting city.
Frantically, he scans the horizon.
To his horror, he sees a dark,
mass forming on a hilltop.
For weeks, news of the Mongols' westward invasion has trickled in.
The devastating pitched battles in Poland, mass rape and murder in Moldova.
Now the barbarian hordes are on their doorstep.
Below him, people spill into the streets.
Leaning from the tower, he bellows.
The Tartas are here. Lead to the woods. Save yourselves.
As word spreads, he hears the cries of fear.
Mongol's reputation precedes them. From his vantage point, Master Roger now sees a column of riders
tearing through the valley. Soon he can make out horses covered in armour, warriors carrying bows and
shields, their helmets glinting in the light. As they reach the city, he hears their blood
curdling shrieks, followed by the terrified streams of their victims. They surge through
the streets, cutting down men and falling on women. He stumbles from the church and heads in the direction
of the forest. Everywhere, the ground vibrates from the hoofbeats of stampeding horses, dust and chaos
all around him. An arrow shatters against a wall, inches from his head. He breaks into a run, too afraid to look
back and can only pray to God the barbarians don't find him. Master Roger was a real person. He really was a
Hungarian-based Italian churchmen of the time who documented the events of the Mongol invasion. And he wrote,
They were a wild people.
They inhumanely raped the virgins of the poor
and defiled the bed of the powerful whenever they had the chance.
Yeah, so it's terrifying.
You know, these people who've come seemingly from nowhere,
they look different, they're dressed in different ways,
they're on different kinds of horses,
different size of horses,
and they move with huge speed.
Also, ahead of them comes these rumours and stories about massive destruction.
And I think people are not sure what to believe,
whether this is just exaggerations. Surely
there can't have been churches that have been
set on fire with people inside them. There can't
be cities that have been completely demolished.
But there's enough knowledge to know that
there's reality underpinning
the anxieties with this sort of
cloud of disaster coming
towards Europe. It must have felt
like the apocalypse. These people coming
with incredible violence, inflicting
total defeat, and
they would not stop until
they had won. And
it was clear that
Europeans were completely unprepared for this onslaught. And you just look at the experiences in
battle as well, that they had a completely different approach to warfare. We heard in earlier
episodes about their remarkable horsemanship, their incredible ability to kill on horseback,
their precision with arrows. And they're fighting these knights with their really heavy,
cumbersome armour who have a completely different style of battle. And it's quite clear that they
are not prepared to fight this new and unknown enemy. So the Mongols,
advance into Poland and Hungary. And as you mentioned, in April 1241, they inflict a crushing defeat
on the Allied army near Leginzsche. King Bella IV narrowly escapes from the battlefield,
but his army doesn't. So they're slaughtered at the Battle of Mohe. But he then escapes down to Dalmatia.
He gets to Troughke, where he goes to stay with the Dormi family, with some of my ancestors,
and then has to be chased through the coastline while the Mongols follow through in hot pursuit,
sacking split, reaching as far as Scutari in Albania before being ordered home. And that arrival
of the Mongols in Europe is shattering in terms of what it is that it does for European self-confidence
and also about what happens later with European travellers wanting to go and head out eastwards.
And John of Plano Capini, William Robrook, and the most famous one, of course, being Marco Polo,
going to travel to go and find out what are these worlds that live in.
to our east. How much more sophisticated are they? How do people live? What do they believe in? And also,
some cases, can they also be converted? In the 1240s, for example, one of these envoys meets the
Great Khan and has given a letter to take back to the Pope, which says, all the lands in the world
have been conquered by the Mongols. You should come in person, it says to the Pope, with all the princes
and serve us. If you don't do so, the Great Khan warns, I shall make you my enemy. Where the Pope asks
the Mongol ruler to become Christian. Again, he gets a reply saying, how do you know whom God
absolves and to whom he shows mercy? All the lands from the rising to the setting sun are subject to me.
So that kind of thing shows that the balance of power is switching quite dramatically. And Ongoidae and
his successors are part of. You can follow Legacy on the Wonderry app or whatever you get,
or podcast. You can also binge entire seasons early and ad free by joining Wondry Plus in the
Wondry app or on Apple Podcasts.
