Kublai Khan, the Mongol Emperor of China, sought to expand his empire and complete the subjugation of all of China, including the Song Dynasty in the south. He also saw Japan as a tempting target due to its strategic location and resources.
The Mongols were defeated by a combination of natural disasters (typhoons) and the Japanese defensive strategies, including the construction of a 25-mile-long wall and night-time attacks on Mongol ships. Additionally, the Mongols' lack of naval expertise and the challenges of amphibious warfare contributed to their failures.
The Mongols and Japanese had different approaches to warfare. The Japanese followed the Bushido Code, which emphasized individual honor and glory, while the Mongols were more pragmatic and organized, using advanced weapons and tactics to overwhelm their opponents.
The second invasion failed due to a typhoon that destroyed most of the Mongol fleet and killed a significant number of soldiers. The Japanese had also better prepared their defenses, including a wall around Hakata Bay, and conducted effective night-time attacks on Mongol ships.
For the Mongols, the invasions devastated their naval capabilities and left them unable to defend their coast, leading to an increase in piracy. For Japan, the invasions led to a greater sense of nationalism and a shift in the samurai class, as they received no rewards for their defense, contributing to the fall of the Kamakura shogunate.
The term 'kamikaze' (divine wind) became significant because the typhoons that destroyed the Mongol fleets were seen as divine intervention. During World War II, Japanese kamikaze pilots took their name and inspiration from these events, believing their attacks would serve as a divine wind to save the country.
The following is an encore presentation of Everything Everywhere Daily. In the late 13th century, the Mongol Empire was at the peak of its power. It was at this time that the Mongol Emperor of China, Kublai Khan, set his sights on the islands of Japan. On two separate occasions, the Mongols assembled the largest amphibious fleet in world history. And both times they discovered the limits of their military conquests. Learn more about the Mongol invasions of Japan on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
This episode is sponsored by NerdWallet. When it comes to general knowledge and history, you know I've got you covered. But who do you turn to when you need smart financial decisions? If your answer is NerdWallet, then you're absolutely right. And if it's not, let me change your mind.
The nerds at NerdWallet have spent thousands of hours researching and reviewing over 1,300 financial products. And they have the tools you need to make smarter financial decisions. Looking for a credit card? Go beyond the basic comparisons, filter for features that matter to you, and read in-depth reviews. Ready to choose a high-yield savings account? Get access to exclusive deals and compare rates, bonuses, and more. House hunting? View today's top mortgage rates for your home sweet home.
Make the Nerds your go-to resource for smart financial decisions. Head to nerdwallet.com forward slash learn more. NerdWallet, finance smarter. Disclosure, NerdWallet Compare Incorporated NMLS 1617539. This episode is brought to you by Wondery's American History Tellers. In early 1607, three ships carrying over 100 English settlers landed on the shores of what is now Virginia, where they established a colony they named Jamestown.
But from the start, internal strife and infighting threatened the colony's survival. Wondery's American History Tellers takes you into the events, times, and people that shaped America. Its values, struggles, and dreams. In the latest series, after their arrival, the English colonists quickly established a fort, but their quest for wealth and status soon led to conflict with Virginia's native people and the powerful Powhatan. Violence, disease, and starvation would soon follow, leaving the colony on the edge of collapse.
Follow American History Tellers on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. Listen to all the episodes ad-free and get early access to the latest season on Wondery Plus. Start your free trial today in the Wondery app, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify. It's hard to stress just how much of a role the Mongols were on in the late 13th century. By this time, Genghis Khan, the guy who started it all, had been dead for almost 50 years. His descendants, however, had continued conquering for decades.
The Mongol Empire at this time had become the largest contiguous land empire in human history, stretching from the Pacific Ocean to the Baltic Sea to the Persian Gulf. These nomadic horse archers from the middle of nowhere were like an ancient version of the Borg from Star Trek. They knew nothing about siege warfare, for example, so they captured some siege warfare experts and became experts themselves. They were the ultimate pragmatists, and they adopted whatever they could from whatever people that they conquered.
In 1264, the grandson of Genghis Khan, Kublai, was named the Khan of Khans. By this time, the empire had grown so large that one person couldn't really rule at all. The distances were simply too vast. Kublai Khan was the ruler of northern China, which had originally been conquered by his grandfather. He dubbed his reign the Yuan Dynasty to use the language and dynastic system of the Chinese.
He wanted to complete what his grandfather was unable to do, the complete subjugation of all of China, which at this point meant the Song Dynasty in the south. However, his appetite for conquest was greater than just the rest of China. In 1259, he established the Kingdom of Goryeo as a vassal kingdom, which ruled the Korean peninsula. By 1268, while he still hadn't yet conquered the Song Dynasty in the south, the islands to the east of his empire began to look like a tempting target, Japan.
So Kublai Khan took a page out of the Mongol playbook and sent envoys to Japan. Between 1266 and 1273, Kublai Khan sent six different envoys demanding that Japan become a vassal state and pay tribute to the Mongols. Needless to say, the Japanese rejected these demands and, after the second envoy in 1268, began preparing for an eventual invasion.
Normally, the Mongols would make such a demand to a walled city. If the city acceded to the demands, the Mongols would set up a Mongol administrator and be on their way. But if a city refused, then the city would be destroyed, sometimes down to the last living person. This was different, however. Japan was a very large country, and most importantly, it was an island across the sea.
China and Japan had thousands of years of contact, mostly consisting of trade and a transfer of knowledge, usually in the direction of China to Japan. Despite a naval battle in the year 663, there had been almost no animosity between the two countries. The Japanese did not pay tribute to the Chinese emperors, and the Chinese never thought to attack Japan because of its location.
Kublai Khan, however, was not Chinese. He was a Mongol. And he took the rejection by the Japanese as an affront, as any Mongol ruler would. So if Japan wasn't going to submit voluntarily, they were going to have to be conquered. However, this was completely different than anything the Mongols had faced before. Yes, the Mongols were adaptable, and that adaptability served them well as their empire expanded across Eurasia.
However, they were still fundamentally horsemen of the Asian steppes. They knew literally nothing about naval warfare. Horses were useless on ships and would be extremely difficult to transport across the sea. None of that deterred Kublai Khan, however. Say what you will about the Mongol Empire, but they most definitely had a can-do spirit. In 1274, the Mongols amassed an army and a flotilla of ships in the southern Korean peninsula to invade Japan.
The sources from that period estimate that the Mongols had amassed an army of 40,000 men and 900 ships. And more on those numbers in a bit. The closest point between the Korean peninsula and Japan is called the Strait of Tsushima. Its name comes from the island of Tsushima located in the middle of the strait. Today, it's located between the modern cities of Busan, South Korea and Fukuoka, Japan.
The Mongols set sail and found immediate success. They took the sparsely populated islands of Tsushima and Iki, located in the strait, before landing their forces at the Bay of Hakata in modern-day Fukuoka. The Japanese were ready, with an army of samurai warriors prepared to defend Japan. But it turned out that the Mongols and the Japanese were playing totally different games. War in Japan was conducted via a set of rules known as the Bushido Code, which stressed individual honor and glory.
There were rules, spoken and unspoken, about how warfare was to be conducted according to this code. The Mongols didn't know anything about that and didn't really care. The Mongols played to win. In battle, the samurai would often step out and announce who they were and their lineage to engage someone in one-on-one combat. When the Mongols saw this, they just laughed and swarmed the warrior and killed them.
The Mongols were using weapons the Japanese had never seen, including poison-tipped arrows, firearms, explosive bombs made out of gunpowder that were launched by catapults, and much more accurate bows that could shoot further. On top of all that, the Mongols were simply more organized. They had decades of experience and fought as a cohesive unit. They could issue battlefield commands via drums to control exactly where and when their units attacked. The Japanese, however, fought as a collection of individuals.
After the Mongols landed, the Japanese began being routed. However, unbeknownst to the Japanese, the captains of the ship, who were all Korean because the Mongols had no sailors of their own, began warning the Mongol commanders that they needed to move their ships out to open water and drop anchor because a storm was coming. Winds were picking up, and if they didn't take action, their ships would be tossed against the rocks of Hakata Bay.
The Mongol commanders eventually relented. The soldiers went back onto their ships and they sailed directly into a typhoon. The storm devastated the Mongol fleet. An estimated 300 ships were lost and 13,500 soldiers went down with them. Japan had been saved by what they called a divine wind, or as it's known in Japanese, kamikaze. This was a very rare failure for the Mongols. They were not used to disasters such as this.
Kublai Khan was determined that Japan would be conquered, so he began plans for a second invasion. While he was working on his second invasion of Japan, he managed to finally conquer the Song Dynasty in southern China, unifying all of China under his rule. This not only freed up resources that had been deployed against the Song, but also gave him the resources of the Song Dynasty as well. Kublai Khan literally established a department in his government called the Ministry for Conquering Japan.
The Japanese, knowing that a second invasion was likely, also began better preparing their defenses. The landowners of the island of Kyushu were made responsible for the construction of a 25-mile-long wall surrounding Hakata Bay. Kublai Khan sent a six-person delegation to the Japanese emperor to demand that the emperor come to China and kowtow before him. This time, the envoys were all beheaded, which was an incredible affront to the Khan. In 1281, the second invasion force was ready.
This was to be the largest amphibious invasion in history, and would remain so until the invasion of Normandy in 1944. According to the accounts from this period, this time the Mongols sent a vastly larger force, 4,000 ships containing 140,000 soldiers. The Mongol fleet came from two directions. One was again from Korea with about 40,000 soldiers, and the other larger one came from southern China with about 100,000 soldiers.
The fleets did not arrive in Hakata Bay at the same time. The smaller fleet from Korea arrived first on June 23, 1281, and encountered the defensive wall that the Japanese had built. The Mongol forces, which at this point were actually mostly Korean and Chinese conscripts, were unable to break through. The Japanese would often sail out at night under the cover of darkness and light the Mongol ships on fire, which demoralized the Mongol forces and made it difficult to supply the troops who had landed.
Unlike the first invasion, where the fighting took place in a single day, this dragged on for 50 days in a stalemate. The Mongols would try to land, the Japanese would push them back, and the Mongols would retreat to their ships and the islands in the strait that they controlled. The larger fleet from southern China was late. In fact, the fleet from Korea was never supposed to attack until the other fleet had first arrived. However, they did eventually arrive on August 12th.
They landed outside of Hakata Bay, where there were no defensive fortifications built. After almost two months of repelling the forces that did attempt to land, the samurai of Kyushu Island now found themselves outnumbered and on the verge of being overrun. Then, on August 15th, something happened. In a repeat of what happened seven years earlier, a typhoon hit the island of Kyushu.
This one was worse than the one which ended the first invasion. Most of the 4,000 ships were destroyed, as were an estimated 100,000 soldiers. All the surviving troops that washed up on shore were slaughtered by the Japanese, except those from southern China. The Japanese felt that those from southern China had been sent against their will to fight, so they were spared. Estimates of the losses amongst the Mongol forces ranged from 60 to 90%.
The Mongol Empire was never able to conquer Japan. The sea proved to be too formidable of an obstacle for the Mongols. The defeat of the Japanese invasion forces proved to be the greatest in the history of the Mongol Empire. And here I should note an issue with all the numbers that I've been referencing. It's widely believed that almost all ancient sources exaggerated numbers when it came to describing battles. And it's believed that it was the case here as well.
Many contemporary historians simply don't believe that the Yuan dynasty had the logistical ability to mount an amphibious landing on the scale of D-Day in the 13th century. Modern estimates place the number of soldiers in the 1274 invasion at about 10,000 to 15,000 and in the 1281 invasion at about 50,000 to 70,000. Still very large numbers, but much less than the accounts given from the period. The disaster of 1281 had enormous implications for both countries.
For the Mongols in the Yuan Dynasty, it devastated their naval capabilities. They threw so much into the invasion of Japan that they didn't have the ships to defend their coast anymore. Much of the ship construction was done in Korea, which had chopped down its best trees to create the fleet. They wouldn't have the lumber to make more ships for at least another generation. They couldn't attempt another invasion of Japan again, even if they wanted to. Not surprisingly, Japanese pirates proliferated off the coast of Korea and China in the years that followed.
In Japan, the fallout from the invasion was even more severe. The samurai were accustomed to receiving payment for fighting on behalf of a warlord. As all of their previous battles involved one Japanese warlord fighting another, it was a zero-sum game and there was always some land or treasure to be distributed by the winner. In this case, there was nothing to distribute to the samurai. These were foreign invaders. The only prize was survival.
With nothing to give those who defended Japan, the Kamakura shogunate that controlled Japan eventually fell without the support of the samurai. The defeat of the Mongols also led to a greater sense of nationalism and destiny within Japan. In China, it also increased the respect of the Japanese, who were now considered to be brave warriors. In the Ming Dynasty that followed the Yuan Dynasty, an invasion of Japan was considered on three separate occasions, and each time the idea was rejected.
However, the thing that most of you probably noticed was the term for divine wind, kamikaze. The Japanese kamikaze pilots of World War II, which is definitely the subject of a future episode, took their name and inspiration directly from the Mongol invasion of Japan. It was felt that the kamikaze attacks would serve as the divine wind which would save the country, just as the actual winds did 700 years earlier.
The Mongol invasions of Japan proved that there were limits to what the Mongols could achieve militarily. They were not, in fact, invincible. The only thing it took to defeat them were two very well-timed tropical storms. The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel. The associate producers are Benji Long and Cameron Kiever.
I want to give a big shout out to everyone who supports the show over on Patreon, including the show's producers. Your support helps me put out a show every single day. And also, Patreon is currently the only place where Everything Everywhere daily merchandise is available to the top tier of supporters. If you'd like to talk to other listeners of the show and members of the Completionist Club, you can join the Everything Everywhere daily Facebook group or Discord server. Links to everything are in the show notes.