About
Kublai Khan, grandson of Genghis, completed what his grandfather began: the conquest of China. By 1279, his Mongol armies had extinguished the Song Dynasty, establishing the Yuan Dynasty that would rule China for nearly a century. But Kublai was more than a conqueror—he was a builder of cities, a patron of the arts, and a ruler who blended Mongol steppe traditions with Chinese Confucian governance. Lucas and Luna trace his rise from a young prince competing for the khaganate to the emperor who welcomed Marco Polo to his court at Khanbaliq (modern Beijing). They explore the administrative innovations of the Yuan—paper currency, a unified postal system, and a sophisticated census—as well as the brutal suppression of dissent, including the failed invasions of Japan (the kamikaze typhoons) and the subjugation of the Southern Song. The show tackles key debates: Was Kublai a true Chinese emperor or an alien Mongol overlord? How did he balance the demands of his Mongol elite with the need to