Pattern Break

How Nomadic Empires Conquered Civilizations - The Strategic Advantages Explained


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What happens when "backward" nomads destroy the world's greatest civilizations? Casey breaks down the surprising pattern that shows empires don't fall to stronger enemies - they fall to hungrier ones. Turns out the Mongols conquered 100 million people with armies that probably never hit 150,000 troops.
On Pattern Break, we explore why nomadic groups consistently beat settled civilizations throughout history. You'll discover how China built the Great Wall to keep out steppe nomads, only to be conquered by them anyway. We examine why Greek city-states thrived on "cooperative competition" while massive empires grew rigid and vulnerable. Plus, Casey explains how Rome's shift from citizen-soldiers to professional armies actually weakened their military edge over time.
šŸ“ Chapters:
[00:00] Introduction with Casey
[01:30] The nomad advantage: mobility vs. rigidity
[04:00] Mongol math: how 150K conquered 100 million
[07:00] Why the Great Wall failed China
[10:00] Greek competition vs. empire isolation
[12:00] Rome's military decline and key takeaways
šŸ” Topics: nomadic empires, Mongol conquest, military strategy, ancient warfare, empire collapse, steppe nomads
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Keywords: psychology history, historical cycles, historical patterns, psychology podcast, history podcast, behavioral psychology, ancient history

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Pattern BreakBy Adrian Walsh