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 legitimize his rule in Confucian terms? And what led to the eventual collapse of the Yuan, weakened by factionalism, inflation, and the Red Turban Rebellion? Through the lens of Kublai’s reign, the show examines the paradox of imperial power—the blend of coercion and co-optation, the tension between cultural assimilation and nomadic identity. For listeners who think they know the Mongols only as destroyers, this series offers a far richer, more complex story: the making of a cross-continental empire that reshaped Asia and the world.