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What did it truly mean to be born a noble woman in the Mongol Empire? In 1235, in the palace city of Karakorum, a sixteen-year-old girl named Altan is prepared like a diplomatic treaty—arranged, inspected, and positioned as part of state strategy. Her life is not shaped by personal choice, but by the machinery of empire. This episode explores how the Mongol state used marriage, kinship, and household control as political tools. Far from legend, this system is documented across centuries of historical sources. Through Altan’s story, we examine how an empire organized the most personal parts of life—identity, family, reproduction, and autonomy—to secure power. In this video, we explore: • How noble women were exchanged as “living alliances” between powerful families • How the Yassa (the Mongol legal code) regulated women, marriage, and inheritance • How officials and rulers maintained authority through controlled intimacy and household oversight • Why almost no resistance to this system existed within the empire • How these practices became normalized traditions that survived long after the empire declined • And why Altan’s experience is not just history, but a structure we can still recognize today These accounts are grounded in real sources: • Persian chronicles, including Rashid al-Din • Yuan Dynasty administrative records • European travel accounts such as Marco Polo • Marriage scrolls, legal codes, archaeological findings from Karakorum • Modern historical and anthropological studies of steppe diplomacy Altan herself is a composite figure, but the system that shaped her life was entirely real. Understanding her story is not about judging the past. It is about recognizing how power operates—and how similar patterns still exist today. If you believe these histories should not be forgotten: ► Subscribe, like, and share. ► Help the algorithm surface stories that challenge the myths we prefer to keep. History is not just kings, battles, or borders. It is the lives of those who had no power to resist—and the systems built upon them.