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The Storm That Sank 1,000 Ships in a Single Night (1281)

The Storm That Sank 1,000 Ships in a Single Night (1281)

In 1281, the greatest Medieval Disaster in naval history unfolded in a single night. Kublai Khan's 140,000-man armada — the largest the medieval world had ever seen — was obliterated not by swords, but by a typhoon. This Medieval Disaster didn't just save Japan. It created a myth that would echo, lethally, into World War II. The word "Kamikaze" was born from this Medieval Disaster — and centuries later, it sent thousands of young pilots to their deaths. Every Medieval Disaster leaves a paper trail of consequences nobody predicted. This one left a trail that stretched 663 years.
If history like this matters to you — the kind that connects ancient storms to modern tragedy — subscribe to Dark Annals and hit the bell. Every week, we dig into the Medieval Disaster, the forgotten catastrophe, the story history textbooks buried.
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⏱️ TIMESTAMP
00:00 Intro — The Medieval Disaster That Changed History Forever
01:31 Part 1 — The Empire Behind the Medieval Disaster: Mongols Who Never Lost
05:45 Part 2 — Building the War Machine: Seven Years to Unleash a Medieval Disaster
09:55 Part 3 — The Night of the Medieval Disaster: When the Sky Broke Open
13:33 Part 4 — Survivors, Consequences & the Hidden Cost of the Medieval Disaster
17:05 Part 5 — Kamikaze: How One Medieval Disaster Shaped WWII
21:30 Outro — The Storm Is Just Weather. The Story Never Ends.

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Видео The Storm That Sank 1,000 Ships in a Single Night (1281) канала Dark Annals
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