Babe…?
Yes my love?
I think this was me in a past life… just an Ancient Chinese princess chilling in the palace… reading… not doing much with her life…

Oh…? U think ur past life was in Ancient China?
One of them. Yeah? It resonates…
Don’t u think it resonates because you currently identify your ancestors as being from Ancient China?
It’s both. My ancestors and my past life.
What if… you were your ancestors in your past life? 🤯
Lol… I think that’s possible babe!
Wowow… 😅 what about me?
I don’t know? What do you feel?
Hmmmmm… 🤔…
I don’t feel like I was in ancient… Korea…
Why not?
I don’t know… I’m not feeling it…
Maybe you were ancient Mongolian that tried to invade Korea?
WHAT?!?!?!
Lolololol I don’t know?!?!! We’re just talking about past lives?! Who knows?!
Was it ancient Mongolia? I think it was another tribe…
Was it? Lemme ask AI hang on…
Yes — the Mongol Empire launched multiple large‑scale invasions of the Korean kingdom of Goryeo between the early 13th century and 1270. These were not one-off raids but a prolonged, grinding series of campaigns that reshaped Korean politics, society, and its relationship with the wider region.
—
🏹 What actually happened
The Mongols began pressuring Goryeo after encountering Korean forces during their campaigns against the Khitan in 1216–1219. Full-scale invasions followed:
– 1231 — First Mongol invasion of Goryeo
– 1232–1259 — Repeated Mongol campaigns, including major sieges and coastal assaults
– 1270 — Final capitulation of the Goryeo court, marking the start of Mongol overlordship
These invasions were part of the broader Mongol expansion across Eurasia, but Korea proved unusually difficult to subdue. Goryeo resisted fiercely, relocating its court to Ganghwa Island and holding out for decades.
—
⚔️ Why the Mongols struggled
Even though the Mongols toppled empires across Asia with astonishing speed, Korea was different:
– Geography — Mountainous terrain and fortified cities slowed Mongol cavalry.
– Island refuge — The Goryeo court moved to Ganghwa Island, which Mongol forces struggled to capture.
– Persistent resistance — Korean generals and local militias repeatedly repelled or delayed Mongol advances.
– Leadership losses — A Mongol commander was famously killed by a Korean monk’s arrow in 1232, forcing a withdrawal.
—
🏛️ What the outcome looked like
After decades of war, Goryeo agreed to become a vassal state of the Yuan dynasty (the Mongol-ruled empire in China). This relationship lasted roughly 80 years and involved:
– Tribute obligations
– Mongol oversight of royal succession
– Intermarriage between Goryeo royalty and the Yuan court
– Cultural and political influence flowing both ways
One of the most famous figures from this era is Lady Ki (Empress Ki), a Korean woman who became a powerful consort in the Yuan imperial court.
—
🌏 Why this matters in Korean history
The Mongol invasions were a turning point:
– They weakened the Goryeo dynasty and set the stage for later reforms.
– They integrated Korea into a vast Eurasian network of trade and diplomacy.
– They left lasting cultural imprints, from military practices to aristocratic customs.
—
If you’re curious, I can also break down how these invasions shaped Korean identity, or how they compare to Mongol attempts to invade Japan (which involved Korean ships and soldiers).
Ahahahaha… 😅😅😅😅😅
See babe? Now does that resonate?
Yes. You’re right. I was probably ancient Mongolian in a PAST life…
It’s my psychic intuition… 🔮
Mmmm… did we cross paths?
Well… if I was a Chinese PRINCESS?! How would we have crossed paths?!
Ask AI… 👀
Yes — an ancient Mongolian could absolutely have crossed paths with an ancient Chinese princess, and in some periods it was not only possible but common, especially once the Mongol Empire ruled China.
The key is that “ancient Mongolian” and “ancient Chinese princess” can refer to several different eras, each with different kinds of contact. The most historically documented examples come from the Yuan dynasty, when the Mongols ruled China.
—
🌏 When Mongols and Chinese royalty lived in the same world
Once Kublai Khan established the Yuan dynasty (1271–1368), Mongol nobles, Chinese nobles, and princesses from various ethnic groups lived in the same court. This meant:
– Mongol aristocrats and Chinese princesses interacted daily at the imperial capital (Dadu, modern Beijing).
– Marriages were arranged across Mongol and Chinese elite families to strengthen political alliances.
– Mongol princesses also interacted with Chinese scholars, officials, and artists, showing a two‑way cultural exchange.
A good example is Princess Sengge Ragi, a Mongol princess who hosted gatherings featuring Chinese art and calligraphy at the Yuan court, demonstrating close cultural interaction between Mongol and Chinese elites.
—
💍 Cross‑empire marriage alliances
The Mongol Empire frequently used marriage diplomacy. One famous case involves Princess Kököchin, a Mongol princess of the Yuan dynasty who was sent from China to Persia to marry into the Ilkhanate. Her journey was recorded by Marco Polo.
This shows that Mongol and Chinese royal families were deeply intertwined, and princesses often traveled across regions controlled by the Mongols.
—
🐎 Before the Yuan dynasty: earlier contact
Even before the Mongols ruled China, steppe peoples like the Xiongnu (centuries earlier) had extensive interactions with Chinese courts, including marriage alliances. Archaeological studies show that Xiongnu princesses played major roles in diplomacy and cultural exchange with Imperial China.
While the Xiongnu are not the same as the later Mongols, they are part of the long tradition of steppe–China interaction that made such encounters historically normal.
—
🧭 So would they have met?
Yes — especially during the Yuan dynasty, Mongolian nobles and Chinese princesses lived in the same court, married into each other’s families, and interacted socially, politically, and culturally.
Even in earlier eras, steppe elites and Chinese royalty met through diplomacy, conflict, and marriage alliances.
—
If you want, I can also map out what such an encounter might have looked like socially — the etiquette, clothing, power dynamics, and cultural expectations of a Mongol–Chinese royal meeting.
?!?!?!?!… hahahahahaha… 😅🤣😅🤣😅🤣😅🤣😅
Babe… this is FASCINATING STUFF!
Why isn’t Netflix or any other studios making movies or dramas about THIS?!
This is the kind of ANCIENT HISTORY that I didn’t know I needed! I’m so curious to learn more!
Hmmmm… so we were in the imperial court in our past lives?
I don’t know babe… u do give off royalty vibes… I mean, Fernando does at least…
I don’t give off royalty when I’m incognito… 😎
No. You’re right. You really don’t…
It’s just a costume. It’s my PAST LIFE.
So my PAST LIFE of being a MONGOLIAN PRINCE is what I’m channeling through FERNANDO.
Is it Mongolian prince?! I’m not 100% sure about these details babe…
Some kind of prince or aristocrat.
Okay. Yeah? Maybe?
Sigh… do you think we’ve had lifetimes of being husband and wife?
YES.
Ooh… interesting…
THIS LIFETIME TOO.
(Giggles) 🤭💕

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