The Silk Ledger

The Silk Ledger

Education EN ↓ 9 episodes

History, audited. History is not a list of dates. It is a ledger of debts. It is a mirror. Empires rise. Empires fall. The numbers don't lie. The Silk Ledger investigates the forces that built and broke empires and dynasties — and the global trades, wars, and currency shocks that pulled them in. Smuggling syndicates that owned fleets. Embezzlers who stole more than the treasury. Pirates who taxed the Pacific. Currency experiments that ended in hyperinflation. We don't teach history. We audit it. See the receipts — full visual audit on thesilkledger.com

Author

The Silk Ledger

Category

Education

Podcast website

thesilkledger.com

Latest episode

Jul 7, 2026

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Episodes

He Built a Fortune in Rubber, Then Gave Away Every Cent 07.07.2026

Fifteen thousand acres of rubber. Thirty thousand men working for him. He gave away every cent of it — and left his own children nothing. In 1903, a young clerk in Singapore came home to find his father's rice business collapsed — and behind it, a debt he was under no legal obligation to touch. He shouldered it anyway. Within two decades, Tan Kah Kee (陈嘉庚) was the richest man in Southeast A...

The Emperor's Banker Who Went Bankrupt 21.06.2026

The men sent to seize Hu Xue Yan's fortune found an empty house. Two years earlier, he had bankrolled imperial China and cornered a global market. He started by sweeping the floor of a small bank in Hangzhou. An orphan with no name to trade on and one talent: he could count. He died the most powerful private banker in China — and then he died broke. In between, he built a network of nine banks...

The Pirate Who Built the Largest Navy — and Taxed the Sea 07.06.2026

He didn't sink the ships that crossed his waters. He charged them a toll. And the most powerful navy on earth was his enforcer. No ship from Japan to the South China Sea sailed through his waters without paying. Zheng Zhilong was born in 1604 to a minor official in Fujian who wanted a scholar for a son. He got a pirate instead — and then something stranger than a pirate. From a Macau trading d...

What Marco Polo Saw Bankrupted Kublai Khan's Empire 26.05.2026

Marco Polo walked into Peking in 1275 and saw something Europe wouldn't believe for 700 years. He went home a liar. Marco Polo walked into Kublai Khan's capital in 1275 and saw the first paper money in history. Mulberry bark, soaked and pressed, stamped with the Khan's red seal, declared the only money allowed across an empire stretching from the Pacific to the Volga. Refusal carried t...

Marco Polo and the Wood That Bankrupted Kublai Khan's Empire 24.05.2026

Marco Polo walked into Peking in 1275 and saw something Europe wouldn't believe for 700 years. He went home a liar. Marco Polo walked into Kublai Khan's capital in 1275 and saw the first paper money in history. Mulberry bark, soaked and pressed, stamped with the Khan's red seal, declared the only money allowed across an empire stretching from the Pacific to the Volga. Refusal carried t...

How the Opium War Bankrupted the Richest Man on Earth 24.04.2026

In 1834, one Chinese merchant was worth more than the entire United States government. Nine years later, he was dead — and his silver was building America. Howqua — Wu Bingjian — was the richest man on earth in the 1830s. This Chinese merchant ran the Cohong, the imperial guild that monopolized foreign trade through Canton (Guangzhou) for a century. His personal fortune of $26 million in silver wa...

The Boxer Rebellion: How Trade Wars Destroyed China 11.04.2026

They were promised magic — that their bodies would stop bullets. Eight hundred million dollars later, the dynasty was dead. The Boxer Rebellion was not a rebellion. It was the final invoice for an empire destroyed by forced trade. After the Opium Wars, foreign goods flooded China — machine-made textiles, steel, and steamships priced local craftsmen out of existence. In Shandong province, millions...

The Silver Drain Behind History's Deadliest Civil War 03.04.2026

In 1851, a failed scholar declared himself the brother of Jesus Christ and founded a kingdom that would kill 20 million people. Hong Xiuquan's Taiping Heavenly Kingdom wasn't just a rebellion — it was a Ponzi state. Confiscate everything. Redistribute nothing. Print money when the loot runs dry. 170 years later, Hugo Chavez ran the same playbook in Venezuela. Different continent. Same collapse. Th...

How One Commodity Bankrupted an Empire 30.03.2026

In 1839, a Qing official burned 20,000 chests of opium in a pit outside Canton. Britain responded with gunboats. Three years later, China signed away Hong Kong and 40% of its tax revenue. But the bill didn't stop there. This episode traces the financial wreckage of the First Opium War — from the silver drain that crippled the Qing treasury to the desperation that would soon ignite history'...

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