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Golden Horde

The Golden Horde, self-designated as Ulug Ulus, lit. 'Great State' in Turkic,[8] was originally a Mongol and later Turkicized khanate established in the 13th century and originating as the northwestern sector of the Mongol Empire.[9] With the fragmentation of the Mongol Empire after 1259 it became a functionally separate khanate. It is also known as the Kipchak Khanate or as the Ulus of Jochi,[a] and replaced the earlier, less organized Cuman–Kipchak confederation.[10]

Golden Horde
Ulug Ulus
Flag during the reign of Öz Beg Khan as shown in Dulcert's 1339 map (other sources claim that the Golden Horde was named for the yellow banner of the khan[1]).
Territories of Golden Horde as of 1389
Status
CapitalSarai (Western wing, later overall)
Sighnaq (Eastern wing)
Common languages
Religion
GovernmentSemi-elective monarchy, later hereditary monarchy
Khan 
• 1226–1280
Orda Khan (White Horde)
• 1242–1255
Batu Khan (Blue Horde)
• 1379–1395
Tokhtamysh
• 1459–1465
Mahmud bin Küchük (Great Horde)
• 1481–1502
Sheikh Ahmed
LegislatureKurultai
Historical eraLate Middle Ages
• Established after the Mongol invasion of Rus'
1242
• Blue Horde and White Horde united
1379
• Disintegrated into Great Horde
1466
1480
• Sack of Sarai by the Crimean Khanate
1502[4]
Area
1310[5][6]6,000,000 km2 (2,300,000 sq mi)
CurrencyPul, Som, Dirham[7]
  1. ^ Official language since the inception of the Golden Horde, used in chancery.
  2. ^ Especially the western Kipchak dialects, this language spoken by the majority of the inhabitants of the Black Sea steppe who were non-Mongol Turks, and those in the Khan's army. Shift from Mongol to Turkic occurred in the 1350s, or earlier, also used in chancery.

After the death of Batu Khan (the founder of the Golden Horde) in 1255, his dynasty flourished for a full century, until 1359, though the intrigues of Nogai instigated a partial civil war in the late 1290s. The Horde's military power peaked during the reign of Uzbeg Khan (1312–1341), who adopted Islam. The territory of the Golden Horde at its peak extended from Siberia and Central Asia to parts of Eastern Europe from the Urals to the Danube in the west, and from the Black Sea to the Caspian Sea in the south, while bordering the Caucasus Mountains and the territories of the Mongol dynasty known as the Ilkhanate.[10]

The khanate experienced violent internal political disorder beginning in 1359, before it briefly reunited (1381–1395) under Tokhtamysh. However, soon after the 1396 invasion of Timur, the founder of the Timurid Empire, the Golden Horde broke into smaller Tatar khanates which declined steadily in power. At the start of the 15th century, the Horde began to fall apart. By 1466, it was being referred to simply as the "Great Horde". Within its territories there emerged numerous predominantly Turkic-speaking khanates. These internal struggles allowed the northern vassal state of Muscovy to rid itself of the "Tatar Yoke" at the Great Stand on the Ugra River in 1480. The Crimean Khanate and the Kazakh Khanate, the last remnants of the Golden Horde, survived until 1783 and 1847 respectively.

Name

The name Golden Horde is a partial calque of Russian Золотая Орда (Zolotáya Ordá), itself supposedly a partial calque of Turkic Altan Orda. Золотая (Zolotáya) was translated to "Golden," while Орда (Ordá) was transliterated to "Horde."

The Turkic word orda means "palace", "camp" or "headquarters", in this case the headquarters of the khan, being the capital of the khanate, metonymically extended to the khanate itself. The English word "horde," in the sense of a large (and often threatening) group, emerged later, metaphorically extended from the reputation of the Mongol hordes.

The appellation "Golden" is said to have been inspired by the golden color of the tents the Mongols lived in during wartime, or an actual golden tent used by Batu Khan or by Uzbek Khan,[11] or to have been bestowed by the Slavic tributaries to describe the great wealth of the khan.

It was not until the 16th century that Russian chroniclers begin explicitly using the term to refer to this particular successor khanate of the Mongol Empire. The first known use of the term, in 1565, in the Russian chronicle History of Kazan, applied it to the Ulus of Batu, centered on Sarai.[12][13] In contemporary Persian, Armenian and Muslim writings, and in the records of the 13th and early 14th centuries such as the Yuanshi and the Jami' al-tawarikh, the khanate was called the "Ulus of Jochi" ("realm of Jochi" in Mongolian), "Dasht-i-Qifchaq" (Qipchaq Steppe) or "Khanate of the Qipchaq" and "Comania" (Cumania).[14][15]

The eastern or left wing (or "left hand" in official Mongolian-sponsored Persian sources) was referred to as the Blue Horde in Russian chronicles and as the White Horde in Timurid sources (e.g. Zafar-Nameh). Western scholars have tended to follow the Timurid sources' nomenclature and call the left wing the White Horde. But Ötemish Hajji (fl. 1550), a historian of Khwarezm, called the left wing the Blue Horde, and since he was familiar with the oral traditions of the khanate empire, it seems likely that the Russian chroniclers were correct, and that the khanate itself called its left wing the Blue Horde.[16] The khanate apparently used the term White Horde to refer to its right wing, which was situated in Batu's home base in Sarai and controlled the ulus. The designations Golden Horde, Blue Horde, and White Horde have not been encountered in the sources of the Mongol period.[17]

Mongol origins (1225–1241)

At his death in 1227, Genghis Khan divided the Mongol Empire amongst his four sons as appanages, but the Empire remained united under the supreme khan. Jochi was the eldest, but he died six months before Genghis. The westernmost lands occupied by the Mongols, which included what is today southern Russia and Kazakhstan, were given to Jochi's eldest sons, Batu Khan, who eventually became ruler of the Blue Horde, and Orda Khan, who became the leader of the White Horde.[18][19] In 1235, Batu with the great general Subutai began an invasion westwards, first conquering the Bashkirs and then moving on to Volga Bulgaria in 1236. From there he conquered some of the southern steppes of present-day Ukraine in 1237, forcing many of the local Cumans to retreat westward. The Mongol campaign against the Kypchaks and Cumans had already started under Jochi and Subutai in 1216–1218 when the Merkits took shelter among them. By 1239 a large portion of Cumans were driven out of the Crimean peninsula, and it became one of the appanages of the Mongol Empire.[20] The remnants of the Crimean Cumans survived in the Crimean mountains, and they would, in time, mix with other groups in the Crimea (including Greeks, Goths, and Mongols) to form the Crimean Tatar population. Moving north, Batu began the Mongol invasion of Rus' and spent three years subjugating the principalities of former Kievan Rus', whilst his cousins Möngke, Kadan, and Güyük moved southwards into Alania.

 
Decisive Golden Horde victory in the Battle of Mohi

Using the migration of the Cumans as their casus belli, the Mongols continued west, raiding Poland and Hungary, which culminated in Mongol victories at the battles of Legnica and Mohi. In 1241, however, Ögedei Khan died in the Mongolian homeland. Batu turned back from his siege of Vienna but did not return to Mongolia, rather opting to stay at the Volga River. His brother Orda returned to take part in the succession. The Mongol armies would never again travel so far west. In 1242, after retreating through Hungary, destroying Pest in the process, and subjugating Bulgaria,[21] Batu established his capital at Sarai, commanding the lower stretch of the Volga River, on the site of the Khazar capital of Atil. Shortly before that, the younger brother of Batu and Orda, Shiban, was given his own enormous ulus east of the Ural Mountains along the Ob and Irtysh Rivers.

While the Mongolian language was undoubtedly in general use at the court of Batu, few Mongol texts written in the territory of the Golden Horde have survived, perhaps because of the prevalent general illiteracy. According to Grigor'ev, yarliq, or decrees of the Khans, were written in Mongol, then translated into the Cuman language. The existence of Arabic-Mongol and Persian-Mongol dictionaries dating from the middle of the 14th century and prepared for the use of the Egyptian Mamluk Sultanate suggests that there was a practical need for such works in the chancelleries handling correspondence with the Golden Horde. It is thus reasonable to conclude that letters received by the Mamluks – if not also written by them – must have been in Mongol.[21]

Golden Age

 
Batu Khan establishes the Golden Horde.
 

Batu Khan (1242–1256)

When the Great Khatun Töregene invited Batu to elect the next Emperor of the Mongol Empire in 1242, he declined to attend the kurultai and instead stayed at the Volga River. Although Batu excused himself by saying he was suffering from old age and illness, it seems that he did not support the election of Güyük Khan. Güyük and Büri, a grandson of Chagatai Khan, had quarreled violently with Batu at a victory banquet during the Mongol occupation of Eastern Europe. He sent his brothers to the kurultai, and the new Khagan of the Mongols was elected in 1246.

All the senior Rus' princes, including Yaroslav II of Vladimir, Daniel of Galicia, and Sviatoslav III of Vladimir, acknowledged Batu's supremacy. Originally Batu ordered Daniel to turn the administration of Galicia over to the Mongols, but Daniel personally visited Batu in 1245 and pledged allegiance to him. After returning from his trip, Daniel was visibly influenced by the Mongols, and equipped his army in the Mongol fashion, his horsemen with Mongol-style cuirasses, and their mounts armoured with shoulder, chest, and head pieces.[22] Michael of Chernigov, who had killed a Mongol envoy in 1240, refused to show obeisance and was executed in 1246.[23]

When Güyük called Batu to pay him homage several times, Batu sent Yaroslav II, Andrey II of Vladimir and Alexander Nevsky to Karakorum in Mongolia in 1247. Yaroslav II never returned and died in Mongolia. He was probably poisoned by Töregene Khatun, who probably did it to spite Batu and even her own son Güyük, because he did not approve of her regency.[24] Güyük appointed Andrey Grand prince of Vladimir-Suzdal and Alexander prince of Kyiv. However when they returned, Andrey went to Vladimir while Alexander went to Novgorod instead. A bishop by the name of Cyril went to Kiev and found it so devastated that he abandoned the place and went further east instead.[25][26]

In 1248, Güyük demanded Batu come eastward to meet him, a move that some contemporaries regarded as a pretext for Batu's arrest. In compliance with the order, Batu approached, bringing a large army. When Güyük moved westwards, Tolui's widow and a sister of Batu's stepmother Sorghaghtani warned Batu that the Jochids might be his target. Güyük died on the way, in what is now Xinjiang, at about the age of 42. Although some modern historians believe that he died of natural causes because of deteriorating health,[27] he may have succumbed to the combined effects of alcoholism and gout, or he may have been poisoned. William of Rubruck and a Muslim chronicler state that Batu killed the imperial envoy, and one of his brothers murdered the Great Khan Güyük, but these claims are not completely corroborated by other major sources. Güyük's widow Oghul Qaimish took over as regent, but she would be unable to keep the succession within her branch of the family.

 
Routes taken by Mongol invaders

With the assistance of Batu, Möngke succeeded as Great Khan in 1251. Utilizing the discovery of a plot designed to remove him, Möngke as the new Great Khan began a purge of his opponents. Estimates of the deaths of aristocrats, officials, and Mongol commanders range from 77 to 300. Batu became the most influential person in the Mongol Empire as his friendship with Möngke ensured the unity of the realm. Batu, Möngke, and other princely lines shared rule over the area from Afghanistan to Turkey. Batu allowed Möngke's census-takers to operate freely in his realm. In 1252–1259, Möngke conducted a census of the Mongol Empire, including Iran, Afghanistan, Georgia, Armenia, Rus', Central Asia, and North China. While the census in China was completed in 1252, Novgorod in the far northwest was not counted until winter 1258–59.[28]

With the new powers afforded to Batu by Möngke, he now had direct control over the Rus' princes. However the Grand Prince Andrey II refused to submit to Batu. Batu sent a punitive expedition under Nevruy, who defeated Andrey and forced him to flee to Novgorod, then Pskov, and finally to Sweden. The Mongols overran Vladimir and harshly punished the principality. The Livonian Knights stopped their advance to Novgorod and Pskov. Thanks to his friendship with Sartaq Khan, Batu's son, who was a Christian, Alexander was installed as the Grand Prince of Vladimir by Batu in 1252.[29]

Berke (1258–1266)

 
Coinage of Berke, Qrim (Crimea) mint. Struck circa AH 662-665 (AD 1263-1267).

After Batu died in 1256, his son Sartaq Khan was appointed by Möngke Khan. As soon as he returned from the court of the Great Khan in Mongolia, Sartaq died. The infant Ulaghchi succeeded him under the regency of Boragchin Khatun. The khatun summoned all the Rus' princes to Sarai to renew their patents. In 1256 Andrey traveled to Sarai to ask for pardon. He was once again reappointed as prince of Vladimir-Suzdal.[30]

Ulaghchi died soon after and Batu Khan's younger brother Berke, who had been converted to Islam, was enthroned as khan of the Golden Horde in 1258.[31]

In 1256, Daniel of Galicia openly defied the Mongols and ousted their troops in northern Podolia. In 1257, he repelled Mongol assaults led by the prince Kuremsa on Ponyzia and Volhynia and dispatched an expedition with the aim of taking Kiev. Despite initial successes, in 1259 a Mongol force under Boroldai entered Galicia and Volhynia and offered an ultimatum: Daniel was to destroy his fortifications or Boroldai would assault the towns. Daniel complied and pulled down the city walls. In 1259 Berke launched savage attacks on Lithuania and Poland, and demanded the submission of Béla IV, the Hungarian monarch, and the French King Louis IX in 1259 and 1260.[32] His assault on Prussia in 1259/60 inflicted heavy losses on the Teutonic Order.[33] The Lithuanians were probably tributary in the 1260s, when reports reached the Curia that they were in league with the Mongols.[34]

Mongol agents began taken censuses in the Rus' principalities. Novgorod in the far northwest was not counted until winter 1258–59. There was an uprising in Novgorod against the Mongol census, but Alexander Nevsky forced the city to submit to the census and taxation.[28]

In 1261, Berke approved the establishment of a church in Sarai.[35]

Toluid Civil War (1260–1264)

After Möngke Khan died in 1259, the Toluid Civil War broke out between Kublai Khan and Ariq Böke. While Hulagu Khan of the Ilkhanate supported Kublai, Berke sided with Ariq Böke.[36] There is evidence that Berke minted coins in Ariq Böke's name,[37] but he remained militarily neutral. After the defeat of Ariq Böke in 1264, he freely acceded to Kublai's enthronement.[38] However, some elites of the White Horde joined Ariq Böke's resistance.

Berke–Hulagu war (1262–1266)

 
The Golden Horde army defeats the Ilkhanate at the battle of Terek in 1262. Many of Hulagu's men drowned in the Terek River while withdrawing.

Möngke ordered the Jochid and Chagatayid families to join Hulagu's expedition to Iran. Berke's persuasion might have forced his brother Batu to postpone Hulagu's operation, little suspecting that it would result in eliminating the Jochid predominance there for several years. During the reign of Batu or his first two successors, the Golden Horde dispatched a large Jochid delegation to participate in Hulagu's expedition in the Middle East in 1256/57.

One of the Jochid princes who joined Hulagu's army was accused of witchcraft and sorcery against Hulagu. After receiving permission from Berke, Hulagu executed him. After that two more Jochid princes died suspiciously. According to some Muslim sources, Hulagu refused to share his war booty with Berke in accordance with Genghis Khan's wish. Berke was a devoted Muslim who had had a close relationship with the Abbasid Caliph Al-Musta'sim, who had been killed by Hulagu in 1258. The Jochids believed that Hulagu's state eliminated their presence in the Transcaucasus.[39] Those events increased the anger of Berke and the war between the Golden Horde and the Ilkhanate soon broke out in 1262.

The increasing tension between Berke and Hulagu was a warning to the Golden Horde contingents in Hulagu's army to flee. One contingent reached the Kipchak Steppe, another traversed Khorasan, and a third body took refuge in Mamluk ruled Syria where they were well received by Sultan Baybars (1260–1277). Hulagu harshly punished the rest of the Golden Horde army in Iran. Berke sought a joint attack with Baybars and forged an alliance with the Mamluks against Hulagu. The Golden Horde dispatched the young prince Nogai to invade the Ilkhanate but Hulagu forced him back in 1262. The Ilkhanid army then crossed the Terek River, capturing an empty Jochid encampment, only to be routed in a surprise attack by Nogai's forces. Many of them were drowned as the ice broke on the frozen Terek River. The outbreak of conflict was made more annoying to Berke by the rebellion of Suzdal at the same time, killing Mongol darughachis and tax-collectors. Berke planned a severe punitive expedition. But after Alexander Nevsky begged Berke not to punish the Rus' and the Vladimir-Suzdal cities agreed to pay a large indemnity, Berke relented. Alexander died on his trip back in Gorodets on the Volga. He was well loved by the people and called the "sun of Suzdal".[40]

When the former Seljuk Sultan Kaykaus II was arrested in the Byzantine Empire, his younger brother Kayqubad II appealed to Berke. An Egyptian envoy was also detained there. With the assistance of the Kingdom of Bulgaria (Berke's vassal), Nogai invaded the Empire in 1265. By the next year, the Mongol-Bulgarian army was within reach of Constantinople. Nogai forced Michael VIII Palaiologos to release Kaykaus and pay tribute to the Horde. Berke gave Kaykaus Crimea as an appanage and had him marry a Mongol woman. Hulagu died in February 1265 and Berke followed the next year while on campaign in Tiflis, causing his troops to retreat.[41]

Ariq Böke had earlier placed Chagatai's grandson Alghu as Chagatayid Khan, ruling Central Asia. He took control of Samarkand and Bukhara. When the Muslim elites and the Jochid retainers in Bukhara declared their loyalty to Berke, Alghu smashed the Golden Horde appanages in Khorazm. Alghu insisted Hulagu attack the Golden Horde; he accused Berke of purging his family in 1252. In Bukhara, he and Hulagu slaughtered all the retainers of the Golden Horde and reduced their families into slavery, sparing only the Great Khan Kublai's men.[42] After Berke gave his allegiance to Kublai, Alghu declared war on Berke, seizing Otrar and Khorazm. While the left bank of Khorazm would eventually be retaken, Berke had lost control over Transoxiana. In 1264 Berke marched past Tiflis to fight against Hulagu's successor Abaqa, but he died en route.

Mengu-Timur (1266–1280)

 
Coinage of Mengu-Timur. Bulghar mint. Dated AH 672 or 3 (AD 1273-1275)

Berke left no sons, so Batu's grandson Mengu-Timur was nominated by Kublai and succeeded his uncle Berke.[43] However, Mengu-Timur secretly supported the Ögedeid prince Kaidu against Kublai and the Ilkhanate. After the defeat of Ghiyas-ud-din Baraq, a peace treaty was concluded in 1267 granting one-third of Transoxiana to Kaidu and Mengu-Timur.[44] In 1268, when a group of princes operating in Central Asia on Kublai's behalf mutinied and arrested two sons of the Qaghan (Great Khan), they sent them to Mengu-Timur. One of them, Nomoghan, favorite of Kublai, was located in the Crimea.[45] Mengu-Timur might have briefly struggled with Hulagu's successor Abagha, but the Great Khan Kublai forced them to sign a peace treaty.[46] He was allowed to take his share in Persia. Independently from the Khan, Nogai expressed his desire to ally with Baibars in 1271. Despite the fact that he was proposing a joint attack on the Ilkhanate with the Mamluks of Egypt, Mengu-Timur congratulated Abagha when Baraq was defeated by the Ilkhan in 1270.[47]

In 1267, Mengu-Timur issued a diploma – jarliq – to exempt Rus' clergy from any taxation and gave to the Genoese and Venice exclusive trading rights in Caffa and Azov. Some of Mengu-Timur's relatives converted to Christianity at the same time and settled among the Rus' people. One of them was a prince who settled in Rostov and became known as Tsarevich Peter of the Horde (Peter Ordynsky). Even though Nogai invaded the Eastern Orthodox Christian Byzantine Empire in 1271, the Khan sent his envoys to maintain friendly relationship with Michael VIII Palaiologos, who sued for peace and married one of his daughters, Euphrosyne Palaiologina, to Nogai. Mengu-Timur ordered the Grand prince of Rus to allow German merchants free travel through his lands. This gramota says:

Mengu-Timur's word to Prince Yaroslav: give the German merchants way into your lands. From Prince Yaroslav to the people of Riga, to the great and the young, and to all: your way is clear through my lands; and who comes to fight, with them I do as I know; but for the merchant the way is clear.[48]

This decree also allowed Novgorod's merchants to travel throughout the Suzdal lands without restraint.[49] Mengu Timur honored his vow: when the Danes and the Livonian Knights attacked Novgorod Republic in 1269, the Khan's great basqaq (darughachi), Amraghan, and many Mongols assisted the Rus' army assembled by the Grand duke Yaroslav. The Germans and the Danes were so cowed that they sent gifts to the Mongols and abandoned the region of Narva.[50] The Mongol Khan's authority extended to all Rus' principalities, and in 1274–75 the census took place in all Rus' cities, including Smolensk and Vitebsk.[51]

In 1277, Mengu-Timur launched a campaign against the Alans north of the Caucasus. Along with the Mongol army were also Rus', who took the fortified stronghold of the Alans, Dadakov, in 1278.[52]

Dual khanship (1281–1299)

 
Tode Mongke Khan of the Golden Horde
 
Regions in the lower Volga inhabited by the descendants of Nogai Khan
 
The Jochid vassal princes of Galicia-Volhynia contributed troops for invasions of Europe by Nogai Khan and Talabuga.

Mengu-Timur was succeeded in 1281 by his brother Töde Möngke, who was a Muslim. However Nogai Khan was now strong enough to establish himself as an independent ruler. The Golden Horde was thus ruled by two khans.[53]

Töde Möngke made peace with Kublai, returned his sons to him, and acknowledged his supremacy.[54][55] Nogai and Köchü, Khan of the White Horde and son of Orda Khan, also made peace with the Yuan dynasty and the Ilkhanate. According to Mamluk historians, Töde Möngke sent the Mamluks a letter proposing to fight against their common enemy, the unbelieving Ilkhanate. This indicates that he might have had an interest in Azerbaijan and Georgia, which were both ruled by the Ilkhans.

In the 1270s Nogai had savagely raided Bulgaria[56] and Lithuania.[57] He blockaded Michael Asen II inside Drăstăr in 1279, executed the rebel emperor Ivailo in 1280, and forced George Terter I to seek refuge in the Byzantine Empire in 1292. In 1284 Saqchi came under the Mongol rule during the major invasion of Bulgaria, and coins were struck in the Khan's name.[58] Smilets was installed by Nogai as emperor of Bulgaria. Accordingly, the reign of Smilets has been considered the height of Mongol overlordship in Bulgaria. When he was expelled by a local boyars c. 1295, the Mongols launched another invasion to protect their protege. Nogai compelled Serbian king Stefan Milutin to accept Mongol supremacy and received his son, Stefan Dečanski, as hostage in 1287. Under his rule, the Vlachs, Slavs, Alans, and Turco-Mongols lived in modern-day Moldavia.

At the same time, the influence of Nogai greatly increased in the Golden Horde. Backed by him, some Rus' princes, such as Dmitry of Pereslavl, refused to visit the court of the Töde Möngke in Sarai, while Dmitry's brother Andrey of Gorodets sought assistance from Töde Möngke. Nogai vowed to support Dmitry in his struggle for the grand ducal throne. On hearing about this, Andrey renounced his claims to Vladimir and Novgorod and returned to Gorodets. He returned with Mongol troops sent by Töde Möngke and seized Vladimir from Dmitry. Dmitry retaliated with the support of Mongol troops from Nogai and retook his holdings. In 1285 Andrey again led a Mongol army under a Borjigin prince to Vladimir, but Dmitry expelled them.[59]

In 1283, Mengu-Timur converted to Islam and abandoned state affairs. Rumors spread that the khan was mentally ill and only cared for clerics and sheikhs. In 1285, Talabuga and Nogai invaded Hungary. While Nogai was successful in subduing Slovakia, Talabuga was stalled north of the Carpathian Mountains. Talabuga's soldiers were angered and sacked Galicia and Volynia instead. In 1286, Talabuga and Nogai attacked Poland and ravaged the country. After returning, Talabuga overthrew Töde Möngke, who was left to live in peace. Talabuga's army made unsuccessful attempts to invade the Ilkhanate in 1288 and 1290.[60]

During a punitive expedition against the Circassians, Talabuga became resentful of Nogai, whom he believed did not provide him with adequate support during the invasions of Hungary and Poland. Talabuga challenged Nogai, but was defeated in a coup and replaced with Toqta in 1291.[61]

Some of the Rus' princes complained to Toqta about Dmitry. Mikhail Yaroslavich was summoned to appear before Nogai in Sarai, and Daniel of Moscow declined to come. In 1293 Toqta sent a punitive expedition led by his brother, Dyuden to Rus' and Belarus to punish those stubborn subjects. The latter sacked fourteen major cities, finally forcing Dmitry to abdicate. Nogai was annoyed by this independent action and sent his wife to Toqta in 1293 to remind him who was in charge. In the same year, Nogai sent an army to Serbia and forced the king to acknowledge himself as a vassal.[62]

 
Coinage of Töde Möngke (Mengu). AH 679-687 AD 1280-1287 Qrim (Crimea) mint

Nogai's daughter married a son of Kublai's niece, Kelmish, who was wife of a Qongirat general of the Golden Horde. Nogai was angry with Kelmish's family because her Buddhist son despised his Muslim daughter. For this reason, he demanded Toqta send Kelmish's husband to him. Nogai's independent actions related to Rus' princes and foreign merchants had already annoyed Toqta. Toqta thus refused and declared war on Nogai. Toqta was defeated in their first battle. Nogai's army turned their attention to Caffa and Soldaia, looting both cities.. Within two years, Toqta returned and killed Nogai in 1299 at the Kagamlik, near the Dnieper. Toqta had his son stationed troops in Saqchi and along the Danube as far as the Iron Gate.[63] Nogai's son Chaka of Bulgaria, first escaped to the Alans, and then Bulgaria where he briefly ruled as emperor before he was murdered by Theodore Svetoslav on the orders of Toqta.[64]

After Mengu-Timur died, rulers of the Golden Horde withdrew their support from Kaidu, the head of the House of Ögedei. Kaidu tried to restore his influence in the Golden Horde by sponsoring his own candidate Kobeleg against Bayan (r. 1299–1304), Khan of the White Horde.[65] After taking military support from Toqta, Bayan asked help from the Yuan dynasty and the Ilkhanate to organize a unified attack on the Chagatai Khanate under the leadership of Kaidu and his second-in-command Duwa. However, the Yuan court was unable to send quick military support.[66]

General peace (1299–1312)

From 1300 to 1303 a severe drought occurred in the areas surrounding the Black Sea. However the troubles were soon overcome and conditions in the Golden Horde rapidly improved under Toqta's reign. After the defeat of Nogai Khan, his followers either fled to Podolia or remained under the service of Toqta, to become what would eventually be known as the Nogai Horde. [68]

Toqta established the Byzantine-Mongol alliance by Maria, an illegitimate daughter of Andronikos II Palaiologos.[69] A report reached Western Europe that Toqta was highly favourable to the Christians.[70] According to Muslim observers, however, Toqta remained an idol-worshiper (Buddhism and Tengerism) and showed favour to religious men of all faiths, though he preferred Muslims.[71]

 
The Bulgarian Empire was still tributary to the Mongols in 1308.[72]

He demanded that the Ilkhan Ghazan and his successor Oljeitu give Azerbaijan back but was refused. Then he sought assistance from Egypt against the Ilkhanate. Toqta made his man ruler in Ghazna, but he was expelled by its people. Toqta dispatched a peace mission to the Ilkhan Gaykhatu in 1294, and peace was maintained mostly uninterrupted until 1318.[73]

In 1304 ambassadors from the Mongol rulers of Central Asia and the Yuan announced to Toqta their general peace proposal. Toqta immediately accepted the supremacy of Yuan emperor Temür Öljeytü, and all yams (postal relays) and commercial networks across the Mongol khanates reopened. Toqta introduced the general peace among the Mongol khanates to Rus' princes at the assembly in Pereyaslavl.[74] The Yuan influence seemed to have increased in the Golden Horde as some of Toqta's coins carried 'Phags-pa script in addition to Mongolian script and Persian characters.[75]

Toqta arrested the Italian residents of Sarai and besieged Caffa in 1307. The cause was apparently Toqta's displeasure at the Genoese slave trade of his subjects, who were mostly sold as soldiers to Egypt.[76] In 1308, Caffa was plundered by the Mongols.[77]

During the late reign of Toqta, tensions between princes of Tver and Moscow became violent. Daniel of Moscow seized the town of Kolomna from the Principality of Ryazan, which turned to Toqta for protection. However Daniel was able to beat both Ryazan and Mongol troops in 1301. His successor Yury of Moscow also seized Pereslavl-Zalessky. Toqta considered eliminating the special status of the Grand principality of Vladimir, and placing all the Rus' princes on the same level. Toqta decided to personally visit northern Rus' to settle the conflict between the princes, but he fell ill and died while crossing the Volga in 1313.[78]

Islamization

Öz Beg Khan (1313–1341)

 
Dmitri avenging the death of his father in the ordo (palace) of Uzbeg Khan, killing Yury.
 
Territories of the Golden Horde under Öz Beg Khan.[citation needed]

After Öz Beg Khan assumed the throne in 1313, he adopted Islam as the state religion. He built a large mosque in the city of Solkhat in the Crimea in 1314 and proscribed Buddhism and Shamanism among the Mongols in the Golden Horde. By 1315, Öz Beg had successfully Islamicized the Horde and killed Jochid princes and Buddhist lamas who opposed his religious policy.[79] Under the reign of Öz Beg, trade caravans went unmolested and there was general order in the Golden Horde. When Ibn Battuta visited Sarai in 1333, he found it to be a large and beautiful city with vast streets and fine markets where Mongols, Alans, Kypchaks, Circassians, Rus', and Greeks each had their own quarters. Merchants had a special walled section of the city all to themselves.[80]

Öz Beg continued the alliance with the Mamluks begun by Berke and his predecessors. He kept a friendly relationship with the Mamluk Sultan and his shadow Caliph in Cairo. In 1320, the Jochid princess Tulunbay was married to Al-Nasir Muhammad, Sultan of Egypt.[81] Al-Nasir Muhammad came to believe that Tulunbay was not a real Chingissid princess but an impostor. In 1327/1328, he divorced her, and she then married one of al-Nasir Muhammad's commanders. When Öz Beg learned of the divorce in 1334/1335, he sent an angry missive. Al-Nasir Muhammad claimed that she had died and showed his ambassadors a fake legal document as proof, although Tulunbay still lived and would only pass away in 1340.[82]

The Golden Horde invaded the Ilkhanate under Abu Sa'id in 1318, 1324, and 1335. Öz Beg's ally Al-Nasir refused to attack Abu Sa'id because the Ilkhan and the Mamluk Sultan signed a peace treaty in 1323. In 1326 Öz Beg reopened friendly relations with the Yuan dynasty and began to send tributes thereafter.[83] From 1339 he received annually 24,000 ding in Yuan paper currency from the Jochid appanages in China.[84] When the Ilkhanate collapsed after Abu Sa'id's death, its senior-beys approached Öz Beg in their desperation to find a leader, but the latter declined after consulting with his senior emir, Qutluq Timür.[citation needed]

Öz Beg, whose total army exceeded 300,000, repeatedly raided Thrace in aid of Bulgaria's war against Byzantium and Serbia beginning in 1319. The Byzantine Empire under Andronikos II Palaiologos and Andronikos III Palaiologos was raided by the Golden Horde between 1320 and 1341, until the Byzantine port of Vicina Macaria was occupied. Friendly relations were established with the Byzantine Empire for a brief period after Öz Beg married Andronikos III Palaiologos's illegitimate daughter, who came to be known as Bayalun. In 1333, she was given permission to visit her father in Constantinople and never returned, apparently fearing her forced conversion to Islam.[85][86] Öz Beg's armies pillaged Thrace for forty days in 1324 and for 15 days in 1337, taking 300,000 captives. In 1330, Öz Beg sent 15,000 troops to Serbia in 1330 but was defeated.[87] Backed by Öz Beg, Basarab I of Wallachia declared an independent state from the Hungarian crown in 1330.[72]

 
Özbeg Khan in the 1339 Dulcert map. Legend: Hic dominatur Usbech, dominus imperator de Sara, "Here rules Özbeg, the Emperor of Sara".[88]

With Öz Beg's assistance, the Grand duke Mikhail Yaroslavich won the battle against the party in Novgorod in 1316. While Mikhail was asserting his authority, his rival Yury of Moscow ingratiated himself with Öz Beg so that he appointed him chief of the Rus' princes and gave him his sister, Konchak, in marriage. After spending three years at Öz Beg's court, Yury returned with an army of Mongols and Mordvins. After he ravaged the villages of Tver, Yury was defeated by Mikhail in December 1318, and his new wife and the Mongol general, Kawgady, were captured. While she stayed in Tver, Konchak, who converted to Christianity and adopted the name Agatha, died. Mikhail's rivals suggested to Öz Beg that he had poisoned the Khan's sister and revolted against his rule. Mikhail was summoned to Sarai and executed on November 22, 1318.[89][90] Yury became grand duke once more. Yury's brother Ivan accompanied the Mongol general Akhmyl in suppressing a revolt by Rostov in 1320. In 1322, Mikhail's son, Dmitry, seeking revenge for his father's murder, went to Sarai and persuaded the Khan that Yury had appropriated a large portion of the tribute due to the Horde. Yury was summoned to the Horde for a trial, but he was killed by Dmitry before any formal investigation. Eight months later, Dmitry was also executed by the Horde for his crime. The title of grand duke went to Aleksandr Mikhailovich.[91]

In 1327, the baskak Shevkal, cousin of Öz Beg, arrived in Tver from the Horde, with a large retinue. They took up residence at Aleksander's palace. Rumors spread that Shevkal wanted to occupy the throne for himself and introduce Islam to the city. When, on 15 August 1327, the Mongols tried to take a horse from a deacon named Dyudko, he cried for help and a mob killed the Mongols. Shevkal and his remaining guards were burnt alive. The incident, the Tver Uprising of 1327, caused Öz Beg to begin backing Moscow as the leading Rus' state. Ivan I Kalita was granted the title of grand prince and given the right to collect taxes from other Rus' potentates. Öz Beg also sent Ivan at the head of an army of 50,000 soldiers to punish Tver. Aleksander was shown mercy in 1335, however, when Moscow requested that he and his son Feoder be quartered in Sarai by orders of the Khan on October 29, 1339.[92]

In 1323 Grand Duke Gediminas of Lithuania gained control of Kiev and installed his brother Fedor as prince, but the principality's tribute to the Khan continued. On a campaign a few years later, the Lithuanians under Fedor included the Khan's baskak in their entourage.[93]

A decree, issued probably by Mengu-Timur, allowing the Franciscans to proselytize, was renewed by Öz Beg in 1314. Öz Beg allowed the Christian Genoese to settle in Crimea after his accession, but the Mongols sacked their outpost Sudak in 1322 when the Genoese clashed with the Turks.[94] The Genoese merchants in the other towns were not molested. Pope John XXII requested Öz Beg to restore Roman Catholic churches destroyed in the region. Öz Beg signed a new trade treaty with the Genoese in 1339 and allowed them to rebuild the walls of Caffa. In 1332 he allowed the Venetians to establish a colony at Tanais on the Don. In 1333, when Ibn Battuta visited Sudak, he found the population to be predominantly Turkish.[81]

Jani Beg (1342–1357)

 
Jani Beg of the Golden Horde, as depicted in the Catalan Atlas (1375), with the flag of the Golden Horde:  .[95] The caption reads: Here resides the emperor of this northern region whose empire starts in the province of Bulgaria and ends at the city of Organcio. The sovereign is named Jambech, Lord of the Sarra.[96]

Öz Beg's eldest son Tini Beg reigned briefly from 1341 to 1342 before his younger brother, Jani Beg (1342–1357), came to power.[97]

In 1344, Jani Beg tried to seize Caffa from the Genoese but failed. In 1347, he signed a commercial treaty with Venice. The slave trade flourished due to strengthening ties with the Mamluk Sultanate. Growth of wealth and increasing demand for products typically produce population growth, and so it was with Sarai. Housing in the region increased, which transformed the capital into the center of a large Muslim Sultanate.[97]

The Black Death of the 1340s was a major factor contributing to the economic downfall of the Golden Horde. It struck the Crimea in 1345 and killed over 85,000 people.[98]

 
Coinage of Jani Beg (Jambek) II. AH 767-768 AD 1365-1366

Jani Beg abandoned his father's Balkan ambitions and backed Moscow against Lithuania and Poland. Jani Beg sponsored joint Mongol-Rus' military expeditions against Lithuania and Poland. In 1344 his army marched against Poland with auxiliaries from Galicia–Volhynia, as Volhynia was part of Lithuania. In 1349, however, Galicia–Volhynia was occupied by a Polish-Hungarian force, and the Kingdom of Galicia–Volhynia was finally conquered and incorporated into Poland. This act put an end to the relationship of vassalage between the Galicia–Volhynia Rus' and the Golden Horde.[99] In 1352, the Golden Horde with its Rus' allies ravaged Polish territory and Lublin. The Polish King, Casimir III the Great, submitted to the Horde in 1357 and paid tribute in order to avoid more conflicts. The seven Mongol princes were sent by Jani Beg to assist Poland.[100]

Jani Beg asserted Jochid dominance over the Chagatai Khanate and conquered Tabriz, ending Chobanid rule there in 1356. After accepting the surrender of the Jalayirids, Jani Beg boasted that three uluses of the Mongol Empire were under his control. However on his way back from Tabriz, Jani Beg was murdered on the order of his own son, Berdi Beg. Following the assassination of Jani Beg, the Golden Horde quickly lost Azerbaijan to the Jalayir king Shaikh Uvais in 1357.[101]

Decline

Great troubles (1359–1381)

 
The Battle of Kulikovo in 1380

Berdi Beg was killed in a coup by his brother Qulpa in 1359. Qulpa's two sons were Christians and bore the Slavic names Michael and Ivan, which outraged the Muslim populace of the Golden Horde. In 1360, Qulpa's brother Nawruz Beg revolted against the khan and killed him and his sons. In 1361, a descendant of Shiban (5th son of Jochi), was invited by some grandees to seize the throne. Khidr rebelled against Nawruz, whose own lieutenant betrayed him and handed him over to be executed. Khidr was slain by his own son, Timur Khwaja, in the same year. Timur Khwaja reigned for only five weeks before descendants of Öz Beg Khan seized power.[102]

In 1362, the Golden Horde was divided between Keldi Beg in Sarai, Bulat Temir in Volga Bulgaria, and Abdullah in Crimea. Meanwhile, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania attacked the western tributaries of the Golden Horde and conquered Kyiv and Podolia after the Battle of Blue Waters in 1363.[103] A powerful Mongol general by the name of Mamai backed Abdullah but failed to take Sarai, which saw the reign of two more khans, Murad and Aziz. Abdullah died in 1370 and Muhammad Bolaq was enthroned as puppet khan by Mamai.[102] Mamai also had to deal with a rebellion in Nizhny Novgorod. Muscovite troops impinged on the Bulgar territory of Arab-Shah, the son of Bulat Temir, who caught them off guard and defeated them on the banks of the Pyana River. However Arab-Shah was unable to take advantage of the situation because of the advance of another Mongol general from the east.[104] Encouraged by the news of Muscovite defeat, Mamai sent an army against Dmitri Donskoy, who defeated the Mongol forces at the Battle of the Vozha River in 1378. Mamai hired Genoese, Circassian, and Alan mercenaries for another attack on Moscow in 1380. In the ensuing battle, Mongol forces once again lost at the Battle of Kulikovo.[104]

By 1360, Urus Khan had set up court in Sighnaq. He was named Urus, which means Russian in Turkish language, presumably because "Urus-Khan's mother was a Russian princess... he was prepared to press his claims on Russia on that ground."[105] In 1372, Urus marched west and occupied Sarai. His nephew and lieutenant Tokhtamysh deserted him and went to Timur for assistance. Tokhtamysh attacked Urus, killing his son Kutlug-Buka, but lost the battle and fled to Samarkand. Soon after, another general Edigu deserted Urus and went over to Timur. Timur personally attacked Urus in 1376 but the campaign ended indecisively. Urus died the next year and was succeeded by his son, Timur-Melik, who immediately lost Sighnaq to Tokhtamysh. In 1378, Tokhtamysh conquered Sarai.[106]

By the 1380s, the Shaybanids and Qashan attempted to break free of the Khan's power.[citation needed]

Tokhtamysh (1381–1395)

 
Emir Timur and his forces advance against the Golden Horde, Khan Tokhtamysh.
 
Tokhtamysh besieges Moscow.

Tokhtamysh attacked Mamai, who had recently suffered a loss against Muscovy, and defeated him in 1381, thus briefly reestablishing the Golden Horde as a dominant regional power. Mamai fled to the Genoese who killed him soon after. Tokhtamysh sent an envoy to the Rus' states to resume their tributary status, but the envoy only made it as far as Nizhny Novgorod before he was stopped. Tokhtamysh immediately seized all the boats on the Volga to ferry his army across and commenced the Siege of Moscow (1382), which fell after three days under a false truce. The next year most of the Rus' princes once again made obeisance to the khan and received patents from him.[107] Tokhtamysh also crushed the Lithuanian army at Poltava in the next year.[108] Władysław II Jagiełło, Grand Duke of Lithuania and King of Poland, accepted his supremacy and agreed to pay tribute in return for a grant of Rus' territory.[109]

Elated by his success, Tokhtamysh invaded Azerbaijan in 1386 and seized Tabriz. He ordered money with his name on it coined in Khwarezm and sent envoys to Egypt to seek an alliance. In 1387, Timur sent an army into Azerbaijan and fought indecisively with the forces of the Golden Horde. Tokhtamysh invaded Transoxania and reached as far as Bukhara, but failed to take the city, and had to turn back. Timur retaliated by invading Khwarezm and destroyed Urgench. Tokhtamysh attacked Timur on the Syr Darya in 1389 with a massive army including Russians, Bulgars, Circassians, and Alans. The battle ended indecisively. In 1391, Timur gathered an army 200,000 strong and defeated Tokhtamysh at the Battle of the Kondurcha River. Timur's allies Temür Qutlugh and Edigu took the eastern half of the Golden Horde. Tokhtamysh returned in 1394, ravaging the region of Shirvan. In 1395, Timur annihilated Tokhtamysh's army again at the Battle of the Terek River, destroyed his capital, looted the Crimean trade centers, and deported the most skillful craftsmen to his own capital in Samarkand. Timur's forces reached as far north as Ryazan before turning back.[110]

Edigu (1395–1419)

Temür Qutlugh was chosen Khan in Sarai while Edigu became co-ruler, and Koirijak was appointed sovereign of the White Horde by Timur.[111] Tokhtamysh fled to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and asked Vytautas for assistance in retaking the Golden Horde in exchange for suzerainty over the Rus' lands. In 1399, Vytautas and Tokhtamysh attacked Temür Qutlugh and Edigu at the Battle of the Vorskla River but were defeated. The Golden Horde victory secured Kyiv, Podolia, and some land in the lower Bug River basin. Tokhtamysh died in obscurity in Tyumen around 1405. His son Jalal al-Din fled to Lithuania and participated in the Battle of Grunwald against the Teutonic Order.[112]

Temür Qutlugh died in 1400 and his cousin Shadi Beg was elected khan with Edigu's approval. After defeating Vytautas, Edigu concentrated on strengthening the Golden Horde. He forbade selling Golden Horde subjects as slaves abroad. Later on the slave trade was resumed, but only Circassians were allowed to be sold. As a result most of the Mamluk recruits in the 15th century were of Circassian origin. Timur died in 1405 and Edigu took advantage to seize Khwarezm a year later. From 1400 to 1408, Edigu gradually regained the eastern Rus' tributaries, with the exception of Moscow, which he failed to take in a siege but ravaged the surrounding area. Smolensk was also lost to Lithuania. Shadi Beg rebelled against Edigu but was defeated and fled to Astrakhan. Shadi Beg was replaced by Pulad, who died in 1410 and was succeeded by Temur Khan, the son of Temür Qutlugh. Temur Khan turned against Edigu and forced him to flee to Khwarezm in 1411. Temur himself was ousted the next year by Jalal al-Din, who returned from Lithuania and briefly took the throne. In 1414, Shah Rukh of the Timurids conquered Khwarezm. Edigu fled to the Crimea where he launched raids on Kiev and tried to forge an alliance with Lithuania to win back the horde. Edigu died in 1419 in a skirmish with one of Tokhtamysh's sons.[113]

Disintegration and succession

Khanate of Sibir (1405)

The Khanate of Sibir was ruled by a dynasty originating with Taibuga in 1405 at Chimgi-Tura. After his death in 1428, the khanate was ruled by the Uzbek[clarification needed] khan Abu'l-Khayr Khan. When he died in 1468, the khanate split in two, with the Shaybanid Ibak Khan situated in Chimgi-Tura, and the Taibugid Muhammad at the fortress of Sibir, from which the khanate derives its name.[114]

Uzbek Khanate (1428)

After 1419, the Golden Horde functionally ceased to exist. Ulugh Muhammad was officially Khan of the Golden Horde but his authority was limited to the lower banks of the Volga where Tokhtamysh's other son Kepek also reigned. The Golden Horde's influence was replaced in Eastern Europe by the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, who Ulugh Muhammad turned to for support. The political situation in the Golden Horde did not stabilize. In 1422, the grandson of Urus Khan, Barak Khan, attacked the reigning khans in the west. Within two years, Ulugh, Kepek, and another claimant Dawlat Berdi, were defeated. Ulugh Muhammad fled to Lithuania, Kepek tried to raid Odoyev and Ryazan but failed to establish himself in those regions, and Dawlat took advantage of the situation to seize Crimea. Barak defeated an invasion by Ulugh Beg in 1427 but was assassinated the next year. His successor, Abu'l-Khayr Khan, founded the Uzbek Khanate.[115]

Nogai Horde (1440s)

By the 1440s, a descendant of Edigu by the name of Musa bin Waqqas was ruling at Saray-Jük as an independent khan of the Nogai Horde.[116]

Khanate of Kazan (1445)

Ulugh Muhammad ousted Dawlat Berdi from Crimea. At the same time, the khan Hacı I Giray fled to Lithuania to ask Vytautas for support. In 1426, Ulugh Muhammad contributed troops to Vytautas' war against Pskov. Despite the Golden Horde's greatly reduced status, both Yury of Zvenigorod and Vasily Kosoy still visited Ulugh Muhammad's court in 1432 to request a grand ducal patent. A year later, Ulugh Muhammad lost the throne to Sayid Ahmad I, a son of Tokhtamysh. Ulugh Muhammad fled to the town of Belev on the upper Oka River, where he came into conflict with the Grand Duchy of Muscovy. Vasily II of Moscow attempted to drive him out but was defeated at the Battle of Belyov. Ulugh Muhammad became master of Belev. Ulugh Muhammad continued to exert influence on Muscovy, occupying Gorodets in 1444. Vasily II even wanted him to issue him a patent for the throne, but Ulugh Muhammad attacked him instead at Murom in 1445. On 7 July, Vasily II was defeated and taken prisoner by Ulugh Muhammad at the Battle of Suzdal. Despite his victory, Ulugh Muhammad's situation was pressed. The Golden Horde was no more, he had barely 10,000 soldiers, and thus could not press the advantage against Moscow. A few months later he released Vasily II for a ransom of 25,000 rubles. Unfortunately, Ulugh Muhammad was murdered by his son, Mäxmüd of Kazan, who fled to the middle Volga region and founded the Khanate of Kazan in 1445.[117] In 1447, Mäxmüd sent an army against Muscovy but was repelled. [118]

Crimean Khanate (1449)

In 1449, Hacı I Giray seized Crimea from Ahmad I, and founded the Crimean Khanate.[118] The Crimean Khanate considered its state as the heir and legal successor of the Golden Horde and Desht-i Kipchak, called themselves khans of "the Great Horde, the Great State and the Throne of the Crimea".[119][120]

Qasim Khanate (1452)

One of Ulugh Muhammad's sons, Qasim Khan, fled to Moscow, where Vasily II granted him land that became the Qasim Khanate.[118]

Kazakh Khanate (1458)

In 1458, Janibek Khan and Kerei Khan led 200,000 of Abu'l-Khayr Khan's followers eastwards to the Chu River where Esen Buqa II of Moghulistan granted them pasture lands. After Abu'l-Khayr Khan died in 1467, they assumed leadership over most of his followers, and became the Kazakh Khanate.[121]

Great Horde (1459–1502)

In 1435, the khan Küchük Muhammad ousted Sayid Ahmad. He attacked Ryazan and suffered a major defeat against the forces of Vasily II. Sayid Ahmad continued to raid Muscovy and in 1449 made a direct attack on Moscow. However he was defeated by Muscovy's ally Qasim Khan. In 1450, Küchük Muhammad attacked Ryazan but was turned back by a combined Russo-Tatar army. In 1451, Sayid Ahmad tried to take Moscow again and failed.[122]

Küchük Muhammad was succeeded by his son Mahmud bin Küchük in 1459, from which point on the Golden Horde came to be known as the Great Horde. Mahmud was succeeded by his brother Ahmed Khan bin Küchük in 1465. In 1469, Ahmed attacked and killed the Uzbek Abu'l-Khayr Khan. In the summer of 1470, Ahmed organized an attack against Moldavia, the Kingdom of Poland, and Lithuania. By August 20, the Moldavian forces under Stephen the Great defeated the Tatars at the battle of Lipnic. In 1474 and 1476, Ahmed insisted that Ivan III of Russia recognize the khan as his overlord. In 1480, Ahmed organized a military campaign against Moscow, resulting in a face off between two opposing armies known as the Great Stand on the Ugra River. Ahmed judged the conditions unfavorable and retreated. This incident formally ended the "Tatar Yoke" over Rus' lands. On 6 January 1481, Ahmed was killed by Ibak Khan, the prince of the Khanate of Sibir, and Nogays at the mouth of the Donets River.[123]

Ahmed's sons were unable to maintain the Great Horde. They attacked the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (which possessed much of Ukraine at the time) in 1487–1491 and reached as far as Lublin in eastern Poland before being decisively beaten at Zaslavl.[124]

The Crimean Khanate, which had become a vassal state of the Ottoman Empire in 1475, subjugated what remained of the Great Horde, sacking Sarai in 1502. After seeking refuge in Lithuania, Sheikh Ahmed, last Khan of the Horde, died in prison in Kaunas some time after 1504. According to other sources, he was released from the Lithuanian prison in 1527.[125]

Records of Golden Horde existence reach however as far as end of 18th century and it was mentioned in works of Russian publisher Nikolay Novikov in his work of 1773 "Ancient Russian Hydrography".[126]

Astrakhan Khanate (1466)

After 1466, Mahmud bin Küchük's descendants continued to rule in Astrakhan as the khans of the Astrakhan Khanate.[127]

Russian conquests

The Tsardom of Russia conquered the Khanate of Kazan in 1552, the Khanate of Astrakhan in 1556, and the Khanate of Sibir in 1582. The Crimean Tatars wreaked havoc in southern Russia, Ukraine and even Poland in the course of the 16th and early 17th centuries (see Crimean–Nogai slave raids in Eastern Europe), but they were not able to defeat Russia or take Moscow. Under Ottoman protection, the Khanate of Crimea continued its precarious existence until Catherine the Great annexed it on April 8, 1783. It was by far the longest-lived of the successor states to the Golden Horde.[citation needed]

Tributaries

 
The Golden Horde and its Rus' tributaries in 1313 under Öz Beg Khan
 

The subjects of the Golden Horde included the Rus' people, Armenians, Georgians, Circassians, Alans, Crimean Greeks, Crimean Goths, Bulgarians, and Vlachs. The objective of the Golden Horde in conquered lands revolved around obtaining recruits for the army and exacting tax payments from its subjects. In most cases the Golden Horde did not implement direct control over the people they conquered.[128]

Influence

For three centuries, Mongol (or Tatar) presence was an undeniable fact for Russians. Although defined as Russians here, there was no "Russian people" or Russian nation during the period of Mongol rule, and therefore no cohesive national response. Aristocratic Russians responded more uniformly to Mongol rule but the same cannot be said with certainty for the peasantry. There is not much evidence for Mongol influence on the Russian peasantry, whose direct contact with the Mongols was mainly through slavery or forced labor. Russian sources generally tend to focus on military encounters with the Mongols but the literary prose betrays a greater Mongol impact on Russian society than accepted at face value. There was a great deal of familiarity with the Mongols among writers, who recorded the name of virtually every Mongol prince, grandee, and official they came into contact with. The Galician–Volhynian Chronicle recounts the words of Tovrul, a captured informant at the Siege of Kiev (1240), who identifies the Mongol captains by name. Russian sources contain a list of the khans of the Golden Horde as well as more detail on their careers during the time of Great Troubles than Arab-Persian sources. Even the names of numerous lesser ranked Mongols are mentioned. The Mongol khan was called tsar, a title also used for the basileus.[129][130] It is evident that the writers expected their audience to be familiar with the names of individual Mongols and their attributes despite their pervasive hostility.[131]

While the Mongols generally did not directly administer the Eastern European lands they conquered, in the cases of the Principality of Pereyaslavl, Principality of Kiev, and Podolia, they removed the native administration altogether and replaced it with their own direct control. The Kingdom of Galicia–Volhynia, Principality of Smolensk, Principality of Chernigov, and Principality of Novgorod-Seversk retained their princes but also had to contend with Mongol agents who enforced recruitment and tax collection. The Novgorod Republic was exempt from the presence of Mongol agents after 1260 but still had to pay taxes. The Mongols took censuses of Rus' lands in 1245, 1258, 1259, 1260, 1274, and 1275. No further censuses were taken after that. Some places such as the town of Tula became the personal property of individual Mongols such as the Khatun Taidula, the mother of Jani Beg.[128]

The Russian aristocracy had to familiarize themselves with the workings of Mongol high society.[b] The Rus' prince had to receive a patent for his throne from the khan, who then sent an envoy to install the prince on his throne. From the time of Öz Beg Khan on, a commissioner was appointed by the khan to reside at each of the Rus' principalities' capitals. Mongol rule loosened in the late 13th century so that some Rus' princes were able to collect taxes as the khan's agents. By the early 14th century, all the grand dukes were collecting taxes by themselves, so that the average people no longer dealt with Mongol overlords while their rulers answered to Sarai.[133]

Aristocratic familiarity with Mongol customs did not result in adopting Mongol culture. Any partiality shown towards Mongol customs could be dangerous, although in one instance they did adopt Mongol military attire. After visiting Batu's camp in 1245, Daniel of Galicia was visibly influenced by the Mongols, and equipped his army in the Mongol fashion. Austrian visitors to his camp remarked that only Daniel himself dressed according to the Rus' custom, with a coat of Greek brocade with gold lace, green leather boots, a gilded saddle, and gold-encrusted sword.[22] Mongols that moved into Russian society shed their former customs as they adopted Orthodox Christianity and despite the numerous mentions of Mongol atrocities, some more honorable portrayals do exist. In the "Tale of the Destruction of Riazan' by Batu" the Mongol Batu exhibited chivalric courtesy to the Russian noble Evpatii by allowing his men to carry him off the field in honor of his bravery. Russian nobles also fought alongside the Mongols as allies at times.[134]

Intermarriage did happen but was rare. Fedor Rostyslavovich, Yury of Moscow, and Gleb Vasil'kovich married Mongol princesses. Vasil'kovich spent his entire career among the Mongols in the steppes. Urus Khan's mother may have been a Russian princess.[105][135] Such intermarriage ceased after the Golden Horde Mongols converted to Islam until the 15th century when the weakened Horde's Mongol grandees moved into Muscovite territory. Most of them entered into the service of grand princes, married aristocracy, converted to Christianity, and became assimilated. It is uncertain how much Mongol Tatar blood entered the Russian aristocracy. Some Mongols might have changed their names after converting while Russians took on Mongol nicknames as patronyms. The nobles of Ryazan and the Godunov clan of prince Chet claimed Tatar descent. Mongol ancestry was considered as prestigious as German, Latin, and Greek ancestry in the 16th century, although such views declined dramatically after the Time of Troubles.[135] There was also intermarriage with their other subjects, such as between Berke and a Seljuk princess, and Jöge (eldest son of Nogai) and a Bulgarian princess.[136][137]

Russian Orthodox Church

The Mongols required the Russian Orthodox Church to pray for the health of the khan and in return they looked after the church's health and fostered its growth. A bishopric was established in Sarai for Russians and to act as an intermediary between the Golden Horde and both the Russian Church and Byzantium. The khans granted the Church significant tax privileges which enabled it to recover from the invasion and prosper even more than before. It was during the 14th century that the Church made decisive inroads into the pagan countryside, possibly due to the attraction of economic benefits bestowed upon Church lands that incentivized peasants to settle. The "Tale of Peters, tsarevich of the Horde" was written in the 14th century. It tells of how the Mongol Peter, a descendant of Genghis Khan, converted and founded the Petrov monastery. Peter's descendants used their ties to the khans to protect the monastery from the Rostov princes and the neighboring Russians who desired the fishing rights to that land. The depiction of Mongols by Church was mixed and awkward. It portrayed them as a disaster and their caretaker. This contradiction can be seen in the khans' portrayals in Church texts. Where the khans' names would have been in the missals, there was a blank space for the name to be read aloud orally. There was also a careful delineation between khan and "Tatars". Hagiographers sometimes absolved the khans from their role in killing Russian princes. After the khans' power began to wane in the 14th century, the Church gave its full backing to the Russian princes. However even after Mongol rule ended, the Church still invoked the Mongol model as an example of how they should be treated. In the 16th century, churchmen circulated a translated Mongol yarlyk that granted tax immunity to the Church.[138]

Administration

Halperin (1987) cautioned: "To analyze the Mongols' administration of Russia requires meticulous examination both of the extant sources individually and of the larger picture they present. Many of the references to Mongol officials occur in unreliable texts from later periods, showing obvious signs of interpolation."[139] Although it is evident that the Mongols started collecting taxes in Rus' principalities as early as 1245 (shortly after they subdued them during or after the invasion of 1237), this appears to have been a localised affair with baskaki (singular baskak or basqaq, a Turkic word used in early sources meaning a local Mongol official who was primarily responsible for collecting tribute and conscripting troops[140]) appointed per village, town or city, rather than a simultaneous imposition of a uniform taxation system throughout all areas of former Kievan Rus'.[140]

The Grand Duchy of Moscow adopted the Mongol tax system and continued to collect tribute after they stopped passing it onto the Golden Horde. The Muscovite grand princes replaced the Mongol basqaq with officials called danshchiki who collected tribute known as dan', which was probably modeled after the Mongol tribute system. The Russians adopted the Mongol word for treasury, kazna, treasurer, kaznachey, and money, den'ga. The Muscovites used the Mongol customs tax system called tamga, from which the Russian word tamozhnya (customs house) is derived from.[141] The yam postal system was adopted by Russia in the late 15th century as the peasants had already been paying a yam tax for centuries. The practice of poruka, collective responsibility of a sworn group, became more common in Russia during the Mongol period and may have been influenced by the Mongols. The Mongols may have spread the practice of beating the shins as a punishment from China to Russia, where this punishment for nonpayment of debts was called pravezh.[142]

Military

Some of the Mongols' subjects adopted Mongol military accoutrements. In 1245, Daniel of Galicia's army was dressed in the Mongol fashion after a visit to Batu Khan's camp. Austrian visitors to Daniel's camp remarked that with the exception of Daniel himself, all the horsemen dressed like Mongols.[22] Muscovite cavalrymen were equipped in a similar fashion to the Mongols as late as the 16th century, when they were depicted using a Mongol-style saddle with Mongol stirrups, wearing a Mongol helmet, and armed with a Mongol bow and quiver. European observers mistook them for Ottoman dress. Muscovite armies also deployed in a similar fashion to the Mongols with the right guard ranked above the left (due to a shamanist belief). The emphasis on cavalry declined in the 16th century as warfare increasingly involved sieges in Eastern Europe than on the steppes with nomadic horsemen.[143]

Decline

Mongol rule in Galicia ended with its conquest by the Kingdom of Poland (1025–1385) in 1349. The Golden Horde entered severe decline after the death of Berdi Beg in 1359, which started a protracted political crisis lasting two decades. In 1363, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania won the Battle of Blue Waters against the Golden Horde and conquered both Kiev and Podolia. After 1360, payment of tribute and taxes from Rus' subjects to the declining Golden Horde decreased significantly. In 1374, Nizhny Novgorod rebelled and slaughtered an embassy sent by Mamai. For a brief period after the victorious Battle of Kulikovo in 1380 by Dmitry Donskoy against Mamai, the Grand Duchy of Moscow was free of Mongol control until Tokhtamysh restored Mongol suzerainty over Moscow two years later with the Siege of Moscow (1382).[144] Tokhtamysh also crushed the Lithuanian army at Poltava in the next year.[108] Władysław II Jagiełło, Grand Duke of Lithuania and King of Poland, accepted his supremacy and agreed to pay tribute in turn for a grant of Rus' territory.[109] In 1395, Timur annihilated Tokhtamysh's army again at the Battle of the Terek River, destroyed his capital, looted the Crimean trade centers, and deported the most skillful craftsmen to his own capital in Samarkand. Timur's forces reached as far north as Ryazan before turning back. Tokhtamysh fled to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and asked Vytautas for assistance in retaking the Golden Horde in exchange for suzerainty over the Rus' lands. In 1399, Vytautas and Tokhtamysh attacked Temür Qutlugh and Edigu at the Battle of the Vorskla River but were defeated. The Golden Horde victory secured for it Kiev, Podolia, and some land in the lower Bug River basin. Tokhtamysh died in obscurity in Tyumen around 1405. His son Jalal al-Din fled to Lithuania and participated in the Battle of Grunwald against the Teutonic Order.[145]

From 1400 to 1408, Edigu gradually regained control of the eastern Rus' tributaries, with the exception of Moscow, which he failed to take in a siege but ravaged the surrounding countryside. Smolensk was lost to Lithuania.[145] After Edigu died in 1419, the Golden Horde rapidly disintegrated but it still retained some vestige of influence in Eastern Europe. In 1426, Ulugh Muhammad contributed troops to Vytautas' war against Pskov and despite the horde's reduced size, both Yury of Zvenigorod and Vasily Kosoy still visited Ulugh Muhammad's court in 1432 to request a grand ducal patent. A year later, Ulugh Muhammad was ousted and fled to the town of Belev on the upper Oka River, where he came into conflict with Vasily II of Moscow, whom he defeated twice in battle. In 1445, Vasily II was taken prisoner by Ulugh Muhammad and ransomed for 25,000 rubles. Ulugh Muhammad was murdered in the same year by his son, Mäxmüd of Kazan, who fled to the middle Volga region and founded the Khanate of Kazan.[117]

In 1447, Mäxmüd sent an army against Muscovy but was repelled. Another of Ulugh Muhammad's sons, Qasim Khan, fled to Moscow, where Vasily II granted him land that became the Qasim Khanate[118] Both the khans Küchük Muhammad and Sayid Ahmad attempted to reassert authority over Moscow. Küchük Muhammad attacked Ryazan and suffered a major defeat against the forces of Vasily II. Sayid Ahmad continued to raid Muscovy and in 1449 made a direct attack on Moscow. However he was defeated by Muscovy's ally Qasim Khan. In 1450, Küchük Muhammad attacked Ryazan but was turned back by a combined Russo-Tatar army. In 1451, Sayid Ahmad tried to take Moscow again and failed.[122]

In the summer of 1470, Ahmed Khan bin Küchük, ruler of the Great Horde, organized an attack against Moldavia, the Kingdom of Poland, and Lithuania. By August 20, the Moldavian forces under Stephen the Great defeated the Tatars at the battle of Lipnic. In 1474 and 1476, Ahmed insisted that Ivan III of Russia recognize the khan as his overlord. In 1480, Ahmed organized a military campaign against Moscow, resulting in a face off between two opposing armies known as the Great Stand on the Ugra River. Ahmed judged the conditions unfavorable and retreated. This incident formally ended the "Tatar Yoke" over Rus' lands.[123]

Trade

Sarai carried on a brisk trade with the Genoese trade emporiums on the coast of the Black SeaSoldaia, Caffa, and Azak. Mamluk Egypt was the Khans' long-standing trade partner and ally in the Mediterranean. Berke, the Khan of Kipchak had drawn up an alliance with the Mamluk Sultan Baibars against the Ilkhanate in 1261.[147]

A change in trade routes

According to Baumer[148] the natural trade route was down the Volga to Serai where it intersected the east-west route north of the Caspian, and then down the west side of the Caspian to Tabriz in Persian Azerbaijan where it met the larger east-west route south of the Caspian. Around 1262 Berke broke with the Il-Khan Hulagu Khan. This led to several wars on the west side of the Caspian which the Horde usually lost. The interruption of trade and conflict with Persia led the Horde to build trading towns along the northern route. They also allied with the Mamluks of Egypt who were the Il-Khan's enemies. Trade between the Horde and Egypt was carried by the Genoese based in Crimea. An important part of this trade was slaves for the Mamluk army. Trade was weakened by a quarrel with the Genoese in 1307 and a Mumluk-Persian peace in 1323. Circa 1336 the Ilkhanate began to disintegrate which shifted trade north. Around 1340 the route north of the Caspian was described by Pegolotti. In 1347 a Horde siege of the Genoese Crimean port of Kaffa led to the spread of the black death to Europe. In 1395-96 Tamerlane laid waste to the Horde's trading towns. Since they had no agricultural hinterland many of the towns vanished and trade shifted south.[citation needed]

Geography and society

Genghis Khan assigned four Mongol mingghans: the Sanchi'ud (or Salji'ud), Keniges, Uushin, and Je'ured clans to Jochi.[149] By the beginning of the 14th century, noyans from the Sanchi'ud, Hongirat, Ongud (Arghun), Keniges, Jajirad, Besud, Oirat, and Je'ured clans held importants positions at the court or elsewhere. There existed four mingghans (4,000) of the Jalayir in the left wing of the Ulus of Jochi (Golden Horde).[citation needed]

The population of the Golden Horde was largely a mixture of Turks and Mongols who adopted Islam later, as well as smaller numbers of Finnic peoples, Sarmato-Scythians, Slavs, and people from the Caucasus, among others (whether Muslim or not).[150] Most of the Horde's population was Turkic: Kipchaks, Cumans, Volga Bulgars, Khwarezmians, and others. The Horde was gradually Turkified and lost its Mongol identity, while the descendants of Batu's original Mongol warriors constituted the upper class.[151] They were commonly named the Tatars by the Russians and Europeans. Russians preserved this common name for this group down to the 20th century. Whereas most members of this group identified themselves by their ethnic or tribal names, most also considered themselves to be Muslims. Most of the population, both agricultural and nomadic, adopted the Kypchak language, which developed into the regional languages of Kypchak groups after the Horde disintegrated.[citation needed]

The descendants of Batu ruled the Golden Horde from Sarai Batu and later Sarai Berke, controlling an area ranging from the Volga River and the Carpathian mountains to the mouth of the Danube River. The descendants of Orda ruled the area from the Ural River to Lake Balkhash. Censuses recorded Chinese living quarters in the Tatar parts of Novgorod, Tver and Moscow.[citation needed]

Internal organization

 
Tilework fragments of a palace in Sarai.

The Golden Horde's elites were descended from four Mongol clans, Qiyat, Manghut, Sicivut and Qonqirat. Their supreme ruler was the Khan, chosen by the kurultai among Batu Khan's descendants. The prime minister, also ethnically Mongol, was known as "prince of princes", or beklare-bek. The ministers were called viziers. Local governors, or basqaqs, were responsible for levying taxes and dealing with popular discontent. Civil and military administration, as a rule, were not separate.[citation needed]

The Horde developed as a sedentary rather than nomadic culture, with Sarai evolving into a large, prosperous metropolis. In the early 14th century, the capital was moved considerably upstream to Sarai Berqe, which became one of the largest cities of the medieval world, with 600,000 inhabitants.[152] Sarai was described by the famous traveller Ibn Battuta as "one of the most beautiful cities ... full of people, with the beautiful bazaars and wide streets", and having 13 congregational mosques along with "plenty of lesser mosques".[153] Another contemporary source describes it as "a grand city accommodating markets, baths and religious institutions".[153] An astrolabe was discovered during excavations at the site and the city was home to many poets, most of whom are known to us only by name.[153][154]

Despite Russian efforts at proselytizing in Sarai, the Mongols clung to their traditional animist or shamanist beliefs until Uzbeg Khan (1312–41) adopted Islam as a state religion. Several rulers of Kievan Rus'Mikhail of Chernigov and Mikhail of Tver among them – were reportedly assassinated in Sarai, but the Khans were generally tolerant and even released the Russian Orthodox Church from paying taxes.[citation needed]

Provinces

The Mongols favored decimal organization, which was inherited from Genghis Khan. It is said that there were a total of ten political divisions within the Golden Horde. The Golden Horde majorly was divided into Blue Horde (Kok Horde) and White Horde (Ak Horde). Blue Horde consisted of Pontic–Caspian steppe, Khazaria, Volga Bulgaria, while White Horde encompassed the lands of the princes of the left hand: Taibugin Yurt, Ulus Shiban, Ulus Tok-timur, Ulus Ezhen Horde.[citation needed]

Vassal territories

Genetics

A 2016 study analyzed the DNA of 5 graves in Tavan Tolgoi, Mongolia, identified as members of the Mongol Golden Family.[157] The male individuals identified as Golden Family members, anthropologically all belonged to the East Asian physical type[158] with West Eurasian paternal haplogroup R1b-M343.[159] The authors proposed that R1b may be the patrilineal lineage of Genghis Khan, and that the R1b-carrying Tavan Tolgoi specimens were the descendants of prior mixed marriages between West Eurasian migrants and women indigenous to the Mongolian plateau. However, the same authors also suggested the possibility that they were product of clan marriages but more likely the Tavan Tolgoi bodies were either related to the female lineages of Genghis Khan's Borjigin clan or to Genghis Khan's male lineage.[160] The authors observed a special link between haplogroup R1b-M343 and the populations residing in the former territory of the Golden Horde, noting a high frequency of R1b-M343 among populations such as the Hazara, as well as Bashkirs and Eastern Russian Tatars.[161][162]

 
Analyses of Early Turk and Medieval Steppe nomad population clusters; Dark Blue: Western Hunter-Gatherer, light Blue: Early European Farmers, Orange: Eastern Hunter-Gatherer, Red: Neolithic Iranian farmers, light Green: Northeast Asian, Dark Green: East/Southeast Asian.

A 2018 genetic study published in Nature examined the remains of two males buried in the Ulytau District in Kazakhstan ca. 1300 AD.[163][164] One male, who was a Buddhist member of the Golden Horde army, was of East Asian ancestry and carried paternal haplogroup C3[165] and the maternal haplogroup D4m2.[166] The other male, who was of West Eurasian (European) ancestry, was a carrier of the paternal haplogroup R1[167] and the maternal haplogroup I1b.[168] According to the authors, this could suggest assimilation of distinct ethnic groups in to the Golden Horde, however he could also be servant or slave.[169]

Coinage

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Their state came to be known in historiography as the Golden Horde or the ulus ("people" or "patrimony") of Djochi, while the contemporaries simply referred to it as the Great Horde (ulu orda).[2]
  2. ^ "Clearly, the Russian bookmen's posturing notwithstanding, the Mongols were anything but an unknown and unknowable people. The Tatars, as an abstraction, were loathed on principle, but to the Russian elite their Tatar counterparts were far from being nameless, faceless enemies. Indeed, Russian aristocrats were probably more familiar with the higher levels of Mongol society than with the society of the Russian peasantry."[132]

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  119. ^ Documents of the Crimean khanate from the collection of Huseyn Feyzkhanov / comp. and the transliteration. R. R. Abdujalilov; scientific. edited by I. Mingaleev. – Simferopol: LLC "Konstanta". - 2017. - 816 p. ISBN 978-5-906952-38-7
  120. ^ Sagit Faizov. Letters of khans Islam Giray III and Muhammad Giray IV to Tsar Alexey Mikhailovich and king Jan Kazimir, 1654-1658: Crimean Tatar diplomacy in polit. post-Pereyaslav context. time - Moscow: Humanitarii, 2003. - 166 p. ISBN 5-89221-075-8
  121. ^ Christian 2018, p. 63.
  122. ^ a b Vernadsky 1953, p. 330.
  123. ^ a b Vernadsky 1953, p. 332.
  124. ^ . Strangelove.net. Archived from the original on 2009-01-18. Retrieved 2014-04-11.
  125. ^ Kołodziejczyk (2011), p. 66.
  126. ^ Nikolay Novikov. "Ancient Russian Hydrography" (Древняя российская идрография). Saint Petersburg, 1773. page 167. ISBN 9785458063685
  127. ^ Frank 2009, p. 253.
  128. ^ a b Vernadsky 1953, p. 214.
  129. ^ Halperin 1987, p. 91.
  130. ^ Halperin 1987, p. 118–119.
  131. ^ Halperin 1987, p. 125.
  132. ^ Halperin 1987, p. 124–126.
  133. ^ Vernadsky 1953, p. 222.
  134. ^ Halperin 1986, p. 107-109.
  135. ^ a b Halperin 1986, p. 111-113.
  136. ^ Mirgaleyev 2017, p. 347.
  137. ^ Spinei 2017, p. 405.
  138. ^ Halperin 1986, p. 113-115.
  139. ^ Halperin 1987, p. 50.
  140. ^ a b Halperin 1987, p. 50–51.
  141. ^ Halperin 1986, p. 89-91.
  142. ^ Halperin 1986, p. 93.
  143. ^ Halperin 1986, p. 91.
  144. ^ Vernadsky 1953, p. 233-244.
  145. ^ a b Vernadsky 1953, p. 277-287.
  146. ^ Bentley, Jerry H. (2008). Traditions & encounters : a global perspective on the past. New York : McGraw-Hill. p. 471, map 18.2. ISBN 978-0-07-340693-0.
  147. ^ Mantran, Robert (Fossier, Robert, ed.) "A Turkish or Mongolian Islam" in The Cambridge Illustrated History of the Middle Ages: 1250-1520, p. 298
  148. ^ Christoph Baumer, History of Central Asia, volume 3, pp 263-270, 2016. He seems to be following Virgil Ciociltan, The Mongols and the Black Sea Trade, 2012
  149. ^ Blair, Sheila; Art, Nasser D. Khalili Collection of Islamic (1995). جامع التواريخ: Rashid Al-Din's Illustrated History of the World. Nour Foundation. p. 212. ISBN 978-0-19-727627-3.
  150. ^ Halperin 1987, p. 111.
  151. ^ "Britannica Academic". academic.eb.com.
  152. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica
  153. ^ a b c Ravil Bukharaev (2014). Islam in Russia: The Four Seasons. Routledge. p. 116. ISBN 9781136808005.
  154. ^ Ravil Bukharaev; David Matthews, eds. (2013). Historical Anthology of Kazan Tatar Verse. Routledge. p. 15. ISBN 9781136814655.
  155. ^ Jackson, Peter (1978). The Dissolution of the Mongol Empire. Harrassowitz. pp. 186–243.
  156. ^ A. P. Grigorev and O. B. Frolova, Geographicheskoy opisaniye Zolotoy Ordi v encyclopedia al-Kashkandi-Tyurkologicheskyh sbornik, 2001, pp. 262-302
  157. ^ Lkhagvasuren, Gavaachimed (2016). "Molecular Genealogy of a Mongol Queen's Family and Her Possible Kinship with Genghis Khan". PLOS ONE. 11 (9): e0161622. Bibcode:2016PLoSO..1161622L. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0161622. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 5023095. PMID 27627454.
  158. ^ Lkhagvasuren 2016Archaeological and physical anthropological analyses of the Tavan Tolgoi bodies. "All physical anthropological parameters indicate that the skulls of the Tavan Tolgoi graves were all anthropologically Mongoloid "
  159. ^ Lkhagvasuren 2016Table 2. Y-haplogroups of the male Tavan Tolgoi bodies. MN0376: R1a1a, MN0126: R1b, MN0104: R1b
  160. ^ Lkhagvasuren et al. 2016"...it seems most likely that the Tavan Tolgoi bodies are members of Genghis Khan’s Golden family, including the lineage of bekis, Genghis Khan’s female lineage, and their female successors who controlled Eastern Mongolia in the early Mongolian era instead of guregens of the Ongud clan, or the lineage of khans, Genghis Khan’s male lineage, who married females of the Hongirad clan, including Genghis Khan’s grandmother, mother, chief wife, and some daughters-in-law.
  161. ^ Lkhagvasuren 2016"Eastern Russian Tatars, Bashkirs, and Pakistani Hazara were found to carry R1b-M343 at unusually high frequencies of 12.65%, 46.07%, and 32%, respectively, compared to other regions of Eastern Asia, which rarely have this haplotype (Fig 3) [40, 42, 43, 49–53]. Interestingly, ancestors of those 3 populations were all closely associated with the medieval Mongol Empire. That is, Russian Tatars and Bashkirs are descendants of the Golden Horde (also known as the Ulus of Jochi) that had been controlled by Jochi, the first son of Genghis Khan, and his descendants during the 12th–15th centuries. In addition, some of the Hazara tribes are believed to consist of descendants of Mongolian soldiers and their slave women after the 1221 siege of Bamiyan under the leadership of Genghis Khan [54, 55]. Similarly, the high frequency of R1b-M343 in geographic regions associated with the past Mongol khanates including the Golden Horde [...] strongly suggest a close association between the Y haplotype R1b-M343 and the past Mongol Empire (Fig 3) [42–44, 49–53]."
  162. ^ Lkhagvasuren 2016"Coincidentally, the geographical distribution of modern-day individuals matching the Y-haplogroup and haplotype of the Tavan Tolgoi bodies in the regions corresponding to the past Mongol khanates, including the Golden Horde Dynasty and Chagatai Khanate, implies that the modern-day individuals are direct descendants of the Golden family members."
  163. ^ Damgaard, Peter de Barros; Marchi, Nina; Rasmussen, Simon; Peyrot, Michaël (May 2018). "137 ancient human genomes from across the Eurasian steppes". Nature. 557 (7705): 369–374. doi:10.1038/s41586-018-0094-2. ISSN 1476-4687.
  164. ^ Damgaard et al. 2018, Supplementary Table 2, Rows 23-24.
  165. ^ Damgaard et al. 2018, Supplementary Table 9, Row 16.
  166. ^ Damgaard et al. 2018, Supplementary Table 8, Row 81.
  167. ^ Damgaard et al. 2018, Supplementary Table 9, Row 17.
  168. ^ Damgaard et al. 2018, Supplementary Table 8, Row 82.
  169. ^ Damgaard 2018, p. 372: "We also find the presence of an individual of West Eurasian descent buried together with members of Jochi Khan’s Golden Horde army from the Ulytau mountains (see Supplementary Information section 4: DA28 is East Asian and DA29 is European). This could suggest assimilation of distinct groups into the Medieval Golden Horde, but this individual may also represent a slave or a servant of West Eurasian descent attached to the service of the Golden Horde members."

Bibliography

  • Allsen, Thomas T. (1985). "The Princes of the Left Hand: An Introduction to the History of the Ulus of Ordu in the Thirteenth and Early Fourteenth Centuries". Archivum Eurasiae Medii Aevi. Vol. V. Harrassowitz. pp. 5–40. ISBN 978-3-447-08610-3.
  • Atwood, Christopher Pratt (2004). Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire. Facts On File. ISBN 978-0-8160-4671-3.
  • Christian, David (2018), A History of Russia, Central Asia and Mongolia 2, Wiley Blackwell
  • Damgaard, P. B.; et al. (May 9, 2018). "137 ancient human genomes from across the Eurasian steppes". Nature. Nature Research. 557 (7705): 369–373. Bibcode:2018Natur.557..369D. doi:10.1038/s41586-018-0094-2. hdl:1887/3202709. PMID 29743675. S2CID 13670282. Retrieved April 11, 2020.
  • Frank, Allen J. (2009), Cambridge History of Inner Asia
  • Forsyth, James (1992), A History of the Peoples of Siberia, Cambridge University Press
  • Halperin, Charles J. (1987). Russia and the Golden Horde: The Mongol Impact on Medieval Russian History. p. 222. ISBN 9781850430575. (e-book). (1985 edition online)
  • Howorth, Sir Henry Hoyle (1880). History of the Mongols: From the 9th to the 19th Century. New York: Burt Franklin. ISBN 9780265306338.
  • Jackson, Peter (2014). The Mongols and the West: 1221-1410. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-317-87898-8.
  • Kołodziejczyk, Dariusz (2011). The Crimean Khanate and Poland-Lithuania: International Diplomacy on the European Periphery (15th-18th Century). A Study of Peace Treaties Followed by Annotated Documents. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-19190-7.
  • Martin, Janet (2007). Medieval Russia, 980-1584. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-85916-5.
  • Mirgaleyev, Ilnur (2017), The Golden Horde and Anatolia
  • Spinei, Victor (2017), The Domination of the Golden Horde in the Romanian Regions
  • Spuler, Bertold (1943). Die Goldene Horde, die Mongolen in Russland, 1223-1502 (in German). O. Harrassowitz.
  • Vernadsky, George (1953), The Mongols and Russia, Yale University Press

Further reading

  • Boris Grekov and Alexander Yakubovski, The Golden Horde and its Downfall
  • Sheila Paine, The Golden Horde: From the Himalaya to the Mediterranean, Penguin Books, 1998.

External links

  • (in Russian) Golden Horde 2011-07-27 at the Wayback Machine — articles at the World Archaeology

golden, horde, this, article, about, mongol, khanate, established, 13th, century, other, uses, disambiguation, self, designated, ulug, ulus, great, state, turkic, originally, mongol, later, turkicized, khanate, established, 13th, century, originating, northwes. This article is about the Mongol khanate established in the 13th century For other uses see Golden Horde disambiguation The Golden Horde self designated as Ulug Ulus lit Great State in Turkic 8 was originally a Mongol and later Turkicized khanate established in the 13th century and originating as the northwestern sector of the Mongol Empire 9 With the fragmentation of the Mongol Empire after 1259 it became a functionally separate khanate It is also known as the Kipchak Khanate or as the Ulus of Jochi a and replaced the earlier less organized Cuman Kipchak confederation 10 Golden HordeUlug Ulus1242 1259 Vassal of Mongol Empire 1260 1458 Independent 1459 1502 Great Horde Flag during the reign of Oz Beg Khan as shown in Dulcert s 1339 map other sources claim that the Golden Horde was named for the yellow banner of the khan 1 Territories of Golden Horde as of 1389StatusNomadic empire Division of the Mongol Empire until 1313 68 CapitalSarai Western wing later overall Sighnaq Eastern wing Common languagesMiddle Mongol a 2 Kipchak Turkic b 2 3 ReligionTengrism Shamanism Nestorianism Tibetan Buddhism 1240s 1313 Islam 1313 1502 GovernmentSemi elective monarchy later hereditary monarchyKhan 1226 1280Orda Khan White Horde 1242 1255Batu Khan Blue Horde 1379 1395Tokhtamysh 1459 1465Mahmud bin Kuchuk Great Horde 1481 1502Sheikh AhmedLegislatureKurultaiHistorical eraLate Middle Ages Established after the Mongol invasion of Rus 1242 Blue Horde and White Horde united1379 Disintegrated into Great Horde1466 Great Stand on the Ugra River1480 Sack of Sarai by the Crimean Khanate1502 4 Area1310 5 6 6 000 000 km2 2 300 000 sq mi CurrencyPul Som Dirham 7 Preceded by Succeeded byMongol EmpireCuman Kipchak ConfederationVolga Bulgaria Uzbek KhanateQasim KhanateGenoese GazariaAstrakhan KhanateKazakh KhanateCrimean KhanateSiberian KhanateNogai HordeKhanate of Kazan Official language since the inception of the Golden Horde used in chancery Especially the western Kipchak dialects this language spoken by the majority of the inhabitants of the Black Sea steppe who were non Mongol Turks and those in the Khan s army Shift from Mongol to Turkic occurred in the 1350s or earlier also used in chancery After the death of Batu Khan the founder of the Golden Horde in 1255 his dynasty flourished for a full century until 1359 though the intrigues of Nogai instigated a partial civil war in the late 1290s The Horde s military power peaked during the reign of Uzbeg Khan 1312 1341 who adopted Islam The territory of the Golden Horde at its peak extended from Siberia and Central Asia to parts of Eastern Europe from the Urals to the Danube in the west and from the Black Sea to the Caspian Sea in the south while bordering the Caucasus Mountains and the territories of the Mongol dynasty known as the Ilkhanate 10 The khanate experienced violent internal political disorder beginning in 1359 before it briefly reunited 1381 1395 under Tokhtamysh However soon after the 1396 invasion of Timur the founder of the Timurid Empire the Golden Horde broke into smaller Tatar khanates which declined steadily in power At the start of the 15th century the Horde began to fall apart By 1466 it was being referred to simply as the Great Horde Within its territories there emerged numerous predominantly Turkic speaking khanates These internal struggles allowed the northern vassal state of Muscovy to rid itself of the Tatar Yoke at the Great Stand on the Ugra River in 1480 The Crimean Khanate and the Kazakh Khanate the last remnants of the Golden Horde survived until 1783 and 1847 respectively Contents 1 Name 2 Mongol origins 1225 1241 3 Golden Age 3 1 Batu Khan 1242 1256 3 2 Berke 1258 1266 3 3 Toluid Civil War 1260 1264 3 4 Berke Hulagu war 1262 1266 3 5 Mengu Timur 1266 1280 3 6 Dual khanship 1281 1299 3 7 General peace 1299 1312 4 Islamization 4 1 Oz Beg Khan 1313 1341 4 2 Jani Beg 1342 1357 5 Decline 5 1 Great troubles 1359 1381 5 2 Tokhtamysh 1381 1395 5 3 Edigu 1395 1419 6 Disintegration and succession 6 1 Khanate of Sibir 1405 6 2 Uzbek Khanate 1428 6 3 Nogai Horde 1440s 6 4 Khanate of Kazan 1445 6 5 Crimean Khanate 1449 6 6 Qasim Khanate 1452 6 7 Kazakh Khanate 1458 6 8 Great Horde 1459 1502 6 9 Astrakhan Khanate 1466 6 10 Russian conquests 7 Tributaries 7 1 Influence 7 1 1 Russian Orthodox Church 7 1 2 Administration 7 1 3 Military 7 2 Decline 8 Trade 8 1 A change in trade routes 9 Geography and society 9 1 Internal organization 9 2 Provinces 9 2 1 Vassal territories 10 Genetics 11 Coinage 12 Gallery 13 See also 14 Notes 15 References 16 Bibliography 17 Further reading 18 External linksNameFurther information Wings of the Golden Horde The name Golden Horde is a partial calque of Russian Zolotaya Orda Zolotaya Orda itself supposedly a partial calque of Turkic Altan Orda Zolotaya Zolotaya was translated to Golden while Orda Orda was transliterated to Horde The Turkic word orda means palace camp or headquarters in this case the headquarters of the khan being the capital of the khanate metonymically extended to the khanate itself The English word horde in the sense of a large and often threatening group emerged later metaphorically extended from the reputation of the Mongol hordes The appellation Golden is said to have been inspired by the golden color of the tents the Mongols lived in during wartime or an actual golden tent used by Batu Khan or by Uzbek Khan 11 or to have been bestowed by the Slavic tributaries to describe the great wealth of the khan It was not until the 16th century that Russian chroniclers begin explicitly using the term to refer to this particular successor khanate of the Mongol Empire The first known use of the term in 1565 in the Russian chronicle History of Kazan applied it to the Ulus of Batu centered on Sarai 12 13 In contemporary Persian Armenian and Muslim writings and in the records of the 13th and early 14th centuries such as the Yuanshi and the Jami al tawarikh the khanate was called the Ulus of Jochi realm of Jochi in Mongolian Dasht i Qifchaq Qipchaq Steppe or Khanate of the Qipchaq and Comania Cumania 14 15 The eastern or left wing or left hand in official Mongolian sponsored Persian sources was referred to as the Blue Horde in Russian chronicles and as the White Horde in Timurid sources e g Zafar Nameh Western scholars have tended to follow the Timurid sources nomenclature and call the left wing the White Horde But Otemish Hajji fl 1550 a historian of Khwarezm called the left wing the Blue Horde and since he was familiar with the oral traditions of the khanate empire it seems likely that the Russian chroniclers were correct and that the khanate itself called its left wing the Blue Horde 16 The khanate apparently used the term White Horde to refer to its right wing which was situated in Batu s home base in Sarai and controlled the ulus The designations Golden Horde Blue Horde and White Horde have not been encountered in the sources of the Mongol period 17 Mongol origins 1225 1241 Main articles Mongol invasion of Volga Bulgaria Mongol invasion of Europe Mongol invasion of Kievan Rus and Mongol Empire At his death in 1227 Genghis Khan divided the Mongol Empire amongst his four sons as appanages but the Empire remained united under the supreme khan Jochi was the eldest but he died six months before Genghis The westernmost lands occupied by the Mongols which included what is today southern Russia and Kazakhstan were given to Jochi s eldest sons Batu Khan who eventually became ruler of the Blue Horde and Orda Khan who became the leader of the White Horde 18 19 In 1235 Batu with the great general Subutai began an invasion westwards first conquering the Bashkirs and then moving on to Volga Bulgaria in 1236 From there he conquered some of the southern steppes of present day Ukraine in 1237 forcing many of the local Cumans to retreat westward The Mongol campaign against the Kypchaks and Cumans had already started under Jochi and Subutai in 1216 1218 when the Merkits took shelter among them By 1239 a large portion of Cumans were driven out of the Crimean peninsula and it became one of the appanages of the Mongol Empire 20 The remnants of the Crimean Cumans survived in the Crimean mountains and they would in time mix with other groups in the Crimea including Greeks Goths and Mongols to form the Crimean Tatar population Moving north Batu began the Mongol invasion of Rus and spent three years subjugating the principalities of former Kievan Rus whilst his cousins Mongke Kadan and Guyuk moved southwards into Alania Decisive Golden Horde victory in the Battle of Mohi Using the migration of the Cumans as their casus belli the Mongols continued west raiding Poland and Hungary which culminated in Mongol victories at the battles of Legnica and Mohi In 1241 however Ogedei Khan died in the Mongolian homeland Batu turned back from his siege of Vienna but did not return to Mongolia rather opting to stay at the Volga River His brother Orda returned to take part in the succession The Mongol armies would never again travel so far west In 1242 after retreating through Hungary destroying Pest in the process and subjugating Bulgaria 21 Batu established his capital at Sarai commanding the lower stretch of the Volga River on the site of the Khazar capital of Atil Shortly before that the younger brother of Batu and Orda Shiban was given his own enormous ulus east of the Ural Mountains along the Ob and Irtysh Rivers While the Mongolian language was undoubtedly in general use at the court of Batu few Mongol texts written in the territory of the Golden Horde have survived perhaps because of the prevalent general illiteracy According to Grigor ev yarliq or decrees of the Khans were written in Mongol then translated into the Cuman language The existence of Arabic Mongol and Persian Mongol dictionaries dating from the middle of the 14th century and prepared for the use of the Egyptian Mamluk Sultanate suggests that there was a practical need for such works in the chancelleries handling correspondence with the Golden Horde It is thus reasonable to conclude that letters received by the Mamluks if not also written by them must have been in Mongol 21 Golden AgeSee also Timeline of the Golden Horde Batu Khan establishes the Golden Horde Jochi Mausoleum Karagandy Region Batu Khan 1242 1256 When the Great Khatun Toregene invited Batu to elect the next Emperor of the Mongol Empire in 1242 he declined to attend the kurultai and instead stayed at the Volga River Although Batu excused himself by saying he was suffering from old age and illness it seems that he did not support the election of Guyuk Khan Guyuk and Buri a grandson of Chagatai Khan had quarreled violently with Batu at a victory banquet during the Mongol occupation of Eastern Europe He sent his brothers to the kurultai and the new Khagan of the Mongols was elected in 1246 All the senior Rus princes including Yaroslav II of Vladimir Daniel of Galicia and Sviatoslav III of Vladimir acknowledged Batu s supremacy Originally Batu ordered Daniel to turn the administration of Galicia over to the Mongols but Daniel personally visited Batu in 1245 and pledged allegiance to him After returning from his trip Daniel was visibly influenced by the Mongols and equipped his army in the Mongol fashion his horsemen with Mongol style cuirasses and their mounts armoured with shoulder chest and head pieces 22 Michael of Chernigov who had killed a Mongol envoy in 1240 refused to show obeisance and was executed in 1246 23 When Guyuk called Batu to pay him homage several times Batu sent Yaroslav II Andrey II of Vladimir and Alexander Nevsky to Karakorum in Mongolia in 1247 Yaroslav II never returned and died in Mongolia He was probably poisoned by Toregene Khatun who probably did it to spite Batu and even her own son Guyuk because he did not approve of her regency 24 Guyuk appointed Andrey Grand prince of Vladimir Suzdal and Alexander prince of Kyiv However when they returned Andrey went to Vladimir while Alexander went to Novgorod instead A bishop by the name of Cyril went to Kiev and found it so devastated that he abandoned the place and went further east instead 25 26 In 1248 Guyuk demanded Batu come eastward to meet him a move that some contemporaries regarded as a pretext for Batu s arrest In compliance with the order Batu approached bringing a large army When Guyuk moved westwards Tolui s widow and a sister of Batu s stepmother Sorghaghtani warned Batu that the Jochids might be his target Guyuk died on the way in what is now Xinjiang at about the age of 42 Although some modern historians believe that he died of natural causes because of deteriorating health 27 he may have succumbed to the combined effects of alcoholism and gout or he may have been poisoned William of Rubruck and a Muslim chronicler state that Batu killed the imperial envoy and one of his brothers murdered the Great Khan Guyuk but these claims are not completely corroborated by other major sources Guyuk s widow Oghul Qaimish took over as regent but she would be unable to keep the succession within her branch of the family Routes taken by Mongol invaders With the assistance of Batu Mongke succeeded as Great Khan in 1251 Utilizing the discovery of a plot designed to remove him Mongke as the new Great Khan began a purge of his opponents Estimates of the deaths of aristocrats officials and Mongol commanders range from 77 to 300 Batu became the most influential person in the Mongol Empire as his friendship with Mongke ensured the unity of the realm Batu Mongke and other princely lines shared rule over the area from Afghanistan to Turkey Batu allowed Mongke s census takers to operate freely in his realm In 1252 1259 Mongke conducted a census of the Mongol Empire including Iran Afghanistan Georgia Armenia Rus Central Asia and North China While the census in China was completed in 1252 Novgorod in the far northwest was not counted until winter 1258 59 28 With the new powers afforded to Batu by Mongke he now had direct control over the Rus princes However the Grand Prince Andrey II refused to submit to Batu Batu sent a punitive expedition under Nevruy who defeated Andrey and forced him to flee to Novgorod then Pskov and finally to Sweden The Mongols overran Vladimir and harshly punished the principality The Livonian Knights stopped their advance to Novgorod and Pskov Thanks to his friendship with Sartaq Khan Batu s son who was a Christian Alexander was installed as the Grand Prince of Vladimir by Batu in 1252 29 Berke 1258 1266 Coinage of Berke Qrim Crimea mint Struck circa AH 662 665 AD 1263 1267 After Batu died in 1256 his son Sartaq Khan was appointed by Mongke Khan As soon as he returned from the court of the Great Khan in Mongolia Sartaq died The infant Ulaghchi succeeded him under the regency of Boragchin Khatun The khatun summoned all the Rus princes to Sarai to renew their patents In 1256 Andrey traveled to Sarai to ask for pardon He was once again reappointed as prince of Vladimir Suzdal 30 Ulaghchi died soon after and Batu Khan s younger brother Berke who had been converted to Islam was enthroned as khan of the Golden Horde in 1258 31 In 1256 Daniel of Galicia openly defied the Mongols and ousted their troops in northern Podolia In 1257 he repelled Mongol assaults led by the prince Kuremsa on Ponyzia and Volhynia and dispatched an expedition with the aim of taking Kiev Despite initial successes in 1259 a Mongol force under Boroldai entered Galicia and Volhynia and offered an ultimatum Daniel was to destroy his fortifications or Boroldai would assault the towns Daniel complied and pulled down the city walls In 1259 Berke launched savage attacks on Lithuania and Poland and demanded the submission of Bela IV the Hungarian monarch and the French King Louis IX in 1259 and 1260 32 His assault on Prussia in 1259 60 inflicted heavy losses on the Teutonic Order 33 The Lithuanians were probably tributary in the 1260s when reports reached the Curia that they were in league with the Mongols 34 Mongol agents began taken censuses in the Rus principalities Novgorod in the far northwest was not counted until winter 1258 59 There was an uprising in Novgorod against the Mongol census but Alexander Nevsky forced the city to submit to the census and taxation 28 In 1261 Berke approved the establishment of a church in Sarai 35 Toluid Civil War 1260 1264 Main articles Toluid Civil War and Division of the Mongol Empire After Mongke Khan died in 1259 the Toluid Civil War broke out between Kublai Khan and Ariq Boke While Hulagu Khan of the Ilkhanate supported Kublai Berke sided with Ariq Boke 36 There is evidence that Berke minted coins in Ariq Boke s name 37 but he remained militarily neutral After the defeat of Ariq Boke in 1264 he freely acceded to Kublai s enthronement 38 However some elites of the White Horde joined Ariq Boke s resistance Berke Hulagu war 1262 1266 The Golden Horde army defeats the Ilkhanate at the battle of Terek in 1262 Many of Hulagu s men drowned in the Terek River while withdrawing Main article Berke Hulagu war Mongke ordered the Jochid and Chagatayid families to join Hulagu s expedition to Iran Berke s persuasion might have forced his brother Batu to postpone Hulagu s operation little suspecting that it would result in eliminating the Jochid predominance there for several years During the reign of Batu or his first two successors the Golden Horde dispatched a large Jochid delegation to participate in Hulagu s expedition in the Middle East in 1256 57 One of the Jochid princes who joined Hulagu s army was accused of witchcraft and sorcery against Hulagu After receiving permission from Berke Hulagu executed him After that two more Jochid princes died suspiciously According to some Muslim sources Hulagu refused to share his war booty with Berke in accordance with Genghis Khan s wish Berke was a devoted Muslim who had had a close relationship with the Abbasid Caliph Al Musta sim who had been killed by Hulagu in 1258 The Jochids believed that Hulagu s state eliminated their presence in the Transcaucasus 39 Those events increased the anger of Berke and the war between the Golden Horde and the Ilkhanate soon broke out in 1262 The increasing tension between Berke and Hulagu was a warning to the Golden Horde contingents in Hulagu s army to flee One contingent reached the Kipchak Steppe another traversed Khorasan and a third body took refuge in Mamluk ruled Syria where they were well received by Sultan Baybars 1260 1277 Hulagu harshly punished the rest of the Golden Horde army in Iran Berke sought a joint attack with Baybars and forged an alliance with the Mamluks against Hulagu The Golden Horde dispatched the young prince Nogai to invade the Ilkhanate but Hulagu forced him back in 1262 The Ilkhanid army then crossed the Terek River capturing an empty Jochid encampment only to be routed in a surprise attack by Nogai s forces Many of them were drowned as the ice broke on the frozen Terek River The outbreak of conflict was made more annoying to Berke by the rebellion of Suzdal at the same time killing Mongol darughachis and tax collectors Berke planned a severe punitive expedition But after Alexander Nevsky begged Berke not to punish the Rus and the Vladimir Suzdal cities agreed to pay a large indemnity Berke relented Alexander died on his trip back in Gorodets on the Volga He was well loved by the people and called the sun of Suzdal 40 When the former Seljuk Sultan Kaykaus II was arrested in the Byzantine Empire his younger brother Kayqubad II appealed to Berke An Egyptian envoy was also detained there With the assistance of the Kingdom of Bulgaria Berke s vassal Nogai invaded the Empire in 1265 By the next year the Mongol Bulgarian army was within reach of Constantinople Nogai forced Michael VIII Palaiologos to release Kaykaus and pay tribute to the Horde Berke gave Kaykaus Crimea as an appanage and had him marry a Mongol woman Hulagu died in February 1265 and Berke followed the next year while on campaign in Tiflis causing his troops to retreat 41 Ariq Boke had earlier placed Chagatai s grandson Alghu as Chagatayid Khan ruling Central Asia He took control of Samarkand and Bukhara When the Muslim elites and the Jochid retainers in Bukhara declared their loyalty to Berke Alghu smashed the Golden Horde appanages in Khorazm Alghu insisted Hulagu attack the Golden Horde he accused Berke of purging his family in 1252 In Bukhara he and Hulagu slaughtered all the retainers of the Golden Horde and reduced their families into slavery sparing only the Great Khan Kublai s men 42 After Berke gave his allegiance to Kublai Alghu declared war on Berke seizing Otrar and Khorazm While the left bank of Khorazm would eventually be retaken Berke had lost control over Transoxiana In 1264 Berke marched past Tiflis to fight against Hulagu s successor Abaqa but he died en route Mengu Timur 1266 1280 Coinage of Mengu Timur Bulghar mint Dated AH 672 or 3 AD 1273 1275 Berke left no sons so Batu s grandson Mengu Timur was nominated by Kublai and succeeded his uncle Berke 43 However Mengu Timur secretly supported the Ogedeid prince Kaidu against Kublai and the Ilkhanate After the defeat of Ghiyas ud din Baraq a peace treaty was concluded in 1267 granting one third of Transoxiana to Kaidu and Mengu Timur 44 In 1268 when a group of princes operating in Central Asia on Kublai s behalf mutinied and arrested two sons of the Qaghan Great Khan they sent them to Mengu Timur One of them Nomoghan favorite of Kublai was located in the Crimea 45 Mengu Timur might have briefly struggled with Hulagu s successor Abagha but the Great Khan Kublai forced them to sign a peace treaty 46 He was allowed to take his share in Persia Independently from the Khan Nogai expressed his desire to ally with Baibars in 1271 Despite the fact that he was proposing a joint attack on the Ilkhanate with the Mamluks of Egypt Mengu Timur congratulated Abagha when Baraq was defeated by the Ilkhan in 1270 47 In 1267 Mengu Timur issued a diploma jarliq to exempt Rus clergy from any taxation and gave to the Genoese and Venice exclusive trading rights in Caffa and Azov Some of Mengu Timur s relatives converted to Christianity at the same time and settled among the Rus people One of them was a prince who settled in Rostov and became known as Tsarevich Peter of the Horde Peter Ordynsky Even though Nogai invaded the Eastern Orthodox Christian Byzantine Empire in 1271 the Khan sent his envoys to maintain friendly relationship with Michael VIII Palaiologos who sued for peace and married one of his daughters Euphrosyne Palaiologina to Nogai Mengu Timur ordered the Grand prince of Rus to allow German merchants free travel through his lands This gramota says Mengu Timur s word to Prince Yaroslav give the German merchants way into your lands From Prince Yaroslav to the people of Riga to the great and the young and to all your way is clear through my lands and who comes to fight with them I do as I know but for the merchant the way is clear 48 This decree also allowed Novgorod s merchants to travel throughout the Suzdal lands without restraint 49 Mengu Timur honored his vow when the Danes and the Livonian Knights attacked Novgorod Republic in 1269 the Khan s great basqaq darughachi Amraghan and many Mongols assisted the Rus army assembled by the Grand duke Yaroslav The Germans and the Danes were so cowed that they sent gifts to the Mongols and abandoned the region of Narva 50 The Mongol Khan s authority extended to all Rus principalities and in 1274 75 the census took place in all Rus cities including Smolensk and Vitebsk 51 In 1277 Mengu Timur launched a campaign against the Alans north of the Caucasus Along with the Mongol army were also Rus who took the fortified stronghold of the Alans Dadakov in 1278 52 Dual khanship 1281 1299 Tode Mongke Khan of the Golden Horde Regions in the lower Volga inhabited by the descendants of Nogai Khan The Jochid vassal princes of Galicia Volhynia contributed troops for invasions of Europe by Nogai Khan and Talabuga Mengu Timur was succeeded in 1281 by his brother Tode Mongke who was a Muslim However Nogai Khan was now strong enough to establish himself as an independent ruler The Golden Horde was thus ruled by two khans 53 Tode Mongke made peace with Kublai returned his sons to him and acknowledged his supremacy 54 55 Nogai and Kochu Khan of the White Horde and son of Orda Khan also made peace with the Yuan dynasty and the Ilkhanate According to Mamluk historians Tode Mongke sent the Mamluks a letter proposing to fight against their common enemy the unbelieving Ilkhanate This indicates that he might have had an interest in Azerbaijan and Georgia which were both ruled by the Ilkhans In the 1270s Nogai had savagely raided Bulgaria 56 and Lithuania 57 He blockaded Michael Asen II inside Drăstăr in 1279 executed the rebel emperor Ivailo in 1280 and forced George Terter I to seek refuge in the Byzantine Empire in 1292 In 1284 Saqchi came under the Mongol rule during the major invasion of Bulgaria and coins were struck in the Khan s name 58 Smilets was installed by Nogai as emperor of Bulgaria Accordingly the reign of Smilets has been considered the height of Mongol overlordship in Bulgaria When he was expelled by a local boyars c 1295 the Mongols launched another invasion to protect their protege Nogai compelled Serbian king Stefan Milutin to accept Mongol supremacy and received his son Stefan Decanski as hostage in 1287 Under his rule the Vlachs Slavs Alans and Turco Mongols lived in modern day Moldavia At the same time the influence of Nogai greatly increased in the Golden Horde Backed by him some Rus princes such as Dmitry of Pereslavl refused to visit the court of the Tode Mongke in Sarai while Dmitry s brother Andrey of Gorodets sought assistance from Tode Mongke Nogai vowed to support Dmitry in his struggle for the grand ducal throne On hearing about this Andrey renounced his claims to Vladimir and Novgorod and returned to Gorodets He returned with Mongol troops sent by Tode Mongke and seized Vladimir from Dmitry Dmitry retaliated with the support of Mongol troops from Nogai and retook his holdings In 1285 Andrey again led a Mongol army under a Borjigin prince to Vladimir but Dmitry expelled them 59 In 1283 Mengu Timur converted to Islam and abandoned state affairs Rumors spread that the khan was mentally ill and only cared for clerics and sheikhs In 1285 Talabuga and Nogai invaded Hungary While Nogai was successful in subduing Slovakia Talabuga was stalled north of the Carpathian Mountains Talabuga s soldiers were angered and sacked Galicia and Volynia instead In 1286 Talabuga and Nogai attacked Poland and ravaged the country After returning Talabuga overthrew Tode Mongke who was left to live in peace Talabuga s army made unsuccessful attempts to invade the Ilkhanate in 1288 and 1290 60 During a punitive expedition against the Circassians Talabuga became resentful of Nogai whom he believed did not provide him with adequate support during the invasions of Hungary and Poland Talabuga challenged Nogai but was defeated in a coup and replaced with Toqta in 1291 61 Some of the Rus princes complained to Toqta about Dmitry Mikhail Yaroslavich was summoned to appear before Nogai in Sarai and Daniel of Moscow declined to come In 1293 Toqta sent a punitive expedition led by his brother Dyuden to Rus and Belarus to punish those stubborn subjects The latter sacked fourteen major cities finally forcing Dmitry to abdicate Nogai was annoyed by this independent action and sent his wife to Toqta in 1293 to remind him who was in charge In the same year Nogai sent an army to Serbia and forced the king to acknowledge himself as a vassal 62 Coinage of Tode Mongke Mengu AH 679 687 AD 1280 1287 Qrim Crimea mint Nogai s daughter married a son of Kublai s niece Kelmish who was wife of a Qongirat general of the Golden Horde Nogai was angry with Kelmish s family because her Buddhist son despised his Muslim daughter For this reason he demanded Toqta send Kelmish s husband to him Nogai s independent actions related to Rus princes and foreign merchants had already annoyed Toqta Toqta thus refused and declared war on Nogai Toqta was defeated in their first battle Nogai s army turned their attention to Caffa and Soldaia looting both cities Within two years Toqta returned and killed Nogai in 1299 at the Kagamlik near the Dnieper Toqta had his son stationed troops in Saqchi and along the Danube as far as the Iron Gate 63 Nogai s son Chaka of Bulgaria first escaped to the Alans and then Bulgaria where he briefly ruled as emperor before he was murdered by Theodore Svetoslav on the orders of Toqta 64 After Mengu Timur died rulers of the Golden Horde withdrew their support from Kaidu the head of the House of Ogedei Kaidu tried to restore his influence in the Golden Horde by sponsoring his own candidate Kobeleg against Bayan r 1299 1304 Khan of the White Horde 65 After taking military support from Toqta Bayan asked help from the Yuan dynasty and the Ilkhanate to organize a unified attack on the Chagatai Khanate under the leadership of Kaidu and his second in command Duwa However the Yuan court was unable to send quick military support 66 General peace 1299 1312 1300 CHAGATAIKHANATE GOLDEN HORDE EMPIREOFTHE GREATKHAN Yuan dynasty ILKHANATE DELHISULTANATE YADAVAS MYIN SAING KHMER MAMLUKSULTANATE The divisions of the Mongol Empire and main Asian polities c 1300 67 From 1300 to 1303 a severe drought occurred in the areas surrounding the Black Sea However the troubles were soon overcome and conditions in the Golden Horde rapidly improved under Toqta s reign After the defeat of Nogai Khan his followers either fled to Podolia or remained under the service of Toqta to become what would eventually be known as the Nogai Horde 68 Toqta established the Byzantine Mongol alliance by Maria an illegitimate daughter of Andronikos II Palaiologos 69 A report reached Western Europe that Toqta was highly favourable to the Christians 70 According to Muslim observers however Toqta remained an idol worshiper Buddhism and Tengerism and showed favour to religious men of all faiths though he preferred Muslims 71 The Bulgarian Empire was still tributary to the Mongols in 1308 72 He demanded that the Ilkhan Ghazan and his successor Oljeitu give Azerbaijan back but was refused Then he sought assistance from Egypt against the Ilkhanate Toqta made his man ruler in Ghazna but he was expelled by its people Toqta dispatched a peace mission to the Ilkhan Gaykhatu in 1294 and peace was maintained mostly uninterrupted until 1318 73 In 1304 ambassadors from the Mongol rulers of Central Asia and the Yuan announced to Toqta their general peace proposal Toqta immediately accepted the supremacy of Yuan emperor Temur Oljeytu and all yams postal relays and commercial networks across the Mongol khanates reopened Toqta introduced the general peace among the Mongol khanates to Rus princes at the assembly in Pereyaslavl 74 The Yuan influence seemed to have increased in the Golden Horde as some of Toqta s coins carried Phags pa script in addition to Mongolian script and Persian characters 75 Toqta arrested the Italian residents of Sarai and besieged Caffa in 1307 The cause was apparently Toqta s displeasure at the Genoese slave trade of his subjects who were mostly sold as soldiers to Egypt 76 In 1308 Caffa was plundered by the Mongols 77 During the late reign of Toqta tensions between princes of Tver and Moscow became violent Daniel of Moscow seized the town of Kolomna from the Principality of Ryazan which turned to Toqta for protection However Daniel was able to beat both Ryazan and Mongol troops in 1301 His successor Yury of Moscow also seized Pereslavl Zalessky Toqta considered eliminating the special status of the Grand principality of Vladimir and placing all the Rus princes on the same level Toqta decided to personally visit northern Rus to settle the conflict between the princes but he fell ill and died while crossing the Volga in 1313 78 IslamizationOz Beg Khan 1313 1341 Dmitri avenging the death of his father in the ordo palace of Uzbeg Khan killing Yury Territories of the Golden Horde under Oz Beg Khan citation needed After Oz Beg Khan assumed the throne in 1313 he adopted Islam as the state religion He built a large mosque in the city of Solkhat in the Crimea in 1314 and proscribed Buddhism and Shamanism among the Mongols in the Golden Horde By 1315 Oz Beg had successfully Islamicized the Horde and killed Jochid princes and Buddhist lamas who opposed his religious policy 79 Under the reign of Oz Beg trade caravans went unmolested and there was general order in the Golden Horde When Ibn Battuta visited Sarai in 1333 he found it to be a large and beautiful city with vast streets and fine markets where Mongols Alans Kypchaks Circassians Rus and Greeks each had their own quarters Merchants had a special walled section of the city all to themselves 80 Oz Beg continued the alliance with the Mamluks begun by Berke and his predecessors He kept a friendly relationship with the Mamluk Sultan and his shadow Caliph in Cairo In 1320 the Jochid princess Tulunbay was married to Al Nasir Muhammad Sultan of Egypt 81 Al Nasir Muhammad came to believe that Tulunbay was not a real Chingissid princess but an impostor In 1327 1328 he divorced her and she then married one of al Nasir Muhammad s commanders When Oz Beg learned of the divorce in 1334 1335 he sent an angry missive Al Nasir Muhammad claimed that she had died and showed his ambassadors a fake legal document as proof although Tulunbay still lived and would only pass away in 1340 82 The Golden Horde invaded the Ilkhanate under Abu Sa id in 1318 1324 and 1335 Oz Beg s ally Al Nasir refused to attack Abu Sa id because the Ilkhan and the Mamluk Sultan signed a peace treaty in 1323 In 1326 Oz Beg reopened friendly relations with the Yuan dynasty and began to send tributes thereafter 83 From 1339 he received annually 24 000 ding in Yuan paper currency from the Jochid appanages in China 84 When the Ilkhanate collapsed after Abu Sa id s death its senior beys approached Oz Beg in their desperation to find a leader but the latter declined after consulting with his senior emir Qutluq Timur citation needed Oz Beg whose total army exceeded 300 000 repeatedly raided Thrace in aid of Bulgaria s war against Byzantium and Serbia beginning in 1319 The Byzantine Empire under Andronikos II Palaiologos and Andronikos III Palaiologos was raided by the Golden Horde between 1320 and 1341 until the Byzantine port of Vicina Macaria was occupied Friendly relations were established with the Byzantine Empire for a brief period after Oz Beg married Andronikos III Palaiologos s illegitimate daughter who came to be known as Bayalun In 1333 she was given permission to visit her father in Constantinople and never returned apparently fearing her forced conversion to Islam 85 86 Oz Beg s armies pillaged Thrace for forty days in 1324 and for 15 days in 1337 taking 300 000 captives In 1330 Oz Beg sent 15 000 troops to Serbia in 1330 but was defeated 87 Backed by Oz Beg Basarab I of Wallachia declared an independent state from the Hungarian crown in 1330 72 Ozbeg Khan in the 1339 Dulcert map Legend Hic dominatur Usbech dominus imperator de Sara Here rules Ozbeg the Emperor of Sara 88 With Oz Beg s assistance the Grand duke Mikhail Yaroslavich won the battle against the party in Novgorod in 1316 While Mikhail was asserting his authority his rival Yury of Moscow ingratiated himself with Oz Beg so that he appointed him chief of the Rus princes and gave him his sister Konchak in marriage After spending three years at Oz Beg s court Yury returned with an army of Mongols and Mordvins After he ravaged the villages of Tver Yury was defeated by Mikhail in December 1318 and his new wife and the Mongol general Kawgady were captured While she stayed in Tver Konchak who converted to Christianity and adopted the name Agatha died Mikhail s rivals suggested to Oz Beg that he had poisoned the Khan s sister and revolted against his rule Mikhail was summoned to Sarai and executed on November 22 1318 89 90 Yury became grand duke once more Yury s brother Ivan accompanied the Mongol general Akhmyl in suppressing a revolt by Rostov in 1320 In 1322 Mikhail s son Dmitry seeking revenge for his father s murder went to Sarai and persuaded the Khan that Yury had appropriated a large portion of the tribute due to the Horde Yury was summoned to the Horde for a trial but he was killed by Dmitry before any formal investigation Eight months later Dmitry was also executed by the Horde for his crime The title of grand duke went to Aleksandr Mikhailovich 91 In 1327 the baskak Shevkal cousin of Oz Beg arrived in Tver from the Horde with a large retinue They took up residence at Aleksander s palace Rumors spread that Shevkal wanted to occupy the throne for himself and introduce Islam to the city When on 15 August 1327 the Mongols tried to take a horse from a deacon named Dyudko he cried for help and a mob killed the Mongols Shevkal and his remaining guards were burnt alive The incident the Tver Uprising of 1327 caused Oz Beg to begin backing Moscow as the leading Rus state Ivan I Kalita was granted the title of grand prince and given the right to collect taxes from other Rus potentates Oz Beg also sent Ivan at the head of an army of 50 000 soldiers to punish Tver Aleksander was shown mercy in 1335 however when Moscow requested that he and his son Feoder be quartered in Sarai by orders of the Khan on October 29 1339 92 In 1323 Grand Duke Gediminas of Lithuania gained control of Kiev and installed his brother Fedor as prince but the principality s tribute to the Khan continued On a campaign a few years later the Lithuanians under Fedor included the Khan s baskak in their entourage 93 A decree issued probably by Mengu Timur allowing the Franciscans to proselytize was renewed by Oz Beg in 1314 Oz Beg allowed the Christian Genoese to settle in Crimea after his accession but the Mongols sacked their outpost Sudak in 1322 when the Genoese clashed with the Turks 94 The Genoese merchants in the other towns were not molested Pope John XXII requested Oz Beg to restore Roman Catholic churches destroyed in the region Oz Beg signed a new trade treaty with the Genoese in 1339 and allowed them to rebuild the walls of Caffa In 1332 he allowed the Venetians to establish a colony at Tanais on the Don In 1333 when Ibn Battuta visited Sudak he found the population to be predominantly Turkish 81 Jani Beg 1342 1357 Jani Beg of the Golden Horde as depicted in the Catalan Atlas 1375 with the flag of the Golden Horde 95 The caption reads Here resides the emperor of this northern region whose empire starts in the province of Bulgaria and ends at the city of Organcio The sovereign is named Jambech Lord of the Sarra 96 Oz Beg s eldest son Tini Beg reigned briefly from 1341 to 1342 before his younger brother Jani Beg 1342 1357 came to power 97 In 1344 Jani Beg tried to seize Caffa from the Genoese but failed In 1347 he signed a commercial treaty with Venice The slave trade flourished due to strengthening ties with the Mamluk Sultanate Growth of wealth and increasing demand for products typically produce population growth and so it was with Sarai Housing in the region increased which transformed the capital into the center of a large Muslim Sultanate 97 The Black Death of the 1340s was a major factor contributing to the economic downfall of the Golden Horde It struck the Crimea in 1345 and killed over 85 000 people 98 Coinage of Jani Beg Jambek II AH 767 768 AD 1365 1366 Jani Beg abandoned his father s Balkan ambitions and backed Moscow against Lithuania and Poland Jani Beg sponsored joint Mongol Rus military expeditions against Lithuania and Poland In 1344 his army marched against Poland with auxiliaries from Galicia Volhynia as Volhynia was part of Lithuania In 1349 however Galicia Volhynia was occupied by a Polish Hungarian force and the Kingdom of Galicia Volhynia was finally conquered and incorporated into Poland This act put an end to the relationship of vassalage between the Galicia Volhynia Rus and the Golden Horde 99 In 1352 the Golden Horde with its Rus allies ravaged Polish territory and Lublin The Polish King Casimir III the Great submitted to the Horde in 1357 and paid tribute in order to avoid more conflicts The seven Mongol princes were sent by Jani Beg to assist Poland 100 Jani Beg asserted Jochid dominance over the Chagatai Khanate and conquered Tabriz ending Chobanid rule there in 1356 After accepting the surrender of the Jalayirids Jani Beg boasted that three uluses of the Mongol Empire were under his control However on his way back from Tabriz Jani Beg was murdered on the order of his own son Berdi Beg Following the assassination of Jani Beg the Golden Horde quickly lost Azerbaijan to the Jalayir king Shaikh Uvais in 1357 101 DeclineGreat troubles 1359 1381 The Battle of Kulikovo in 1380 Berdi Beg was killed in a coup by his brother Qulpa in 1359 Qulpa s two sons were Christians and bore the Slavic names Michael and Ivan which outraged the Muslim populace of the Golden Horde In 1360 Qulpa s brother Nawruz Beg revolted against the khan and killed him and his sons In 1361 a descendant of Shiban 5th son of Jochi was invited by some grandees to seize the throne Khidr rebelled against Nawruz whose own lieutenant betrayed him and handed him over to be executed Khidr was slain by his own son Timur Khwaja in the same year Timur Khwaja reigned for only five weeks before descendants of Oz Beg Khan seized power 102 In 1362 the Golden Horde was divided between Keldi Beg in Sarai Bulat Temir in Volga Bulgaria and Abdullah in Crimea Meanwhile the Grand Duchy of Lithuania attacked the western tributaries of the Golden Horde and conquered Kyiv and Podolia after the Battle of Blue Waters in 1363 103 A powerful Mongol general by the name of Mamai backed Abdullah but failed to take Sarai which saw the reign of two more khans Murad and Aziz Abdullah died in 1370 and Muhammad Bolaq was enthroned as puppet khan by Mamai 102 Mamai also had to deal with a rebellion in Nizhny Novgorod Muscovite troops impinged on the Bulgar territory of Arab Shah the son of Bulat Temir who caught them off guard and defeated them on the banks of the Pyana River However Arab Shah was unable to take advantage of the situation because of the advance of another Mongol general from the east 104 Encouraged by the news of Muscovite defeat Mamai sent an army against Dmitri Donskoy who defeated the Mongol forces at the Battle of the Vozha River in 1378 Mamai hired Genoese Circassian and Alan mercenaries for another attack on Moscow in 1380 In the ensuing battle Mongol forces once again lost at the Battle of Kulikovo 104 By 1360 Urus Khan had set up court in Sighnaq He was named Urus which means Russian in Turkish language presumably because Urus Khan s mother was a Russian princess he was prepared to press his claims on Russia on that ground 105 In 1372 Urus marched west and occupied Sarai His nephew and lieutenant Tokhtamysh deserted him and went to Timur for assistance Tokhtamysh attacked Urus killing his son Kutlug Buka but lost the battle and fled to Samarkand Soon after another general Edigu deserted Urus and went over to Timur Timur personally attacked Urus in 1376 but the campaign ended indecisively Urus died the next year and was succeeded by his son Timur Melik who immediately lost Sighnaq to Tokhtamysh In 1378 Tokhtamysh conquered Sarai 106 By the 1380s the Shaybanids and Qashan attempted to break free of the Khan s power citation needed Tokhtamysh 1381 1395 See also Tokhtamysh Timur war Emir Timur and his forces advance against the Golden Horde Khan Tokhtamysh Tokhtamysh besieges Moscow Tokhtamysh attacked Mamai who had recently suffered a loss against Muscovy and defeated him in 1381 thus briefly reestablishing the Golden Horde as a dominant regional power Mamai fled to the Genoese who killed him soon after Tokhtamysh sent an envoy to the Rus states to resume their tributary status but the envoy only made it as far as Nizhny Novgorod before he was stopped Tokhtamysh immediately seized all the boats on the Volga to ferry his army across and commenced the Siege of Moscow 1382 which fell after three days under a false truce The next year most of the Rus princes once again made obeisance to the khan and received patents from him 107 Tokhtamysh also crushed the Lithuanian army at Poltava in the next year 108 Wladyslaw II Jagiello Grand Duke of Lithuania and King of Poland accepted his supremacy and agreed to pay tribute in return for a grant of Rus territory 109 Elated by his success Tokhtamysh invaded Azerbaijan in 1386 and seized Tabriz He ordered money with his name on it coined in Khwarezm and sent envoys to Egypt to seek an alliance In 1387 Timur sent an army into Azerbaijan and fought indecisively with the forces of the Golden Horde Tokhtamysh invaded Transoxania and reached as far as Bukhara but failed to take the city and had to turn back Timur retaliated by invading Khwarezm and destroyed Urgench Tokhtamysh attacked Timur on the Syr Darya in 1389 with a massive army including Russians Bulgars Circassians and Alans The battle ended indecisively In 1391 Timur gathered an army 200 000 strong and defeated Tokhtamysh at the Battle of the Kondurcha River Timur s allies Temur Qutlugh and Edigu took the eastern half of the Golden Horde Tokhtamysh returned in 1394 ravaging the region of Shirvan In 1395 Timur annihilated Tokhtamysh s army again at the Battle of the Terek River destroyed his capital looted the Crimean trade centers and deported the most skillful craftsmen to his own capital in Samarkand Timur s forces reached as far north as Ryazan before turning back 110 Edigu 1395 1419 Temur Qutlugh was chosen Khan in Sarai while Edigu became co ruler and Koirijak was appointed sovereign of the White Horde by Timur 111 Tokhtamysh fled to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and asked Vytautas for assistance in retaking the Golden Horde in exchange for suzerainty over the Rus lands In 1399 Vytautas and Tokhtamysh attacked Temur Qutlugh and Edigu at the Battle of the Vorskla River but were defeated The Golden Horde victory secured Kyiv Podolia and some land in the lower Bug River basin Tokhtamysh died in obscurity in Tyumen around 1405 His son Jalal al Din fled to Lithuania and participated in the Battle of Grunwald against the Teutonic Order 112 Temur Qutlugh died in 1400 and his cousin Shadi Beg was elected khan with Edigu s approval After defeating Vytautas Edigu concentrated on strengthening the Golden Horde He forbade selling Golden Horde subjects as slaves abroad Later on the slave trade was resumed but only Circassians were allowed to be sold As a result most of the Mamluk recruits in the 15th century were of Circassian origin Timur died in 1405 and Edigu took advantage to seize Khwarezm a year later From 1400 to 1408 Edigu gradually regained the eastern Rus tributaries with the exception of Moscow which he failed to take in a siege but ravaged the surrounding area Smolensk was also lost to Lithuania Shadi Beg rebelled against Edigu but was defeated and fled to Astrakhan Shadi Beg was replaced by Pulad who died in 1410 and was succeeded by Temur Khan the son of Temur Qutlugh Temur Khan turned against Edigu and forced him to flee to Khwarezm in 1411 Temur himself was ousted the next year by Jalal al Din who returned from Lithuania and briefly took the throne In 1414 Shah Rukh of the Timurids conquered Khwarezm Edigu fled to the Crimea where he launched raids on Kiev and tried to forge an alliance with Lithuania to win back the horde Edigu died in 1419 in a skirmish with one of Tokhtamysh s sons 113 Disintegration and successionKhanate of Sibir 1405 The Khanate of Sibir was ruled by a dynasty originating with Taibuga in 1405 at Chimgi Tura After his death in 1428 the khanate was ruled by the Uzbek clarification needed khan Abu l Khayr Khan When he died in 1468 the khanate split in two with the Shaybanid Ibak Khan situated in Chimgi Tura and the Taibugid Muhammad at the fortress of Sibir from which the khanate derives its name 114 Uzbek Khanate 1428 After 1419 the Golden Horde functionally ceased to exist Ulugh Muhammad was officially Khan of the Golden Horde but his authority was limited to the lower banks of the Volga where Tokhtamysh s other son Kepek also reigned The Golden Horde s influence was replaced in Eastern Europe by the Grand Duchy of Lithuania who Ulugh Muhammad turned to for support The political situation in the Golden Horde did not stabilize In 1422 the grandson of Urus Khan Barak Khan attacked the reigning khans in the west Within two years Ulugh Kepek and another claimant Dawlat Berdi were defeated Ulugh Muhammad fled to Lithuania Kepek tried to raid Odoyev and Ryazan but failed to establish himself in those regions and Dawlat took advantage of the situation to seize Crimea Barak defeated an invasion by Ulugh Beg in 1427 but was assassinated the next year His successor Abu l Khayr Khan founded the Uzbek Khanate 115 Nogai Horde 1440s By the 1440s a descendant of Edigu by the name of Musa bin Waqqas was ruling at Saray Juk as an independent khan of the Nogai Horde 116 Khanate of Kazan 1445 Ulugh Muhammad ousted Dawlat Berdi from Crimea At the same time the khan Haci I Giray fled to Lithuania to ask Vytautas for support In 1426 Ulugh Muhammad contributed troops to Vytautas war against Pskov Despite the Golden Horde s greatly reduced status both Yury of Zvenigorod and Vasily Kosoy still visited Ulugh Muhammad s court in 1432 to request a grand ducal patent A year later Ulugh Muhammad lost the throne to Sayid Ahmad I a son of Tokhtamysh Ulugh Muhammad fled to the town of Belev on the upper Oka River where he came into conflict with the Grand Duchy of Muscovy Vasily II of Moscow attempted to drive him out but was defeated at the Battle of Belyov Ulugh Muhammad became master of Belev Ulugh Muhammad continued to exert influence on Muscovy occupying Gorodets in 1444 Vasily II even wanted him to issue him a patent for the throne but Ulugh Muhammad attacked him instead at Murom in 1445 On 7 July Vasily II was defeated and taken prisoner by Ulugh Muhammad at the Battle of Suzdal Despite his victory Ulugh Muhammad s situation was pressed The Golden Horde was no more he had barely 10 000 soldiers and thus could not press the advantage against Moscow A few months later he released Vasily II for a ransom of 25 000 rubles Unfortunately Ulugh Muhammad was murdered by his son Maxmud of Kazan who fled to the middle Volga region and founded the Khanate of Kazan in 1445 117 In 1447 Maxmud sent an army against Muscovy but was repelled 118 Crimean Khanate 1449 In 1449 Haci I Giray seized Crimea from Ahmad I and founded the Crimean Khanate 118 The Crimean Khanate considered its state as the heir and legal successor of the Golden Horde and Desht i Kipchak called themselves khans of the Great Horde the Great State and the Throne of the Crimea 119 120 Qasim Khanate 1452 One of Ulugh Muhammad s sons Qasim Khan fled to Moscow where Vasily II granted him land that became the Qasim Khanate 118 Kazakh Khanate 1458 In 1458 Janibek Khan and Kerei Khan led 200 000 of Abu l Khayr Khan s followers eastwards to the Chu River where Esen Buqa II of Moghulistan granted them pasture lands After Abu l Khayr Khan died in 1467 they assumed leadership over most of his followers and became the Kazakh Khanate 121 Great Horde 1459 1502 The Great stand on the Ugra river 1480 In 1435 the khan Kuchuk Muhammad ousted Sayid Ahmad He attacked Ryazan and suffered a major defeat against the forces of Vasily II Sayid Ahmad continued to raid Muscovy and in 1449 made a direct attack on Moscow However he was defeated by Muscovy s ally Qasim Khan In 1450 Kuchuk Muhammad attacked Ryazan but was turned back by a combined Russo Tatar army In 1451 Sayid Ahmad tried to take Moscow again and failed 122 Kuchuk Muhammad was succeeded by his son Mahmud bin Kuchuk in 1459 from which point on the Golden Horde came to be known as the Great Horde Mahmud was succeeded by his brother Ahmed Khan bin Kuchuk in 1465 In 1469 Ahmed attacked and killed the Uzbek Abu l Khayr Khan In the summer of 1470 Ahmed organized an attack against Moldavia the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania By August 20 the Moldavian forces under Stephen the Great defeated the Tatars at the battle of Lipnic In 1474 and 1476 Ahmed insisted that Ivan III of Russia recognize the khan as his overlord In 1480 Ahmed organized a military campaign against Moscow resulting in a face off between two opposing armies known as the Great Stand on the Ugra River Ahmed judged the conditions unfavorable and retreated This incident formally ended the Tatar Yoke over Rus lands On 6 January 1481 Ahmed was killed by Ibak Khan the prince of the Khanate of Sibir and Nogays at the mouth of the Donets River 123 Ahmed s sons were unable to maintain the Great Horde They attacked the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania which possessed much of Ukraine at the time in 1487 1491 and reached as far as Lublin in eastern Poland before being decisively beaten at Zaslavl 124 The Crimean Khanate which had become a vassal state of the Ottoman Empire in 1475 subjugated what remained of the Great Horde sacking Sarai in 1502 After seeking refuge in Lithuania Sheikh Ahmed last Khan of the Horde died in prison in Kaunas some time after 1504 According to other sources he was released from the Lithuanian prison in 1527 125 Records of Golden Horde existence reach however as far as end of 18th century and it was mentioned in works of Russian publisher Nikolay Novikov in his work of 1773 Ancient Russian Hydrography 126 Astrakhan Khanate 1466 After 1466 Mahmud bin Kuchuk s descendants continued to rule in Astrakhan as the khans of the Astrakhan Khanate 127 Russian conquests The Tsardom of Russia conquered the Khanate of Kazan in 1552 the Khanate of Astrakhan in 1556 and the Khanate of Sibir in 1582 The Crimean Tatars wreaked havoc in southern Russia Ukraine and even Poland in the course of the 16th and early 17th centuries see Crimean Nogai slave raids in Eastern Europe but they were not able to defeat Russia or take Moscow Under Ottoman protection the Khanate of Crimea continued its precarious existence until Catherine the Great annexed it on April 8 1783 It was by far the longest lived of the successor states to the Golden Horde citation needed Tributaries The Golden Horde and its Rus tributaries in 1313 under Oz Beg Khan Alexander Nevsky and a Mongol shaman The subjects of the Golden Horde included the Rus people Armenians Georgians Circassians Alans Crimean Greeks Crimean Goths Bulgarians and Vlachs The objective of the Golden Horde in conquered lands revolved around obtaining recruits for the army and exacting tax payments from its subjects In most cases the Golden Horde did not implement direct control over the people they conquered 128 Influence For three centuries Mongol or Tatar presence was an undeniable fact for Russians Although defined as Russians here there was no Russian people or Russian nation during the period of Mongol rule and therefore no cohesive national response Aristocratic Russians responded more uniformly to Mongol rule but the same cannot be said with certainty for the peasantry There is not much evidence for Mongol influence on the Russian peasantry whose direct contact with the Mongols was mainly through slavery or forced labor Russian sources generally tend to focus on military encounters with the Mongols but the literary prose betrays a greater Mongol impact on Russian society than accepted at face value There was a great deal of familiarity with the Mongols among writers who recorded the name of virtually every Mongol prince grandee and official they came into contact with The Galician Volhynian Chronicle recounts the words of Tovrul a captured informant at the Siege of Kiev 1240 who identifies the Mongol captains by name Russian sources contain a list of the khans of the Golden Horde as well as more detail on their careers during the time of Great Troubles than Arab Persian sources Even the names of numerous lesser ranked Mongols are mentioned The Mongol khan was called tsar a title also used for the basileus 129 130 It is evident that the writers expected their audience to be familiar with the names of individual Mongols and their attributes despite their pervasive hostility 131 While the Mongols generally did not directly administer the Eastern European lands they conquered in the cases of the Principality of Pereyaslavl Principality of Kiev and Podolia they removed the native administration altogether and replaced it with their own direct control The Kingdom of Galicia Volhynia Principality of Smolensk Principality of Chernigov and Principality of Novgorod Seversk retained their princes but also had to contend with Mongol agents who enforced recruitment and tax collection The Novgorod Republic was exempt from the presence of Mongol agents after 1260 but still had to pay taxes The Mongols took censuses of Rus lands in 1245 1258 1259 1260 1274 and 1275 No further censuses were taken after that Some places such as the town of Tula became the personal property of individual Mongols such as the Khatun Taidula the mother of Jani Beg 128 The Russian aristocracy had to familiarize themselves with the workings of Mongol high society b The Rus prince had to receive a patent for his throne from the khan who then sent an envoy to install the prince on his throne From the time of Oz Beg Khan on a commissioner was appointed by the khan to reside at each of the Rus principalities capitals Mongol rule loosened in the late 13th century so that some Rus princes were able to collect taxes as the khan s agents By the early 14th century all the grand dukes were collecting taxes by themselves so that the average people no longer dealt with Mongol overlords while their rulers answered to Sarai 133 Aristocratic familiarity with Mongol customs did not result in adopting Mongol culture Any partiality shown towards Mongol customs could be dangerous although in one instance they did adopt Mongol military attire After visiting Batu s camp in 1245 Daniel of Galicia was visibly influenced by the Mongols and equipped his army in the Mongol fashion Austrian visitors to his camp remarked that only Daniel himself dressed according to the Rus custom with a coat of Greek brocade with gold lace green leather boots a gilded saddle and gold encrusted sword 22 Mongols that moved into Russian society shed their former customs as they adopted Orthodox Christianity and despite the numerous mentions of Mongol atrocities some more honorable portrayals do exist In the Tale of the Destruction of Riazan by Batu the Mongol Batu exhibited chivalric courtesy to the Russian noble Evpatii by allowing his men to carry him off the field in honor of his bravery Russian nobles also fought alongside the Mongols as allies at times 134 Intermarriage did happen but was rare Fedor Rostyslavovich Yury of Moscow and Gleb Vasil kovich married Mongol princesses Vasil kovich spent his entire career among the Mongols in the steppes Urus Khan s mother may have been a Russian princess 105 135 Such intermarriage ceased after the Golden Horde Mongols converted to Islam until the 15th century when the weakened Horde s Mongol grandees moved into Muscovite territory Most of them entered into the service of grand princes married aristocracy converted to Christianity and became assimilated It is uncertain how much Mongol Tatar blood entered the Russian aristocracy Some Mongols might have changed their names after converting while Russians took on Mongol nicknames as patronyms The nobles of Ryazan and the Godunov clan of prince Chet claimed Tatar descent Mongol ancestry was considered as prestigious as German Latin and Greek ancestry in the 16th century although such views declined dramatically after the Time of Troubles 135 There was also intermarriage with their other subjects such as between Berke and a Seljuk princess and Joge eldest son of Nogai and a Bulgarian princess 136 137 Russian Orthodox Church The Mongols required the Russian Orthodox Church to pray for the health of the khan and in return they looked after the church s health and fostered its growth A bishopric was established in Sarai for Russians and to act as an intermediary between the Golden Horde and both the Russian Church and Byzantium The khans granted the Church significant tax privileges which enabled it to recover from the invasion and prosper even more than before It was during the 14th century that the Church made decisive inroads into the pagan countryside possibly due to the attraction of economic benefits bestowed upon Church lands that incentivized peasants to settle The Tale of Peters tsarevich of the Horde was written in the 14th century It tells of how the Mongol Peter a descendant of Genghis Khan converted and founded the Petrov monastery Peter s descendants used their ties to the khans to protect the monastery from the Rostov princes and the neighboring Russians who desired the fishing rights to that land The depiction of Mongols by Church was mixed and awkward It portrayed them as a disaster and their caretaker This contradiction can be seen in the khans portrayals in Church texts Where the khans names would have been in the missals there was a blank space for the name to be read aloud orally There was also a careful delineation between khan and Tatars Hagiographers sometimes absolved the khans from their role in killing Russian princes After the khans power began to wane in the 14th century the Church gave its full backing to the Russian princes However even after Mongol rule ended the Church still invoked the Mongol model as an example of how they should be treated In the 16th century churchmen circulated a translated Mongol yarlyk that granted tax immunity to the Church 138 Administration Halperin 1987 cautioned To analyze the Mongols administration of Russia requires meticulous examination both of the extant sources individually and of the larger picture they present Many of the references to Mongol officials occur in unreliable texts from later periods showing obvious signs of interpolation 139 Although it is evident that the Mongols started collecting taxes in Rus principalities as early as 1245 shortly after they subdued them during or after the invasion of 1237 this appears to have been a localised affair with baskaki singular baskak or basqaq a Turkic word used in early sources meaning a local Mongol official who was primarily responsible for collecting tribute and conscripting troops 140 appointed per village town or city rather than a simultaneous imposition of a uniform taxation system throughout all areas of former Kievan Rus 140 The Grand Duchy of Moscow adopted the Mongol tax system and continued to collect tribute after they stopped passing it onto the Golden Horde The Muscovite grand princes replaced the Mongol basqaq with officials called danshchiki who collected tribute known as dan which was probably modeled after the Mongol tribute system The Russians adopted the Mongol word for treasury kazna treasurer kaznachey and money den ga The Muscovites used the Mongol customs tax system called tamga from which the Russian word tamozhnya customs house is derived from 141 The yam postal system was adopted by Russia in the late 15th century as the peasants had already been paying a yam tax for centuries The practice of poruka collective responsibility of a sworn group became more common in Russia during the Mongol period and may have been influenced by the Mongols The Mongols may have spread the practice of beating the shins as a punishment from China to Russia where this punishment for nonpayment of debts was called pravezh 142 Military Some of the Mongols subjects adopted Mongol military accoutrements In 1245 Daniel of Galicia s army was dressed in the Mongol fashion after a visit to Batu Khan s camp Austrian visitors to Daniel s camp remarked that with the exception of Daniel himself all the horsemen dressed like Mongols 22 Muscovite cavalrymen were equipped in a similar fashion to the Mongols as late as the 16th century when they were depicted using a Mongol style saddle with Mongol stirrups wearing a Mongol helmet and armed with a Mongol bow and quiver European observers mistook them for Ottoman dress Muscovite armies also deployed in a similar fashion to the Mongols with the right guard ranked above the left due to a shamanist belief The emphasis on cavalry declined in the 16th century as warfare increasingly involved sieges in Eastern Europe than on the steppes with nomadic horsemen 143 Decline This article may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards as The second part of this chapter is a carbon copy of other paragraphs It should explain how the Golden Horde lost its administrative influence not historical events already described You can help The talk page may contain suggestions October 2020 Mongol rule in Galicia ended with its conquest by the Kingdom of Poland 1025 1385 in 1349 The Golden Horde entered severe decline after the death of Berdi Beg in 1359 which started a protracted political crisis lasting two decades In 1363 the Grand Duchy of Lithuania won the Battle of Blue Waters against the Golden Horde and conquered both Kiev and Podolia After 1360 payment of tribute and taxes from Rus subjects to the declining Golden Horde decreased significantly In 1374 Nizhny Novgorod rebelled and slaughtered an embassy sent by Mamai For a brief period after the victorious Battle of Kulikovo in 1380 by Dmitry Donskoy against Mamai the Grand Duchy of Moscow was free of Mongol control until Tokhtamysh restored Mongol suzerainty over Moscow two years later with the Siege of Moscow 1382 144 Tokhtamysh also crushed the Lithuanian army at Poltava in the next year 108 Wladyslaw II Jagiello Grand Duke of Lithuania and King of Poland accepted his supremacy and agreed to pay tribute in turn for a grant of Rus territory 109 In 1395 Timur annihilated Tokhtamysh s army again at the Battle of the Terek River destroyed his capital looted the Crimean trade centers and deported the most skillful craftsmen to his own capital in Samarkand Timur s forces reached as far north as Ryazan before turning back Tokhtamysh fled to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and asked Vytautas for assistance in retaking the Golden Horde in exchange for suzerainty over the Rus lands In 1399 Vytautas and Tokhtamysh attacked Temur Qutlugh and Edigu at the Battle of the Vorskla River but were defeated The Golden Horde victory secured for it Kiev Podolia and some land in the lower Bug River basin Tokhtamysh died in obscurity in Tyumen around 1405 His son Jalal al Din fled to Lithuania and participated in the Battle of Grunwald against the Teutonic Order 145 From 1400 to 1408 Edigu gradually regained control of the eastern Rus tributaries with the exception of Moscow which he failed to take in a siege but ravaged the surrounding countryside Smolensk was lost to Lithuania 145 After Edigu died in 1419 the Golden Horde rapidly disintegrated but it still retained some vestige of influence in Eastern Europe In 1426 Ulugh Muhammad contributed troops to Vytautas war against Pskov and despite the horde s reduced size both Yury of Zvenigorod and Vasily Kosoy still visited Ulugh Muhammad s court in 1432 to request a grand ducal patent A year later Ulugh Muhammad was ousted and fled to the town of Belev on the upper Oka River where he came into conflict with Vasily II of Moscow whom he defeated twice in battle In 1445 Vasily II was taken prisoner by Ulugh Muhammad and ransomed for 25 000 rubles Ulugh Muhammad was murdered in the same year by his son Maxmud of Kazan who fled to the middle Volga region and founded the Khanate of Kazan 117 In 1447 Maxmud sent an army against Muscovy but was repelled Another of Ulugh Muhammad s sons Qasim Khan fled to Moscow where Vasily II granted him land that became the Qasim Khanate 118 Both the khans Kuchuk Muhammad and Sayid Ahmad attempted to reassert authority over Moscow Kuchuk Muhammad attacked Ryazan and suffered a major defeat against the forces of Vasily II Sayid Ahmad continued to raid Muscovy and in 1449 made a direct attack on Moscow However he was defeated by Muscovy s ally Qasim Khan In 1450 Kuchuk Muhammad attacked Ryazan but was turned back by a combined Russo Tatar army In 1451 Sayid Ahmad tried to take Moscow again and failed 122 In the summer of 1470 Ahmed Khan bin Kuchuk ruler of the Great Horde organized an attack against Moldavia the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania By August 20 the Moldavian forces under Stephen the Great defeated the Tatars at the battle of Lipnic In 1474 and 1476 Ahmed insisted that Ivan III of Russia recognize the khan as his overlord In 1480 Ahmed organized a military campaign against Moscow resulting in a face off between two opposing armies known as the Great Stand on the Ugra River Ahmed judged the conditions unfavorable and retreated This incident formally ended the Tatar Yoke over Rus lands 123 Trade 1300CHAGATAIKHANATEGOLDEN HORDEEMPIREOF THEGREAT KHANILKHANATEDELHISULTANATEYADAVASTungusMYIN SAINGKHMERBEYLIKSBYZANTIUMFRANCEENGLANDSPAINMARINIDSMALIEMPIREMAMLUKSULTANATEGO RYEOKAMA KURABALISUNDA class notpageimage The Golden Horde with contemporary polities c 1300 146 Sarai carried on a brisk trade with the Genoese trade emporiums on the coast of the Black Sea Soldaia Caffa and Azak Mamluk Egypt was the Khans long standing trade partner and ally in the Mediterranean Berke the Khan of Kipchak had drawn up an alliance with the Mamluk Sultan Baibars against the Ilkhanate in 1261 147 A change in trade routes According to Baumer 148 the natural trade route was down the Volga to Serai where it intersected the east west route north of the Caspian and then down the west side of the Caspian to Tabriz in Persian Azerbaijan where it met the larger east west route south of the Caspian Around 1262 Berke broke with the Il Khan Hulagu Khan This led to several wars on the west side of the Caspian which the Horde usually lost The interruption of trade and conflict with Persia led the Horde to build trading towns along the northern route They also allied with the Mamluks of Egypt who were the Il Khan s enemies Trade between the Horde and Egypt was carried by the Genoese based in Crimea An important part of this trade was slaves for the Mamluk army Trade was weakened by a quarrel with the Genoese in 1307 and a Mumluk Persian peace in 1323 Circa 1336 the Ilkhanate began to disintegrate which shifted trade north Around 1340 the route north of the Caspian was described by Pegolotti In 1347 a Horde siege of the Genoese Crimean port of Kaffa led to the spread of the black death to Europe In 1395 96 Tamerlane laid waste to the Horde s trading towns Since they had no agricultural hinterland many of the towns vanished and trade shifted south citation needed Geography and societyGenghis Khan assigned four Mongol mingghans the Sanchi ud or Salji ud Keniges Uushin and Je ured clans to Jochi 149 By the beginning of the 14th century noyans from the Sanchi ud Hongirat Ongud Arghun Keniges Jajirad Besud Oirat and Je ured clans held importants positions at the court or elsewhere There existed four mingghans 4 000 of the Jalayir in the left wing of the Ulus of Jochi Golden Horde citation needed The population of the Golden Horde was largely a mixture of Turks and Mongols who adopted Islam later as well as smaller numbers of Finnic peoples Sarmato Scythians Slavs and people from the Caucasus among others whether Muslim or not 150 Most of the Horde s population was Turkic Kipchaks Cumans Volga Bulgars Khwarezmians and others The Horde was gradually Turkified and lost its Mongol identity while the descendants of Batu s original Mongol warriors constituted the upper class 151 They were commonly named the Tatars by the Russians and Europeans Russians preserved this common name for this group down to the 20th century Whereas most members of this group identified themselves by their ethnic or tribal names most also considered themselves to be Muslims Most of the population both agricultural and nomadic adopted the Kypchak language which developed into the regional languages of Kypchak groups after the Horde disintegrated citation needed The descendants of Batu ruled the Golden Horde from Sarai Batu and later Sarai Berke controlling an area ranging from the Volga River and the Carpathian mountains to the mouth of the Danube River The descendants of Orda ruled the area from the Ural River to Lake Balkhash Censuses recorded Chinese living quarters in the Tatar parts of Novgorod Tver and Moscow citation needed Internal organization Tilework fragments of a palace in Sarai The Golden Horde s elites were descended from four Mongol clans Qiyat Manghut Sicivut and Qonqirat Their supreme ruler was the Khan chosen by the kurultai among Batu Khan s descendants The prime minister also ethnically Mongol was known as prince of princes or beklare bek The ministers were called viziers Local governors or basqaqs were responsible for levying taxes and dealing with popular discontent Civil and military administration as a rule were not separate citation needed The Horde developed as a sedentary rather than nomadic culture with Sarai evolving into a large prosperous metropolis In the early 14th century the capital was moved considerably upstream to Sarai Berqe which became one of the largest cities of the medieval world with 600 000 inhabitants 152 Sarai was described by the famous traveller Ibn Battuta as one of the most beautiful cities full of people with the beautiful bazaars and wide streets and having 13 congregational mosques along with plenty of lesser mosques 153 Another contemporary source describes it as a grand city accommodating markets baths and religious institutions 153 An astrolabe was discovered during excavations at the site and the city was home to many poets most of whom are known to us only by name 153 154 Despite Russian efforts at proselytizing in Sarai the Mongols clung to their traditional animist or shamanist beliefs until Uzbeg Khan 1312 41 adopted Islam as a state religion Several rulers of Kievan Rus Mikhail of Chernigov and Mikhail of Tver among them were reportedly assassinated in Sarai but the Khans were generally tolerant and even released the Russian Orthodox Church from paying taxes citation needed Provinces See also Wings of the Golden Horde The Mongols favored decimal organization which was inherited from Genghis Khan It is said that there were a total of ten political divisions within the Golden Horde The Golden Horde majorly was divided into Blue Horde Kok Horde and White Horde Ak Horde Blue Horde consisted of Pontic Caspian steppe Khazaria Volga Bulgaria while White Horde encompassed the lands of the princes of the left hand Taibugin Yurt Ulus Shiban Ulus Tok timur Ulus Ezhen Horde citation needed Vassal territories Venetian port cities in Crimea center at Qirim After the Mongol conquest in 1238 the port cities in Crimea paid the Jochids custom duties and the revenues were divided among all Chingisid princes of the Mongol Empire in accordance with the appanage system 155 the banks of Azov the country of Circassians Walachia Alania Russian lands 156 GeneticsA 2016 study analyzed the DNA of 5 graves in Tavan Tolgoi Mongolia identified as members of the Mongol Golden Family 157 The male individuals identified as Golden Family members anthropologically all belonged to the East Asian physical type 158 with West Eurasian paternal haplogroup R1b M343 159 The authors proposed that R1b may be the patrilineal lineage of Genghis Khan and that the R1b carrying Tavan Tolgoi specimens were the descendants of prior mixed marriages between West Eurasian migrants and women indigenous to the Mongolian plateau However the same authors also suggested the possibility that they were product of clan marriages but more likely the Tavan Tolgoi bodies were either related to the female lineages of Genghis Khan s Borjigin clan or to Genghis Khan s male lineage 160 The authors observed a special link between haplogroup R1b M343 and the populations residing in the former territory of the Golden Horde noting a high frequency of R1b M343 among populations such as the Hazara as well as Bashkirs and Eastern Russian Tatars 161 162 Analyses of Early Turk and Medieval Steppe nomad population clusters Dark Blue Western Hunter Gatherer light Blue Early European Farmers Orange Eastern Hunter Gatherer Red Neolithic Iranian farmers light Green Northeast Asian Dark Green East Southeast Asian A 2018 genetic study published in Nature examined the remains of two males buried in the Ulytau District in Kazakhstan ca 1300 AD 163 164 One male who was a Buddhist member of the Golden Horde army was of East Asian ancestry and carried paternal haplogroup C3 165 and the maternal haplogroup D4m2 166 The other male who was of West Eurasian European ancestry was a carrier of the paternal haplogroup R1 167 and the maternal haplogroup I1b 168 According to the authors this could suggest assimilation of distinct ethnic groups in to the Golden Horde however he could also be servant or slave 169 Coinage Talabuga s coin dating c 1287 1291 AD Jani Beg s coin dating c 1342 1357 AD Berdi Beg s coin minted in Azak dating c 1357 AD Kildibeg s coin minted in Sarai dating c 1360 AD Ordumelik s coin minted in Azak dating c 1360 AD Muscovite coin minted in the name of Abdullah ibn Uzbeg dating c 1367 1368 or 1369 1370 Dawlat Berdi s coin minted in Kaffa dating c 1419 1421 or 1428 1432 AD Gallery Golden Horde raid at Ryazan Golden Horde raid at Kiev Golden Horde raid at Kozelsk Golden Horde raid Vladimir Golden Horde raid Suzdal Mongol Tatar warriors besiege their opponents Mongols chase Hungarian king from Mohi detail from Chronicon Pictum The Mongol army captures a Rus city Mongol invasion of Hungary in 1285 Edigu s invasion of Rus The sack of Suzdal by Batu Khan in 1238 miniature from 16th century chronicle Drawing of Mongols of the Golden Horde outside Vladimir presumably demanding submission before sacking the city Paiza of Abdullah Khan r 1361 70 with Mongolian script Mongol Tatar raid A Rus prince being punished by the Golden HordeSee alsoCumans Mongol invasion of Kievan Rus Tale of the Destruction of the Rus Land Russo Kazan Wars Tatar invasions Tokhtamysh Timur war Volga Bulgaria Division of the Mongol Empire Berke Hulagu war History of the western steppe List of Khans of the Golden Horde List of medieval Mongol tribes and clans List of Mongol states List of Turkic dynasties and countries JarligNotes Their state came to be known in historiography as the Golden Horde or the ulus people or patrimony of Djochi while the contemporaries simply referred to it as the Great Horde ulu orda 2 Clearly the Russian bookmen s posturing notwithstanding the Mongols were anything but an unknown and unknowable people The Tatars as an abstraction were loathed on principle but to the Russian elite their Tatar counterparts were far from being nameless faceless enemies Indeed Russian aristocrats were probably more familiar with the higher levels of Mongol society than with the society of the Russian peasantry 132 References Zahler Diane 2013 The Black Death Revised ed Twenty First Century Books p 70 ISBN 978 1 4677 0375 8 a b c Kolodziejczyk 2011 p 4 Mustafayeva A A Aubakirova K K The language situation and status of the Turkic language in the Egyptian Mamluk state and Golden Horde Journal of Oriental Studies S l v 97 n 2 p 17 25 June 2021 ISSN 2617 1864 Available at lt https bulletin orientalism kaznu kz index php 1 vostok article view 1689 gt Date accessed 01 sep 2021 doi https doi org 10 26577 JOS 2021 v97 i2 02 Halperin 1987 p 78 Turchin Peter Adams Jonathan M Hall Thomas D December 2006 East West Orientation of Historical Empires Journal of World Systems Research 12 2 222 ISSN 1076 156X Retrieved 12 September 2016 Rein Taagepera September 1997 Expansion and Contraction Patterns of Large Polities Context for Russia International Studies Quarterly 41 3 498 doi 10 1111 0020 8833 00053 JSTOR 2600793 German A Fedorov Davydov The Monetary System of The Golden Horde Translated by L I Smirnova Holden Retrieved 14 July 2017 The History and Culture of the Golden Horde Room 6 The State Hermitage Museum Sankt Petersburg Retrieved 21 March 2020 Perrie Maureen ed 2006 The Cambridge History of Russia Volume 1 From Early Rus to 1689 Cambridge University Press p 130 ISBN 978 0 521 81227 6 a b Golden Horde Encyclopaedia Britannica 2007 Also called Kipchak Khanate Russian designation for Juchi s Ulus the western part of the Mongol Empire which flourished from the mid 13th century to the end of the 14th century The people of the Golden Horde were mainly a mixture of Turkic and Uralic peoples and Sarmatians amp Scythians and to a lesser extent Mongols with the latter generally constituting the aristocracy Distinguish the Kipchak Khanate from the earlier Cuman Kipchak confederation in the same region that had previously held sway before its conquest by the Mongols Atwood 2004 p 201 rEPLHM gNKNRYu nPDYu NHAJYu RNKLYuVYu 16 YaRNKERH mHK lYuJYaHM oPNGYu PS MYuZhHNMYuKEMShI YaEPBEP YaNBPELEMMNI OPNGSh Proza ru Retrieved 2014 04 11 Ostrowski Donald G Spring 2007 Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire and The Mongols and the West 1221 1410 and Daily Life in the Mongol Empire and The Secret History of the Mongols A Mongolian Epic Chronicle of the Thirteenth Century review Kritika Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History Project MUSE 8 2 431 441 doi 10 1353 kri 2007 0019 S2CID 161222967 May T 2001 Khanate of the Golden Horde Kipchak North Georgia College and State University Archived from the original on December 14 2006 Spinei Victor 2009 The Romanians and the Turkic Nomads North of the Danube Delta from the Tenth to the Mid Thirteenth Century Brill p 38 ISBN 978 90 04 17536 5 Atwood 2004 p 41 Allsen 1985 pp 5 40 Edward L Keenan Encyclopedia Americana article Grekov B D Yakubovski A Y 1998 1950 The Golden Horde and its Downfall in Russian Moscow Bogorodskii Pechatnik ISBN 978 5 8958 9005 9 History of Crimean Khanate Archived from the original on 2009 01 06 in English a b Sinor Denis 1999 The Mongols in the West Journal of Asian History Harrassowitz Verlag 33 1 1 44 JSTOR 41933117 a b c Vernadsky 1953 p 146 Atwood 2004 p 479 Vernadsky 1953 p 143 Martin 2007 p 152 Vernadsky 1953 p 147 Atwood 2004 p 213 a b Atwood 2004 p 48 Vernadsky 1953 p 148 149 Vernadsky 1953 p 150 Vernadsky 1953 p 151 Jackson 2014 pp 123 124 Annales Mellicenses Continuatio Zwetlensis tertia MGHS IX p 644 Jackson 2014 p 202 Vernadsky 1953 p 153 Kirakos Istoriia p 236 Mukhamadiev A G Bulgaro Tatarskiya monetnaia sistema p 50 Rashid al Din Jawal al Tawarikhi Boyle p 256 Jackson Peter 1995 The Mongols and Europe In Abulafia David ed The New Cambridge Medieval History Volume 5 C 1198 c 1300 Cambridge University Press p 709 ISBN 978 0 521 36289 4 Plokhy Serhii 2006 The origins of the Slavic nations premodern identities in Russia Ukraine and Belarus Cambridge University Press p 74 ISBN 978 0 511 24564 0 OCLC 845782300 As the transformation of St Aleksandr Nevsky from son of Suzdal to son of Rus in early modern Muscovite literature well attests Vernadsky 1953 p 163 Barthold W 2008 1958 Turkestan Down to the Mongol Invasion ACLS Humanities E Book p 446 ISBN 978 1 59740 450 1 Howorth 1880 Biran Michal 2013 Qaidu and the Rise of the Independent Mongol State In Central Asia Taylor amp Francis p 52 ISBN 978 1 136 80044 3 Man John 2012 Kublai Khan Transworld p 229 ISBN 978 1 4464 8615 3 Saunders J J 2001 The History of the Mongol Conquests University of Pennsylvania Press pp 130 132 ISBN 978 0 8122 1766 7 Amitai Preiss Reuven 2005 Mongols and Mamluks The Mamluk Ilkhanid War 1260 1281 Cambridge University Press pp 88 89 ISBN 978 0 521 52290 8 Anton Cooper On the Edge of Empire Novgorod s trade with the Golden Horde p 19 GVNP p 13 Gramota 3 Zenkovsky Serge A Zenkovsky Betty Jean eds 1986 The Nikonian Chronicle From the year 1241 to the year 1381 Kingston Press p 45 ISBN 978 0 940670 02 0 Vernadsky 1953 p 172 Vernadsky 1953 p 173 Vernadsky 1953 p 174 Rashid al Din II Successors Boyle p 897 Allsen 1985 p 21 Curta Florin 2006 Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages 500 1250 Cambridge University Press p 414 ISBN 978 0 521 81539 0 Howorth 1880 p 130 Byzantino Tatarica p 209 Vernadsky 1953 p 177 Vernadsky 1953 p 178 Vernadsky 1953 p 185 Vernadsky 1953 p 186 Baybars al Mansuri Zubdat al Fikra p 355 Spuler 1943 p 78 Barthold V V Four Studies on Central Asia Translated by Minorsky V Minorsky T Brill p 127 Grousset Rene 1970 The Empire of the Steppes A History of Central Asia Rutgers University Press p 335 ISBN 978 0 8135 1304 1 Bentley Jerry H 2008 Traditions amp encounters a global perspective on the past New York McGraw Hill p 471 map 18 2 ISBN 978 0 07 340693 0 Vernadsky 1953 p 190 Vasary Istvan 2005 Cumans and Tatars Oriental Military in the Pre Ottoman Balkans 1185 1365 Cambridge University Press p 91 ISBN 978 1 139 44408 8 Ptolemy of Lucca Annales p 237 DeWeese Devin 2010 Islamization and Native Religion in the Golden Horde Baba TŸkles and Conversion to Islam in Historical and Epic Tradition Penn State Press p 99 ISBN 978 0 271 04445 3 a b Jackson 2014 p 204 Boyle J A 1968 Dynastic and Political History of the Il Khans In Boyle J A ed The Cambridge History of Iran Cambridge University Press p 374 ISBN 978 0 521 06936 6 Vernadsky 1953 p 74 Badarch Nyamaa The coins of Mongol empire and clan tamgna of khans XIII XIV Monety mongolskih hanov Ch 2 Spuler 1943 p 84 Vernadsky 1953 p 191 Vernadsky 1953 p 195 Vernadsky 1953 p 196 Vernadsky 1953 p 198 a b Vernadsky 1953 p 197 Broadbridge Anne F 2008 Kingship and ideology in the Islamic and Mongol worlds Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 132 137 ISBN 978 0 521 85265 4 OCLC 124025602 Allsen Thomas T 2006 The Royal Hunt in Eurasian History University of Pennsylvania Press p 256 ISBN 978 0 8122 0107 9 Atwood 2004 Golden Horde Mihail Dimitri Sturdza Dictionnaire historique et Genealogique des grandes familles de Grece d Albanie et de Constantinople Great families of Greece Albania and Constantinople Historical and genealogical dictionary 1983 page 373 Saunders 2001 Jireuek Bulgaria pp 293 295 Vagnon Emmanuelle 1 January 2020 Mongols et Tartare dans les cartes occidentales du Moyen Age Presses Universitaires de Valenciennes p 145 Martin 2007 p 175 Fennell John 1988 Princely Executions in the Horde 1308 1339 Forschungen zur Osteuropaischen Geschichte 38 9 19 Vernadsky 1953 p 200 Vernadsky 1953 p 201 Rowell S C 2014 Lithuania Ascending Cambridge University Press p 100 ISBN 978 1 107 65876 9 Ibn Battuta 2 414 415 Massing Jean Michel Albuquerque Luis de Brown Jonathan Gonzalez J J Martin 1 January 1991 Circa 1492 Art in the Age of Exploration Yale University Press p 29 ISBN 978 0 300 05167 4 The Cresques Project Panel V www cresquesproject net a b Vernadsky 1953 p 204 Vernadsky 1953 p 205 Zdan Michael B June 1957 The Dependence of Halych Volyn Rus on the Golden Horde The Slavonic and East European Review 35 85 521 522 JSTOR 4204855 Jackson 2014 p 211 Vernadsky 1953 p 208 a b Vernadsky 1953 p 246 Atwood 2004 p 480 a b Vernadsky 1953 p 258 a b Vernadsky 1953 p 247 Vernadsky 1953 p 250 Vernadsky 1953 p 267 a b Grousset 1970 p 407 a b ed Johann Voigt Codex diplomaticus Prussicus 6 vols VI p 47 Vernadsky 1953 p 277 Howorth 1880 p 287 Vernadsky 1953 p 282 Vernadsky 1953 p 284 287 Forsyth 1992 p 25 26 Vernadsky 1953 p 293 Frank 2009 p 242 a b Vernadsky 1953 p 296 319 a b c d Vernadsky 1953 p 329 Documents of the Crimean khanate from the collection of Huseyn Feyzkhanov comp and the transliteration R R Abdujalilov scientific edited by I Mingaleev Simferopol LLC Konstanta 2017 816 p ISBN 978 5 906952 38 7 Sagit Faizov Letters of khans Islam Giray III and Muhammad Giray IV to Tsar Alexey Mikhailovich and king Jan Kazimir 1654 1658 Crimean Tatar diplomacy in polit post Pereyaslav context time Moscow Humanitarii 2003 166 p ISBN 5 89221 075 8 Christian 2018 p 63 a b Vernadsky 1953 p 330 a b Vernadsky 1953 p 332 Russian Interaction with Foreign Lands Strangelove net Archived from the original on 2009 01 18 Retrieved 2014 04 11 Kolodziejczyk 2011 p 66 Nikolay Novikov Ancient Russian Hydrography Drevnyaya rossijskaya idrografiya Saint Petersburg 1773 page 167 ISBN 9785458063685 Frank 2009 p 253 a b Vernadsky 1953 p 214 Halperin 1987 p 91 Halperin 1987 p 118 119 Halperin 1987 p 125 Halperin 1987 p 124 126 Vernadsky 1953 p 222 Halperin 1986 p 107 109 sfn error no target CITEREFHalperin1986 help a b Halperin 1986 p 111 113 sfn error no target CITEREFHalperin1986 help Mirgaleyev 2017 p 347 Spinei 2017 p 405 Halperin 1986 p 113 115 sfn error no target CITEREFHalperin1986 help Halperin 1987 p 50 a b Halperin 1987 p 50 51 Halperin 1986 p 89 91 sfn error no target CITEREFHalperin1986 help Halperin 1986 p 93 sfn error no target CITEREFHalperin1986 help Halperin 1986 p 91 sfn error no target CITEREFHalperin1986 help Vernadsky 1953 p 233 244 a b Vernadsky 1953 p 277 287 Bentley Jerry H 2008 Traditions amp encounters a global perspective on the past New York McGraw Hill p 471 map 18 2 ISBN 978 0 07 340693 0 Mantran Robert Fossier Robert ed A Turkish or Mongolian Islam in The Cambridge Illustrated History of the Middle Ages 1250 1520 p 298 Christoph Baumer History of Central Asia volume 3 pp 263 270 2016 He seems to be following Virgil Ciociltan The Mongols and the Black Sea Trade 2012 Blair Sheila Art Nasser D Khalili Collection of Islamic 1995 جامع التواريخ Rashid Al Din s Illustrated History of the World Nour Foundation p 212 ISBN 978 0 19 727627 3 Halperin 1987 p 111 Britannica Academic academic eb com Encyclopaedia Britannica a b c Ravil Bukharaev 2014 Islam in Russia The Four Seasons Routledge p 116 ISBN 9781136808005 Ravil Bukharaev David Matthews eds 2013 Historical Anthology of Kazan Tatar Verse Routledge p 15 ISBN 9781136814655 Jackson Peter 1978 The Dissolution of the Mongol Empire Harrassowitz pp 186 243 A P Grigorev and O B Frolova Geographicheskoy opisaniye Zolotoy Ordi v encyclopedia al Kashkandi Tyurkologicheskyh sbornik 2001 pp 262 302 Lkhagvasuren Gavaachimed 2016 Molecular Genealogy of a Mongol Queen s Family and Her Possible Kinship with Genghis Khan PLOS ONE 11 9 e0161622 Bibcode 2016PLoSO 1161622L doi 10 1371 journal pone 0161622 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 5023095 PMID 27627454 Lkhagvasuren 2016Archaeological and physical anthropological analyses of the Tavan Tolgoi bodies All physical anthropological parameters indicate that the skulls of the Tavan Tolgoi graves were all anthropologically Mongoloid Lkhagvasuren 2016Table 2 Y haplogroups of the male Tavan Tolgoi bodies MN0376 R1a1a MN0126 R1b MN0104 R1b Lkhagvasuren et al 2016 it seems most likely that the Tavan Tolgoi bodies are members of Genghis Khan s Golden family including the lineage of bekis Genghis Khan s female lineage and their female successors who controlled Eastern Mongolia in the early Mongolian era instead of guregens of the Ongud clan or the lineage of khans Genghis Khan s male lineage who married females of the Hongirad clan including Genghis Khan s grandmother mother chief wife and some daughters in law harvnb error no target CITEREFLkhagvasurenShinLeeTumen2016 help Lkhagvasuren 2016 Eastern Russian Tatars Bashkirs and Pakistani Hazara were found to carry R1b M343 at unusually high frequencies of 12 65 46 07 and 32 respectively compared to other regions of Eastern Asia which rarely have this haplotype Fig 3 40 42 43 49 53 Interestingly ancestors of those 3 populations were all closely associated with the medieval Mongol Empire That is Russian Tatars and Bashkirs are descendants of the Golden Horde also known as the Ulus of Jochi that had been controlled by Jochi the first son of Genghis Khan and his descendants during the 12th 15th centuries In addition some of the Hazara tribes are believed to consist of descendants of Mongolian soldiers and their slave women after the 1221 siege of Bamiyan under the leadership of Genghis Khan 54 55 Similarly the high frequency of R1b M343 in geographic regions associated with the past Mongol khanates including the Golden Horde strongly suggest a close association between the Y haplotype R1b M343 and the past Mongol Empire Fig 3 42 44 49 53 Lkhagvasuren 2016 Coincidentally the geographical distribution of modern day individuals matching the Y haplogroup and haplotype of the Tavan Tolgoi bodies in the regions corresponding to the past Mongol khanates including the Golden Horde Dynasty and Chagatai Khanate implies that the modern day individuals are direct descendants of the Golden family members Damgaard Peter de Barros Marchi Nina Rasmussen Simon Peyrot Michael May 2018 137 ancient human genomes from across the Eurasian steppes Nature 557 7705 369 374 doi 10 1038 s41586 018 0094 2 ISSN 1476 4687 Damgaard et al 2018 Supplementary Table 2 Rows 23 24 Damgaard et al 2018 Supplementary Table 9 Row 16 Damgaard et al 2018 Supplementary Table 8 Row 81 Damgaard et al 2018 Supplementary Table 9 Row 17 Damgaard et al 2018 Supplementary Table 8 Row 82 Damgaard 2018 p 372 We also find the presence of an individual of West Eurasian descent buried together with members of Jochi Khan s Golden Horde army from the Ulytau mountains see Supplementary Information section 4 DA28 is East Asian and DA29 is European This could suggest assimilation of distinct groups into the Medieval Golden Horde but this individual may also represent a slave or a servant of West Eurasian descent attached to the service of the Golden Horde members harvnb error no target CITEREFDamgaard2018 help BibliographyAllsen Thomas T 1985 The Princes of the Left Hand An Introduction to the History of the Ulus of Ordu in the Thirteenth and Early Fourteenth Centuries Archivum Eurasiae Medii Aevi Vol V Harrassowitz pp 5 40 ISBN 978 3 447 08610 3 Atwood Christopher Pratt 2004 Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire Facts On File ISBN 978 0 8160 4671 3 Christian David 2018 A History of Russia Central Asia and Mongolia 2 Wiley Blackwell Damgaard P B et al May 9 2018 137 ancient human genomes from across the Eurasian steppes Nature Nature Research 557 7705 369 373 Bibcode 2018Natur 557 369D doi 10 1038 s41586 018 0094 2 hdl 1887 3202709 PMID 29743675 S2CID 13670282 Retrieved April 11 2020 Frank Allen J 2009 Cambridge History of Inner Asia Forsyth James 1992 A History of the Peoples of Siberia Cambridge University Press Halperin Charles J 1987 Russia and the Golden Horde The Mongol Impact on Medieval Russian History p 222 ISBN 9781850430575 e book 1985 edition online Howorth Sir Henry Hoyle 1880 History of the Mongols From the 9th to the 19th Century New York Burt Franklin ISBN 9780265306338 Jackson Peter 2014 The Mongols and the West 1221 1410 Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 317 87898 8 Kolodziejczyk Dariusz 2011 The Crimean Khanate and Poland Lithuania International Diplomacy on the European Periphery 15th 18th Century A Study of Peace Treaties Followed by Annotated Documents Leiden Brill ISBN 978 90 04 19190 7 Martin Janet 2007 Medieval Russia 980 1584 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 85916 5 Mirgaleyev Ilnur 2017 The Golden Horde and Anatolia Spinei Victor 2017 The Domination of the Golden Horde in the Romanian Regions Spuler Bertold 1943 Die Goldene Horde die Mongolen in Russland 1223 1502 in German O Harrassowitz Vernadsky George 1953 The Mongols and Russia Yale University PressFurther readingBoris Grekov and Alexander Yakubovski The Golden Horde and its Downfall Sheila Paine The Golden Horde From the Himalaya to the Mediterranean Penguin Books 1998 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Golden Horde The Golden Horde coinage in Russian Golden Horde Archived 2011 07 27 at the Wayback Machine articles at the World Archaeology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Golden Horde amp oldid 1142311329, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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