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Mongol invasion of Europe

Mongol invasion of Europe
Part of the Mongol invasions and conquests

Mongol invasion of Europe 1236–1242
Date1220s–1240s
Location
Result

Mongol victory

  • Numerous European political entities destroyed, subjugated, or raided and forced to pay tribute.
  • Devastation of the populations, cultures, and political structures in most of Eastern Europe, the Caucasus and Central Europe. Eventual Mongol withdrawal from Central Europe (1242).
Territorial
changes
Volga Bulgaria, Cumania, Alania, and the Kievan Rus' principalities conquered and become vassals of the Mongol Empire. The Kingdom of Georgia subjugated. Parts of the Kingdom of Hungary temporarily controlled by Mongol Empire. Eastern and Central Europe and the North Caucasus repeatedly subject to raids and invasions.
Belligerents

Kievan Rus'

Kingdom of Poland Kingdom of Bohemia Kingdom of Hungary

Margravate of Meissen

Kingdom of Serbia (medieval)

Cumania

Supported by:

Mongol Empire



From the 1220s into the 1240s, the Mongols conquered the Turkic states of Volga Bulgaria, Cumania and Iranian state of Alania, and various principalities in Eastern Europe. Following this, they began their invasion into Central Europe by launching a two-pronged invasion of then-fragmented Poland, culminating in the Battle of Legnica (9 April 1241), and the Kingdom of Hungary, culminating in the Battle of Mohi (11 April 1241).[1][failed verification] Invasions were also launched into the Caucasus against the Kingdom of Georgia, the Chechens, the Ingush, and Circassia though they failed to fully subjugate the latter. More invasions were launched in Southeast Europe against Bulgaria, Croatia, and the Latin Empire. The operations were planned by General Subutai (1175–1248) and commanded by Batu Khan (c. 1207–1255) and Kadan (d. c. 1261), two grandsons of Genghis Khan. Their conquests integrated much of Eastern European territory into the empire of the Golden Horde. Warring European princes realized they had to cooperate in the face of a Mongol invasion, so local wars and conflicts were suspended in parts of central Europe, only to be resumed after the Mongols had withdrawn.[2] After the initial invasions, subsequent raids and punitive expeditions continued into the late 13th century.

General overview edit

 
Mongol expansion

Invasions and conquest of Kievan Rus' edit

 
Returning to Vladimir by Yaroslav II of Vladimir after Mongol destruction. From the medieval Rus' annals
 
The Mongol army captures a Rus' city

In 1223, Mongols routed a near 50,000 Rus'/Cuman army at the Battle of the Kalka River near modern-day Mariupol before turning back for nearly a decade.

Ögedei Khan ordered Batu Khan to conquer Rus' in 1235.[3] The main force, headed by Jochi's sons, and their cousins, Möngke Khan and Güyük Khan, arrived at Ryazan in December 1237. Ryazan refused to surrender, and the Mongols sacked it and then stormed Suzdalia. Many Rus' armies were defeated; Grand Prince Yuri was killed on the Sit River (March 4, 1238). Major cities such as Vladimir, Torzhok, and Kozelsk were captured.

Afterward, the Mongols turned their attention to the steppe, crushing the Kypchaks and the Alans and sacking Crimea. Batu appeared in Kievan Rus' in 1239, sacking Pereiaslav and Chernihiv. The Mongols sacked Kiev on December 6, 1240, destroyed Sutiejsk and conquered Halych along with Volodymyr-Volynskyi. Batu sent a small detachment to probe the Poles before passing on to Central Europe. One column was routed by the Poles while the other defeated the Polish army and returned.[4]

Invasion of Central Europe edit

The attack on Europe was planned and executed by Subutai, who achieved perhaps his most lasting fame with his victories there. Having devastated the various Rus' principalities, he sent spies into Poland and Hungary, and as far as eastern Austria, in preparation for an attack into the heartland of Europe.[5] Having a clear picture of the European kingdoms, he prepared an attack nominally commanded by Batu Khan and two other familial-related princes. Batu Khan, son of Jochi, was the overall leader, but Subutai was the strategist and commander in the field, and as such, was present in both the northern and southern campaigns against Rus' principalities.[6] He also commanded the central column that moved against Hungary. While Kadan's northern force won the Battle of Liegnitz and Güyük's army triumphed in Transylvania, Subutai was waiting for them on the Hungarian plain. The newly reunited army then withdrew to the Sajó river where they inflicted a decisive defeat on King Béla IV of Hungary at the Battle of Mohi. Again, Subutai masterminded the operation, and it would prove one of his greatest victories.

Invasion of Poland edit

 
Henry II the Pious who lost his life at the battle of Legnica, 19th-century painting by Jan Matejko
 
The Mongols at Legnica display the head of Henry II of the Duchy of Silesia and High Duke of Poland

The Mongols invaded Central Europe with three armies. One army defeated an alliance which included forces from fragmented Poland and their allies, led by Henry II the Pious, Duke of Silesia in the Battle of Liegnitz. A second army crossed the Carpathian mountains and a third followed the Danube. The armies re-grouped and crushed Hungary in 1241, defeating the Hungarian army at the Battle of Mohi on April 11, 1241. The devastating Mongol invasion killed half of Hungary's population.[7] The armies swept the plains of Hungary over the summer, and in early 1242 regained impetus and extended their control into Dalmatia and Moravia. The Great Khan had, however, died in December 1241, and on hearing the news, all the "Princes of the Blood," against Subotai's recommendation, went back to Mongolia to elect the new Khan.[8]

After sacking Kiev,[9] Batu Khan sent a smaller group of troops to Poland, destroying Lublin and defeating an inferior Polish army. Other elements—not part of the main Mongol force—saw difficulty near the Polish-Halych border.

The Mongols then reached Polaniec on the Czarna Hańcza, where they set up camp.[10] There, the Voivode attacked them with the remaining Cracovian knights, which were few in number, but determined to vanquish the invader or die. Surprise gave the Poles an initial advantage and they managed to kill many Mongol soldiers. When the invaders realized the actual numerical weakness of the Poles, they regrouped, broke through the Polish ranks and defeated them. During the fighting, many Polish prisoners of war found ways to escape and hide in the nearby woods. The Polish defeat was partly influenced by the initially successful Polish knights having been distracted by looting.

Invasion of German lands edit

On 9 April 1241, Mongol detachments entered the Margravate of Meissen and the March of Lusatia following a decisive Mongol victory at the Battle of Legnica in Poland.[11] The Mongol light reconnaissance units, led by Orda Khan, pillaged through Meissen and burned most of the city of Meissen to the ground.[12] The Chronica sancti Pantaleonis records these attacks.

Invasion of Lands of the Bohemian crown (Bohemia, Moravia) edit

After the defeat of the European forces at Liegnitz, the Mongols then continued pillaging throughout Poland's neighboring states, particularly Moravia. King Wenceslaus I of Bohemia returned to protect his kingdom after arriving in Liegnitz a day late. He gathered reinforcements from Thuringia and Saxony on his way back. He stationed his troops in the mountainous border regions of Bohemia where the Mongols would not be able to utilize their cavalry effectively.[13]

By that time, Mongolian forces had divided into two, one led by Batu and Subutai who were planning to invade Hungary, and another led by Baidar and Kadan who were ravaging their way through Silesia and Moravia. When they arrived to attack Bohemia, the kingdom's defenses discouraged them from attacking and they withdrew to the town of Othmachau.[13][14] A small force of Mongolians did attack the strategically located (on the way to the mountain passes) Bohemian town of Kladsko but Wenceslaus' cavalry managed to fend them off.[15][16] The Mongols then tried to take the town of Olomouc, but Wenceslaus with the aid of Austrian Babenbergs repulsed the raid.[13][17][18] A Mongol commander was captured in a sortie near Olomouc.[19] Under Wenceslaus' leadership during the Mongol invasion, Bohemia remained one of a few central European kingdoms that was never pillaged by the Mongols even though most countries around it such as Poland and Hungary were ravaged.[13] Such was his success that chroniclers sent messages to Emperor Frederick II of his victorious defense.[20] After these failed attempts, Baidar and Kadan continued raiding Moravia (via the Moravian Gate route into the valley of the river March towards the Danube) before finally going southward to reunite with Batu and Subutai in Hungary.

Invasion of Hungary edit

The Hungarians had first learned about the Mongol threat in 1229, when King Andrew II granted asylum to some fleeing Ruthenian boyars. Some Magyars (Hungarians), left behind during the main migration to the Pannonian basin, still lived on the banks of the upper Volga (it is believed by some[who?] that the descendants of this group are the modern-day Bashkirs, although this people now speaks a Turkic language, not Magyar). In 1237 a Dominican friar, Julianus, set off on an expedition to lead them back, and was sent back to King Béla with a letter from Batu Khan. In this letter, Batu called upon the Hungarian king to surrender his kingdom unconditionally to the Tatar forces or face complete destruction. Béla did not reply, and two more messages were later delivered to Hungary. The first, in 1239, was sent by the defeated Cuman tribes, who asked for and received asylum in Hungary. The second was sent in February 1241 by the defeated Polish princes.

Only then did King Béla call upon his magnates to join his army in defense of the country. He also asked the papacy and the Western European rulers for help. Foreign help came in the form of a small knight-detachment under the leadership of Frederick II, Duke of Austria, but it was too small to change the outcome of the campaign. The majority of the Hungarian magnates also did not realize the urgency of the matter. Some may have hoped that a defeat of the royal army would force Béla to discontinue his centralization efforts and thus strengthen their own power.

Although the Mongol danger was real and imminent, Hungary was not prepared to deal with it; in the minds of a people who had lived free from nomadic invasions for the last few hundred years, an invasion seemed impossible, and Hungary was no longer a predominantly soldier population. Only rich nobles were trained as heavy-armored cavalry. The Hungarians had long since forgotten the light-cavalry strategy and tactics of their ancestors, which were similar to those now used by the Mongols. The Hungarian army (some 60,000 on the eve of the Battle of Mohi) was made up of individual knights with tactical knowledge, discipline, and talented commanders. Because his army was not experienced in nomadic warfare, King Béla welcomed the Cuman King Kuthen (also known as Kotony) and his fighters. However, the Cuman invitation proved detrimental to the Hungarians because Batu Khan considered this acceptance of a group he considered rebels as justifications for his invasion of Hungary. After rumors began to circulate in Hungary that the Cumans were agents of the Mongols, some hot-headed Hungarians attacked the Cuman camp and killed Kotony. This led the enraged Cumans to ride south, ravaging the countryside, and slaughtering the unsuspecting Magyar population. The Austrian troops retreated to Austria shortly thereafter to gain more western aid. The Hungarians now stood alone in the defense of their country.

 
Battle of Mohi in a Medieval-era depiction

The 1241 Mongol invasion first affected Moldavia and Wallachia (situated east and south of the Carpathians). Tens of thousands of Wallachians and Moldavians lost their lives defending their territories from the Golden Horde. Crops and goods plundered from Wallachian settlements seem to have been a primary supply source for the Golden Horde. The invaders killed up to half of the population and burned down most of their settlements, thus destroying much of the cultural and economic records from that period. Neither the Wallachians nor the army of Hungary offered much resistance against the Mongols.[21] The swiftness of the invasion took many by surprise and forced them to retreat and hide in forests and the enclosed valleys of the Carpathians. In the end, however, the main target of the invasion was the Kingdom of Hungary.[21]

The Hungarian army arrived and encamped at the Sajó River on April 10, 1241, without having been directly challenged by the Mongols. The Mongols, having largely concealed their positions, began their attack the next night; after heavier-than-expected losses inflicted by Hungarian crossbowmen, the Mongols adjusted their strategy and routed the Hungarian forces rapidly. A major Hungarian loss was imminent, and the Mongols intentionally left a gap in their formation to permit the wavering Hungarian forces to flee and spread out in doing so, leaving them unable to effectively resist the Mongols as they picked off the retreating Hungarian remnants. While the king escaped with the help of his bodyguard, the remaining Hungarian army was killed by the Mongols or drowned in the river as they attempted escape. Following their decisive victory, the Mongols now systematically occupied the Great Hungarian Plains, the slopes of the northern Carpathian Mountains, and Transylvania. Where they found local resistance, they killed the population. Where the locale offered no resistance, they forced the men into servitude in the Mongol army. Still, tens of thousands avoided Mongol domination by taking refuge behind the walls of the few existing fortresses or by hiding in the forests or large marshes along the rivers. The Mongols, instead of leaving the defenseless and helpless people and continuing their campaign through Pannonia to Western Europe, spent time securing and pacifying the occupied territories. On Christmas 1241, the costly siege of Esztergom destroyed the capital and economic center of the Kingdom of Hungary, forcing the capital to be moved to Buda.[22]

During the winter, contrary to the traditional strategy of nomadic armies which started campaigns only in spring-time, they crossed the Danube and continued their systematic occupation, including Pannonia. They eventually reached the Austrian borders and the Adriatic shores in Dalmatia. The Mongols appointed a darughachi in Hungary and minted coins in the name of the Khagan.[23] According to Michael Prawdin, the country of Béla was assigned to Orda by Batu as an appanage. At least 20–40% of the population died, by slaughter or epidemic. Rogerius of Apulia, an Italian monk and chronicler who witnessed and survived the invasion, pointed out not only the genocidal element of the occupation, but also that the Mongols especially "found pleasure" in humiliating local women.[24] But while the Mongols claimed control of Hungary, they could not occupy fortified cities such as Fehérvár, Veszprém, Tihany, Győr, Pannonhalma, Moson, Sopron, Vasvár, Újhely, Zala, Léka, Pozsony , Nyitra, Komárom, Fülek and Abaújvár. Learning from this lesson, fortresses came to play a significant role in Hungary. King Béla IV rebuilt the country and invested in fortifications. Facing a shortage of money, he welcomed the settlement of Jewish families, investors, and tradesmen, granting them citizenship rights. The King also welcomed tens of thousands of Kun (Cumans) who had fled the country before the invasion. Chinese fire arrows were deployed by Mongols against the city of Buda on December 25, 1241, which they overran.[25]

The Mongolian invasion taught the Magyars a simple lesson: although the Mongols had destroyed the countryside, the forts and fortified cities had survived. To improve their defense capabilities for the future, they had to build forts, not only on the borders but also inside the country. In the siege of Esztergom, the defenses managed to hold off the Mongolians despite the latter having overwhelming numerical superiority and 30 siege machines which they had just used to reduce the wooden towers of the city.[26][27] During the remaining decades of the 13th century and throughout the 14th century, the kings donated more and more royal land to the magnates with the condition that they build forts and ensure their defenses.

Invasion of Croatia edit

 
At Klis Fortress the Mongols experienced defeat in 1242.[27]

During the Middle Ages, the Kingdom of Croatia was in a personal union with the Kingdom of Hungary, with Béla IV as a king.[28][29][30]

After being routed on the banks of the Sajó river in 1241 by the Mongols, Béla IV fled to today's Zagreb in Croatia. Batu sent a few tumens (roughly 20,000 men at arms) under Khadan in pursuit of Bela. The major objective was not the conquest but the capture of the Arpad king. The poorly fortified Zagreb was unable to resist the invasion and was destroyed, its cathedral burned by Mongols.[31] In preparation for a second invasion, Gradec was granted a royal charter or Golden Bull of 1242 by King Béla IV, after which citizens of Zagreb engaged in building defensive walls and towers around their settlement.[32]

The Mongols' pursuit of Béla IV continued from Zagreb through Pannonia to Dalmatia. While in pursuit, the Mongols under the leadership of Kadan (Qadan) attacked Klis Fortress in Croatia in March 1242. Due to the strong fortifications of Klis, the Mongols dismounted and climbed over the walls using nearby cliffs. The defenders were able to inflict a number of casualties on the Mongols, which enraged the latter and caused them to fight hand to hand in the streets and gather a sizable amount of loot from houses. As soon as they learned that King Bela was elsewhere, they abandoned the attack and split off to attack Split and Trogir.[33] The Mongols pursued Béla IV from town to town in Dalmatia, while Croatian nobility and Dalmatian towns such as Trogir and Rab helped Béla IV to escape. After being defeated by the Croatian soldiers, the Mongols retreated and Béla IV was awarded Croatian towns and nobility. Only the city of Split did not aid Béla IV in his escape from the Mongols. Some historians claim that the mountainous terrain of Croatian Dalmatia was fatal for the Mongols because of the great losses they suffered from Croat ambushes in mountain passes.[32] In any case, though much of Croatia was plundered and destroyed, long-term occupation was unsuccessful.

Saint Margaret (January 27, 1242 – January 18, 1271), a daughter of Béla IV and Maria Laskarina, was born in Klis Fortress during the Mongol invasion of Hungary-Croatia in 1242.[34]

Historians estimate that up to half of Hungary's two million population at that time were victims of the Mongol invasion of Europe.[35]

Invasion of Austria edit

The subjugation of Hungary opened a pathway for the Mongol Horde to invade Vienna. Using similar tactics during their campaigns in previous Eastern and Central European countries, the Mongols first launched small squadrons to attack isolated settlements in the outskirts of Vienna in an attempt to instill fear and panic among the populace.[36] In 1241 the Mongols raided Wiener Neustadt and its neighboring districts, located south of Vienna. Wiener Neustadt took the brunt of the attack and, like previous invasions, the Mongols committed horrible atrocities on the relatively unarmed populace. The city of Korneuburg, just north of Vienna, was also pillaged and destroyed.[37] The Duke of Austria, Frederick II, had previously engaged the Mongols in Olomouc and in the initial stages of the Battle of Mohi. Unlike in Hungary however, Vienna under the leadership of Duke Frederick and his knights, together with their foreign allies, managed to rally quicker and annihilate the small Mongolian squadron.[38][39] After the battle, the Duke estimated that the Mongols lost 300 to upwards of 700 men, while the defending Europeans lost 100.[40] Austrian knights also subsequently defeated the Mongols at the borders of the River March in the district of Theben.[41] After the failed initial raids, the rest of the Mongols retreated after learning of the Great Khan Ögedei's death.[disputed ]

Invasion of Bulgaria edit

During his withdrawal from Hungary back into Ruthenia, part of Batu Khan's army invaded Bulgaria. A Mongolian force was defeated by the Bulgarian army under Tsar Ivan Asen II.[42] A larger force returned to raid Bulgaria again the same year, though little is known of what happened. According to the Persian historian Rashid-al-Din Hamadani, the Bulgarian capital of Tarnovo was sacked. This is unlikely, but rumor of it spread widely, being repeated in Palestine by Bar Hebraeus.[43] The invasion of Bulgaria is mentioned in other contemporary sources, such as Philippe Mouskès, Thomas of Cantimpré and Ricoldo of Montecroce.[44] Contemporary documents indicate that by 1253, Kaliman I was a tribute-paying vassal of the Mongols, a status he had probably been forced to accept during the invasion of 1242.[45]

European tactics against Mongols edit

The traditional European method of warfare of melee combat between knights ended in catastrophe when it was deployed against the Mongol forces as the Mongols were able to keep a distance and advance with superior numbers. The New Encyclopædia Britannica, Volume 29 says that "Employed against the Mongol invaders of Europe, knightly warfare failed even more disastrously for the Poles at the Battle of Legnica and the Hungarians at the Battle of Mohi in 1241. Feudal Europe was saved from sharing the fate of China and the Grand Duchy of Moscow not by its tactical prowess but by the unexpected death of the Mongols' supreme ruler, Ögedei, and the subsequent eastward retreat of his armies."[46]

However, during the initial Mongol invasion and the subsequent raids afterwards, heavily armored knights and cavalry proved more effective at fighting the Mongols than their light-armored counterparts. During the Battle of Mohi, for example, while the Hungarian light cavalry and infantry were decimated by Mongol forces, the heavily armored knights in their employ, such as the Knights Templar, fought significantly better.[47] During the Battle of Liegnitz, the Knights Templar that numbered between 65 and 88 during the battle lost only three knights and 2 sergeants.[48] Austrian knights under Duke Frederick also fared better in fighting the Mongol invasion in Vienna.[39]

King Béla IV of Hungary hired the help of the Knights Hospitaller, as well as training his own better-armed local knights, in preparation for the Second Mongol invasion of Hungary.[49] In the decades following the Mongolian raids on European settlements, Western armies (particularly Hungary) started to adapt to the Mongol tactics by building better fortifications against siege weapons and improving their heavy cavalry.[50] After the division of the Mongol Empire into four fragments, when the Golden Horde attempted the next invasion of Hungary, Hungary had increased their proportion of knights (led by Ladislaus IV of Hungary) and they quickly defeated the main Golden Horde Army in the hills of western Transylvania.[51]

By this time as well, many Eastern and Central European countries had ended their hostilities with one another and united to finally drive out the remnants of the Golden Horde.[52] Guerrilla warfare and stiff resistance also helped many Europeans, particularly those in Croatia and Durdzuketia, in preventing the Mongols from setting a permanent hold and driving them off.[53][54]

Possible Mongol diffusion of gunpowder to Europe edit

Several sources mention the Mongols deploying firearms and gunpowder weapons against European forces at the Battle of Mohi in various forms, including bombs hurled via catapult.[55][56][57] Professor Kenneth Warren Chase credits the Mongols for introducing gunpowder and its associated weaponry into Europe.[58] A later legend arose in Europe about a mysterious Berthold Schwarz who is credited with the invention of gunpowder by 15th- through 19th-century European literature.[59]

End of the Mongol advance edit

During 1241, most of the Mongol forces were resting on the Hungarian Plain. In late March 1242, they began to withdraw. The most common reason given for this withdrawal is the Great Khan Ögedei's death on December 11, 1241. Ögedei Khan died at the age of fifty-six after a binge of drinking during a hunting trip, which forced most of the Mongolian army to retreat back to Mongolia so that the princes of the blood could be present for the election of a new great khan. This is attested to by one primary source: the chronicle of Giovanni da Pian del Carpine, who after visiting the Mongol court, stated that the Mongols withdrew for this reason; he further stated that God had caused the Great Khan's death to protect Latin Christendom.[60] As Stephen Pow pointed out in his analysis of this issue, by Carpini's account, a messenger would have to be able to make the journey from Mongolia to Central Europe in a little over three months at a minimum; the messenger would have to arrive in March, meaning he took about three months in the middle of winter from the time of the khan's death. Carpini himself accompanied a Mongol party in a much shorter journey (from Kiev to Mongolia) in 1246, where the party "made great speed" in order to reach the election ceremony in time, and made use of several horses per person while riding nearly all day and night. It took five months.[61]

 
Rus' states under Mongol control

Rashid Al-Din, a historian of the Mongol Ilkhanate, explicitly states in the Ilkhanate's official histories that the Mongols were not even aware of Ogedei's death when they began their withdrawal.[62] Rashid Al-Din, writing under the auspices of the Mongol Empire, had access to the official Mongol chronicle when compiling his history (Altan Debter). John Andrew Boyle asserts, based on the orthography, that Rashid Al-Din's account of the withdrawal from central Europe was taken verbatim from Mongolian records.[63]

Another theory is that weather data preserved in tree rings points to a series of warm, dry summers in the region until 1242. When temperatures dropped and rainfall increased, the local climate shifted to a wetter and colder environment. That, in turn, caused flooding of the formerly dry grasslands and created a marshy terrain. Those conditions would have been less than ideal for the nomadic Mongol cavalry and their encampments, reducing their mobility and pastureland, curtailing their invasion into Europe west of the Hungarian plain,[64] and hastening their retreat.

The true reasons for the Mongol withdrawal are not fully known, but numerous plausible explanations exist. The Mongol invasion had bogged down into a series of costly and frustrating sieges, where they gained little loot and ran into stiff resistance. They had lost a large number of men despite their victories (see above). Finally, they were stretched thin in the European theater, and were experiencing a rebellion by the Cumans (Batu returned to put it down, and spent roughly a year doing so).[65] Others argue Europe's bad weather had an effect: Hungary has a high water table so it floods easily. An analysis of tree rings there found that Hungary had cold wet weather in early 1242, which likely turned Hungary's central plain into a huge swamp; so, lacking pastures for their horses, the Mongols would have had to fall back to Rus' in search of better grasslands.[66]

Regardless of their reasons, the Mongols had completely withdrawn from Central Europe by mid-1242, though they still launched military operations in the west at this time, most notably the 1241–1243 Mongol invasion of Anatolia. Batu specifically decided against attending the kurultai in favor of staying in Europe, which delayed the ceremony for several years.[67]

The historian Jack Weatherford claims that European survival was due to Mongol unwillingness to fight in the more densely populated German principalities, where the weather affected the glue and sinew of the Mongol bows. However, a counter to this assertion is that the Mongols were willing to fight in the densely populated areas of Song China and India. Furthermore, the Mongols were able to conquer Southern China which is located in a tropical climate zone and would have received far more rainfall and humidity than anywhere in Europe.[68][69] The territory of Western Europe had more forests and castles than the Mongols were accustomed, and there were opportunities for the European heavy cavalry to counter-attack[citation needed]. Also, despite the steppe tactics of the Avars and early Hungarians, both were defeated by Western states in the 9th and 10th centuries, though many states conquered by the Mongols have also faced steppe tactics successfully before. A significant number of important castles and towns in Hungary had also resisted the formidable and infamous Mongol siege tactics.

John Keegan thought that Europeans had an advantage due to more food surpluses enabling better campaigns, and larger horses.[70]

Some historians believe that the reason for Batu's stopping at the Mohi River was that he never intended to advance further.[71] He had made the new Rus' conquests secure for the years to come, and when the Great Khan died and Batu rushed back to Mongolia to put in his claim for power, it ended his westward expansion. Subutai's recall at the same time left the Mongol armies without their spiritual head and primary strategist. Batu Khan was not able to resume his plans for conquest to the "Great Sea" (the Atlantic Ocean) until 1255, after the turmoil after Ögedei's death had finally subsided with the election of Möngke Khan as Great Khan. Though he was capable of invading Western Europe, he was no longer interested[citation needed].

Mongol infighting edit

 
Mongol successor khanates

From 1241 to 1248 a state of almost open warfare existed between Batu, son of Jochi, and Güyük, son of Ögedei. The Mongol Empire was ruled by a regency under Ögedei's widow Töregene Khatun, whose only goal was to secure the Great Khanate for her son, Güyük. There was so much bitterness between the two branches of the family that when Güyük died in 1248, he was on his way to confront Batu to force him to accept his authority. Batu also had problems in his last years with the Principality of Halych-Volhynia, whose ruler, Danylo of Halych, adopted a policy of confronting the Golden Horde and defeated some Mongol assaults in 1254. He was finally defeated in 1259, when Berke ruled the Horde. Batu Khan was unable to turn his army west until 1255, after Möngke had become Great Khan in 1251, and he had repaired his relations with the Great Khanate. However, as he prepared to finish the invasion of Europe, he died. His son did not live long enough to implement his father and Subutai's plan to invade Europe, and with his death, Batu's younger brother Berke became Khan of the Kipchak Khanate. Berke was not interested in invading Europe as much as stopping his cousin Hulagu Khan from ravaging the Holy Land. Berke had converted to Islam and watched with horror as his cousin destroyed the Abbasid Caliphate, the spiritual head of Islam as far as Berke was concerned. The Mamluks of Egypt, learning through spies that Berke was both a Muslim and not fond of his cousin, appealed to him for help and were careful to nourish their ties to him and his Khanate.

Both entities were Turkic in origin.[72] Many of the Mamluks were of Turkic descent and Berke's Khanate was almost totally Turkic also. Jochi, Genghis Khan's oldest son, was of disputed parentage and only received 4,000 Mongol warriors to start his Khanate. His warriors were virtually all Turkic people who had submitted to the Mongols. Thus, the Khanate was Turkic in culture and had more in common with their Muslim Turkic Mamluks brothers than with the Mongol shamanist Hulagu and his horde. Thus, when Hulagu Khan began to mass his army for war against the Mamluk-controlled Holy Land, they swiftly appealed to Berke Khan who sent armies against his cousin and forced him to defend his domains in the north.

Hulagu returned to his lands by 1262, but instead of being able to avenge his defeats, had to turn north to face Berke Khan, suffering severe defeat in an attempted invasion north of the Caucasus in 1263, after Berke Khan had lured him north and away from the Holy Land. Thus, the Kipchak Khanate never invaded Europe, keeping watch to the south and east instead. Berke sent troops into Europe only twice, in two relatively light raids in 1259 and 1265, simply to collect booty he needed to pay for his wars against Hulagu from 1262 to 1265.

Europe at the time of the Mongol invasion edit

 
Pope Gregory IX sanctioned a small Crusade against the Mongols in mid-1241

The Papacy had rejected the pleas of Georgia in favor of launching crusades in Iberia and the Middle East, as well as preaching a Crusade against Kievan Rus in 1238 for refusing to join his earlier Balkan Crusade. Meanwhile, Emperor Frederick II, a well-educated ruler, wanted to annex Italy to unite his separated kingdoms of the Holy Roman Empire and Sicily. In addition to calling a council to depose the Holy Roman Emperor, Pope Gregory IX and his successor Innocent IV excommunicated Frederick four times and labeled him the Antichrist.[73]

In the 1240s the efforts of Christendom were already divided between five Crusades, only one of which was aimed against the Mongols. Initially, when Bela sent messengers to the Pope to request a Crusade against the Mongols, the Pope tried to convince them to instead join his Crusade against the Holy Roman Emperor. Eventually Pope Gregory IX did promise a Crusade and the Church finally helped sanction a small Crusade against the Mongols in mid-1241, but it was diverted when he died in August 1241. Instead of fighting the Mongols, the resources gathered by the Crusade was used to fight a Crusade against the Hohenstaufen dynasty after the German barons revolted against the Holy Roman Emperor's son Conrad in September 1241.[74]

Later raids edit

The Golden Horde raids in the 1280s (those in Bulgaria, Hungary, and Poland), were much greater in scale than anything since the 1241–1242 invasion, thanks to the lack of civil war in the Mongol Empire at the time. They have sometimes been collectively referred to as "the second Mongol invasion of Europe", "the second Tatar-Mongol invasion of central and south-eastern Europe",[75] or "the second Mongol invasion of central Europe."[76]

Against Poland (1259 and 1287) edit

 
Martyrdom of Sadok and 48 Dominican martyrs of Sandomierz during the Second Mongol invasion of Poland

In 1259, eighteen years after the first attack, two tumens (20,000 men) from the Golden Horde, under the leadership of Berke, attacked Poland after raiding Lithuania.[77] This attack was commanded by general Burundai with young princes Nogai and Talabuga. Lublin, Sieradz, Sandomierz, Zawichost, Kraków, and Bytom were ravaged and plundered. Berke had no intention of occupying or conquering Poland. After this raid the Pope Alexander IV tried without success to organize a crusade against the Horde.

An unsuccessful invasion followed in 1287, led by Talabuga and Nogai Khan. 30,000 men (three tumens) in two columns under Nogai (10,000 Mongol cavalry) and Talabuga (20,000 Mongols and Ruthenians) respectively raided Lesser Poland to plunder the area and meet up north of Kraków. Lublin, Mazovia, and Sieradz were successfully raided, but the Mongols failed to capture Sandomierz and Kraków and were repulsed with heavy casualties when they attempted to assault the cities, although the cities were devastated. Talabuga's main army (the rest of his column having dissolved across the countryside for raiding) was defeated by Duke Leszek II at the Battle of Łagów. After this severe setback, Talabuga linked back up with the raiding parties and fled Poland with the loot that was already taken. Nogai's column, after suffering losses during the assault on Kraków, split up to raid the lands both north and south of the city. One detachment headed towards the town of Stary Sącz, another to Podolínec, and others to the Duchy of Sieradz. The first detachment was surprised and defeated by the Poles and their Hungarian allies in the Battle of Stary Sącz, while the second devastated the area of Podhale while skirmishing with the locals. After the defeat at Stary Sącz, Nogai's whole column retreated into Ruthenia.[78]

Against Byzantine Thrace (1265, 1324 and 1337) edit

During the reign of Berke there was also a raid against Thrace. In the winter of 1265, the Bulgarian czar, Constantine Tych, requested Mongol intervention against the Byzantines in the Balkans. Nogai Khan led a Mongol raid of 20,000 cavalry (two tumens) against the territories of Byzantine eastern Thrace. In early 1265, Michael VIII Palaeologus confronted the Mongols, but his smaller squadron apparently had very low morale and was quickly routed. Most of them were cut down as they fled. Michael was forced to retreat to Constantinople on a Genoese ship while Nogai's army plundered all of Thrace. Following this defeat, the Byzantine emperor made an alliance with the Golden Horde (which was massively beneficial for the latter), giving his daughter Euphrosyne in marriage to Nogai. Michael also sent much valuable fabric to Golden Horde as tribute.[79]

Thrace also suffered raids in 1324 and 1337, during the reign of Uzbeg Khan.[80]

Against Bulgaria (1271, 1274, 1280 and 1285) edit

The successors of Tsar Ivan Asen II – the regency of Kaliman Asen I decided to pay tax to the Golden Horde. In 1271 Nogai Khan led a successful raid against the country, which was a vassal of the Golden Horde until the early 14th century. Bulgaria was again raided by the Mongols in 1274, 1280 and 1285. In 1278 and 1279 Tsar Ivailo led the Bulgarian army and crushed the Mongol raids before being surrounded at Silistra.[81] After a three-month siege, he managed to once again break through the elite Mongol forces, forcing them to retreat north of the Danube. In 1280 a rebellion inspired by Byzantium left Ivailo without much support, and so he fled to Nogai's camp, asking him for help before being killed by the Mongols. Tsar George I, however, became a Mongol vassal before the Mongol threat was finally ended with the reign of Theodore Svetoslav.

 
Mongol invasion of Hungary in 1285 (Chronicon Pictum, 1358)

Against Hungary (1285) edit

In 1285 Nogai Khan led a raid of Hungary alongside Talabuga. Nogai lead an army that ravaged Transylvania with success: Cities like Reghin, Brașov and Bistrița were plundered and ravaged. However Talabuga, who led the main army in Northern Hungary, was stopped by the heavy snow of the Carpathians and the invading force was defeated[82] near Pest by the royal army of Ladislaus IV and ambushed by the Székely in the return. Nogai's own column suffered serious casualties. As with later invasions, it was repelled handily, the Mongols losing much of their invading force. The outcome could not have contrasted more sharply with the 1241 invasion, mostly due to the reforms of Béla IV, which included advances in military tactics and, most importantly, the widespread building of stone castles, both responses to the defeat of the Hungarian Kingdom in 1241. The failed Mongol attack on Hungary greatly reduced the Golden Horde's military power and caused them to stop disputing Hungarian borders.[76][83]

Against Serbia (1291) edit

 
Serbian king Uroš II Milutin after victory over Mongols

In 1291 a large Mongol-Bulgarian alliance raided into Serbia, where Serbian king Stefan Uroš II Milutin defeated the Mongolian contingent. However, after a threat that Nogai himself will return with the Golden Horde, the Serbian king acknowledged Nogai's supremacy and sent his son as hostage to prevent further hostility when Nogai threatened to lead a punitive expedition himself.[84]

Against Germany (1340) edit

Contemporary Swiss historian John of Winterthur reports attacks by the Mongols on Hungary, the March of Brandenburg and Prussia during the period of 1340–1341.[85]

Counter-invasions of Europe edit

By the mid-14th century the grip of the Golden Horde over Central and Eastern Europe had started to weaken. Several European kingdoms started various incursions into Mongol-controlled lands with the aim of reclaiming captured territories as well as adding new ones from the Empire itself. The Kingdom of Georgia, under the leadership of King George V the Brilliant, restored Georgian dominance in their own lands and even took the Empire of Trebizond from Mongol hands.[86] Lithuania, taking advantage of internal strifes in the Golden Horde, started an invasion of their own, defeating the Mongols at the Battle at Blue Waters, as well as conquering territories of the Golden Horde such as the Principality of Kiev all the way to the Dnieper River, before being halted after their defeat at the Battle of the Vorskla River.[87][88] The Duchy of Moscow also started to reclaim many Rus' lands, eventually developing into the Tsardom of Russia. In 1345, the Kingdom of Hungary took the initiative and launched their own invasion force into Mongolian territory, capturing what would become Moldavia.[89]

By this point, some Western European armies also started to meet the Mongols in their conquered territories. In the siege of Caffa for example, when the Mongols under Janibeg besieged Caffa in Crimea, a relief force of an Genoese army came and defeated the Mongols, killing 15,000 of their troops and destroying their siege engines. A year later, the Genoese blockaded Mongol ports in the region, forcing Janibeg to negotiate, and in 1347 the Genoese were allowed to reestablish their colony in Tana on the Sea of Azov.[90]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

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Sources edit

  • Sverdrup, Carl (2010). "Numbers in Mongol Warfare". Journal of Medieval Military History. Boydell Press. 8: 109–17 [p. 115]. ISBN 978-1-84383-596-7.

Further reading edit

  • Allsen, Thomas T. (March 25, 2004). Culture and Conquest in Mongol Eurasia. Cambridge UP. ISBN 9780521602709.
  • Atwood, Christopher P. Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire (2004)
  • Chambers, James. The Devil's Horsemen: The Mongol Invasion of Europe (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1979)
  • Christian, David. A History of Russia, Central Asia and Mongolia Vol. 1: Inner Eurasia from Prehistory to the Mongol Empire (Blackwell, 1998)
  • Cook, David, "Apocalyptic Incidents during the Mongol Invasions", in Brandes, Wolfram / Schmieder, Felicitas (hg), Endzeiten. Eschatologie in den monotheistischen Weltreligionen (Berlin, de Gruyter, 2008) (Millennium-Studien / Millennium Studies / Studien zu Kultur und Geschichte des ersten Jahrtausends n. Chr. / Studies in the Culture and History of the First Millennium C.E., 16), 293–312.
  • Halperin, Charles J. Russia and the golden horde: the Mongol impact on medieval Russian history (Indiana University Press, 1985)
  • May, Timothy. The Mongol conquests in world history (Reaktion Books, 2013)
  • Morgan, David. The Mongols, ISBN 0-631-17563-6
  • Nicolle, David. The Mongol Warlords, Brockhampton Press, 1998
  • Reagan, Geoffry. The Guinness Book of Decisive Battles, Canopy Books, New York (1992)
  • Saunders, J.J. The History of the Mongol Conquests, Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd, 1971, ISBN 0-8122-1766-7
  • Sinor, Denis (1999). . Journal of Asian History. 33 (1). Archived from the original on June 5, 2011. Retrieved April 21, 2007.; also in JSTOR
  • Vernadsky, George. The Mongols and Russia (Yale University Press, 1953)
    • Halperin, Charles J. "George Vernadsky, Eurasianism, the Mongols, and Russia." Slavic Review (1982): 477–493. in JSTOR
  • Craughwell, Thomas J. (February 1, 2010). The Rise and Fall of the Second Largest Empire in History: How Genghis Khan almost conquered the world. Fair Winds. ISBN 9781616738518.
  • Kauffman, JE (April 14, 2004). The medieval Fortress:Castles, Forts and Walled Cities of the medieval ages. Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-306-81358-0.\
  • Fagan, Brian (August 1, 2010). The Great Warming:Climate Change and the Rise and Fall of Civilization. Bloomsbury Press. ISBN 978-1-59691-780-4.
  • Penn, Imma (2007). Dogma Evolution & Papal Fallacies:An Unveiled History of Catholicism. AuthorHouse. ISBN 978-1-4343-0874-0.

External links edit

    mongol, invasion, europe, part, mongol, invasions, conquests, 1236, 1242date1220s, 1240slocationeastern, europe, northern, europe, central, europe, caucasus, balkansresultmongol, victory, numerous, european, political, entities, destroyed, subjugated, raided, . Mongol invasion of EuropePart of the Mongol invasions and conquestsMongol invasion of Europe 1236 1242Date1220s 1240sLocationEastern Europe Northern Europe Central Europe the Caucasus and the BalkansResultMongol victory Numerous European political entities destroyed subjugated or raided and forced to pay tribute Devastation of the populations cultures and political structures in most of Eastern Europe the Caucasus and Central Europe Eventual Mongol withdrawal from Central Europe 1242 TerritorialchangesVolga Bulgaria Cumania Alania and the Kievan Rus principalities conquered and become vassals of the Mongol Empire The Kingdom of Georgia subjugated Parts of the Kingdom of Hungary temporarily controlled by Mongol Empire Eastern and Central Europe and the North Caucasus repeatedly subject to raids and invasions BelligerentsKievan Rus Vladimir Suzdal Principality of Kiev Galicia Volhynia Novgorod Republic Smolensk Rostov Turov and Pinsk Chernigov Ryazan Pereyaslavl Cumans 1223 Kingdom of Poland Kingdom of Bohemia Kingdom of Hungary Kingdom of CroatiaMargravate of Meissen Second Bulgarian EmpireKingdom of Serbia medieval CumaniaSupported by Duchy of Austria Margraviate of Moravia Knights Templar Holy Roman empire Byzantine EmpireMongol Empire From the 1220s into the 1240s the Mongols conquered the Turkic states of Volga Bulgaria Cumania and Iranian state of Alania and various principalities in Eastern Europe Following this they began their invasion into Central Europe by launching a two pronged invasion of then fragmented Poland culminating in the Battle of Legnica 9 April 1241 and the Kingdom of Hungary culminating in the Battle of Mohi 11 April 1241 1 failed verification Invasions were also launched into the Caucasus against the Kingdom of Georgia the Chechens the Ingush and Circassia though they failed to fully subjugate the latter More invasions were launched in Southeast Europe against Bulgaria Croatia and the Latin Empire The operations were planned by General Subutai 1175 1248 and commanded by Batu Khan c 1207 1255 and Kadan d c 1261 two grandsons of Genghis Khan Their conquests integrated much of Eastern European territory into the empire of the Golden Horde Warring European princes realized they had to cooperate in the face of a Mongol invasion so local wars and conflicts were suspended in parts of central Europe only to be resumed after the Mongols had withdrawn 2 After the initial invasions subsequent raids and punitive expeditions continued into the late 13th century Contents 1 General overview 2 Invasions and conquest of Kievan Rus 3 Invasion of Central Europe 3 1 Invasion of Poland 3 2 Invasion of German lands 3 3 Invasion of Lands of the Bohemian crown Bohemia Moravia 3 4 Invasion of Hungary 3 4 1 Invasion of Croatia 3 5 Invasion of Austria 3 6 Invasion of Bulgaria 4 European tactics against Mongols 5 Possible Mongol diffusion of gunpowder to Europe 6 End of the Mongol advance 6 1 Mongol infighting 7 Europe at the time of the Mongol invasion 8 Later raids 8 1 Against Poland 1259 and 1287 8 2 Against Byzantine Thrace 1265 1324 and 1337 8 3 Against Bulgaria 1271 1274 1280 and 1285 8 4 Against Hungary 1285 8 5 Against Serbia 1291 8 6 Against Germany 1340 8 7 Counter invasions of Europe 9 Gallery 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Citations 11 2 Sources 12 Further reading 13 External linksGeneral overview editFurther information Lists of battles of the Mongol invasion of Europe nbsp Mongol expansionInvasions and conquest of Kievan Rus editMain article Mongol invasion of Kievan Rus nbsp Returning to Vladimir by Yaroslav II of Vladimir after Mongol destruction From the medieval Rus annals nbsp The Mongol army captures a Rus cityIn 1223 Mongols routed a near 50 000 Rus Cuman army at the Battle of the Kalka River near modern day Mariupol before turning back for nearly a decade Ogedei Khan ordered Batu Khan to conquer Rus in 1235 3 The main force headed by Jochi s sons and their cousins Mongke Khan and Guyuk Khan arrived at Ryazan in December 1237 Ryazan refused to surrender and the Mongols sacked it and then stormed Suzdalia Many Rus armies were defeated Grand Prince Yuri was killed on the Sit River March 4 1238 Major cities such as Vladimir Torzhok and Kozelsk were captured Afterward the Mongols turned their attention to the steppe crushing the Kypchaks and the Alans and sacking Crimea Batu appeared in Kievan Rus in 1239 sacking Pereiaslav and Chernihiv The Mongols sacked Kiev on December 6 1240 destroyed Sutiejsk and conquered Halych along with Volodymyr Volynskyi Batu sent a small detachment to probe the Poles before passing on to Central Europe One column was routed by the Poles while the other defeated the Polish army and returned 4 Invasion of Central Europe editThe attack on Europe was planned and executed by Subutai who achieved perhaps his most lasting fame with his victories there Having devastated the various Rus principalities he sent spies into Poland and Hungary and as far as eastern Austria in preparation for an attack into the heartland of Europe 5 Having a clear picture of the European kingdoms he prepared an attack nominally commanded by Batu Khan and two other familial related princes Batu Khan son of Jochi was the overall leader but Subutai was the strategist and commander in the field and as such was present in both the northern and southern campaigns against Rus principalities 6 He also commanded the central column that moved against Hungary While Kadan s northern force won the Battle of Liegnitz and Guyuk s army triumphed in Transylvania Subutai was waiting for them on the Hungarian plain The newly reunited army then withdrew to the Sajo river where they inflicted a decisive defeat on King Bela IV of Hungary at the Battle of Mohi Again Subutai masterminded the operation and it would prove one of his greatest victories Invasion of Poland edit Main article First Mongol invasion of Poland nbsp Henry II the Pious who lost his life at the battle of Legnica 19th century painting by Jan Matejko nbsp The Mongols at Legnica display the head of Henry II of the Duchy of Silesia and High Duke of PolandThe Mongols invaded Central Europe with three armies One army defeated an alliance which included forces from fragmented Poland and their allies led by Henry II the Pious Duke of Silesia in the Battle of Liegnitz A second army crossed the Carpathian mountains and a third followed the Danube The armies re grouped and crushed Hungary in 1241 defeating the Hungarian army at the Battle of Mohi on April 11 1241 The devastating Mongol invasion killed half of Hungary s population 7 The armies swept the plains of Hungary over the summer and in early 1242 regained impetus and extended their control into Dalmatia and Moravia The Great Khan had however died in December 1241 and on hearing the news all the Princes of the Blood against Subotai s recommendation went back to Mongolia to elect the new Khan 8 After sacking Kiev 9 Batu Khan sent a smaller group of troops to Poland destroying Lublin and defeating an inferior Polish army Other elements not part of the main Mongol force saw difficulty near the Polish Halych border The Mongols then reached Polaniec on the Czarna Hancza where they set up camp 10 There the Voivode attacked them with the remaining Cracovian knights which were few in number but determined to vanquish the invader or die Surprise gave the Poles an initial advantage and they managed to kill many Mongol soldiers When the invaders realized the actual numerical weakness of the Poles they regrouped broke through the Polish ranks and defeated them During the fighting many Polish prisoners of war found ways to escape and hide in the nearby woods The Polish defeat was partly influenced by the initially successful Polish knights having been distracted by looting Invasion of German lands edit On 9 April 1241 Mongol detachments entered the Margravate of Meissen and the March of Lusatia following a decisive Mongol victory at the Battle of Legnica in Poland 11 The Mongol light reconnaissance units led by Orda Khan pillaged through Meissen and burned most of the city of Meissen to the ground 12 The Chronica sancti Pantaleonis records these attacks Invasion of Lands of the Bohemian crown Bohemia Moravia edit After the defeat of the European forces at Liegnitz the Mongols then continued pillaging throughout Poland s neighboring states particularly Moravia King Wenceslaus I of Bohemia returned to protect his kingdom after arriving in Liegnitz a day late He gathered reinforcements from Thuringia and Saxony on his way back He stationed his troops in the mountainous border regions of Bohemia where the Mongols would not be able to utilize their cavalry effectively 13 By that time Mongolian forces had divided into two one led by Batu and Subutai who were planning to invade Hungary and another led by Baidar and Kadan who were ravaging their way through Silesia and Moravia When they arrived to attack Bohemia the kingdom s defenses discouraged them from attacking and they withdrew to the town of Othmachau 13 14 A small force of Mongolians did attack the strategically located on the way to the mountain passes Bohemian town of Kladsko but Wenceslaus cavalry managed to fend them off 15 16 The Mongols then tried to take the town of Olomouc but Wenceslaus with the aid of Austrian Babenbergs repulsed the raid 13 17 18 A Mongol commander was captured in a sortie near Olomouc 19 Under Wenceslaus leadership during the Mongol invasion Bohemia remained one of a few central European kingdoms that was never pillaged by the Mongols even though most countries around it such as Poland and Hungary were ravaged 13 Such was his success that chroniclers sent messages to Emperor Frederick II of his victorious defense 20 After these failed attempts Baidar and Kadan continued raiding Moravia via the Moravian Gate route into the valley of the river March towards the Danube before finally going southward to reunite with Batu and Subutai in Hungary Invasion of Hungary edit Main article First Mongol invasion of Hungary The Hungarians had first learned about the Mongol threat in 1229 when King Andrew II granted asylum to some fleeing Ruthenian boyars Some Magyars Hungarians left behind during the main migration to the Pannonian basin still lived on the banks of the upper Volga it is believed by some who that the descendants of this group are the modern day Bashkirs although this people now speaks a Turkic language not Magyar In 1237 a Dominican friar Julianus set off on an expedition to lead them back and was sent back to King Bela with a letter from Batu Khan In this letter Batu called upon the Hungarian king to surrender his kingdom unconditionally to the Tatar forces or face complete destruction Bela did not reply and two more messages were later delivered to Hungary The first in 1239 was sent by the defeated Cuman tribes who asked for and received asylum in Hungary The second was sent in February 1241 by the defeated Polish princes Only then did King Bela call upon his magnates to join his army in defense of the country He also asked the papacy and the Western European rulers for help Foreign help came in the form of a small knight detachment under the leadership of Frederick II Duke of Austria but it was too small to change the outcome of the campaign The majority of the Hungarian magnates also did not realize the urgency of the matter Some may have hoped that a defeat of the royal army would force Bela to discontinue his centralization efforts and thus strengthen their own power Although the Mongol danger was real and imminent Hungary was not prepared to deal with it in the minds of a people who had lived free from nomadic invasions for the last few hundred years an invasion seemed impossible and Hungary was no longer a predominantly soldier population Only rich nobles were trained as heavy armored cavalry The Hungarians had long since forgotten the light cavalry strategy and tactics of their ancestors which were similar to those now used by the Mongols The Hungarian army some 60 000 on the eve of the Battle of Mohi was made up of individual knights with tactical knowledge discipline and talented commanders Because his army was not experienced in nomadic warfare King Bela welcomed the Cuman King Kuthen also known as Kotony and his fighters However the Cuman invitation proved detrimental to the Hungarians because Batu Khan considered this acceptance of a group he considered rebels as justifications for his invasion of Hungary After rumors began to circulate in Hungary that the Cumans were agents of the Mongols some hot headed Hungarians attacked the Cuman camp and killed Kotony This led the enraged Cumans to ride south ravaging the countryside and slaughtering the unsuspecting Magyar population The Austrian troops retreated to Austria shortly thereafter to gain more western aid The Hungarians now stood alone in the defense of their country nbsp Battle of Mohi in a Medieval era depictionThe 1241 Mongol invasion first affected Moldavia and Wallachia situated east and south of the Carpathians Tens of thousands of Wallachians and Moldavians lost their lives defending their territories from the Golden Horde Crops and goods plundered from Wallachian settlements seem to have been a primary supply source for the Golden Horde The invaders killed up to half of the population and burned down most of their settlements thus destroying much of the cultural and economic records from that period Neither the Wallachians nor the army of Hungary offered much resistance against the Mongols 21 The swiftness of the invasion took many by surprise and forced them to retreat and hide in forests and the enclosed valleys of the Carpathians In the end however the main target of the invasion was the Kingdom of Hungary 21 The Hungarian army arrived and encamped at the Sajo River on April 10 1241 without having been directly challenged by the Mongols The Mongols having largely concealed their positions began their attack the next night after heavier than expected losses inflicted by Hungarian crossbowmen the Mongols adjusted their strategy and routed the Hungarian forces rapidly A major Hungarian loss was imminent and the Mongols intentionally left a gap in their formation to permit the wavering Hungarian forces to flee and spread out in doing so leaving them unable to effectively resist the Mongols as they picked off the retreating Hungarian remnants While the king escaped with the help of his bodyguard the remaining Hungarian army was killed by the Mongols or drowned in the river as they attempted escape Following their decisive victory the Mongols now systematically occupied the Great Hungarian Plains the slopes of the northern Carpathian Mountains and Transylvania Where they found local resistance they killed the population Where the locale offered no resistance they forced the men into servitude in the Mongol army Still tens of thousands avoided Mongol domination by taking refuge behind the walls of the few existing fortresses or by hiding in the forests or large marshes along the rivers The Mongols instead of leaving the defenseless and helpless people and continuing their campaign through Pannonia to Western Europe spent time securing and pacifying the occupied territories On Christmas 1241 the costly siege of Esztergom destroyed the capital and economic center of the Kingdom of Hungary forcing the capital to be moved to Buda 22 During the winter contrary to the traditional strategy of nomadic armies which started campaigns only in spring time they crossed the Danube and continued their systematic occupation including Pannonia They eventually reached the Austrian borders and the Adriatic shores in Dalmatia The Mongols appointed a darughachi in Hungary and minted coins in the name of the Khagan 23 According to Michael Prawdin the country of Bela was assigned to Orda by Batu as an appanage At least 20 40 of the population died by slaughter or epidemic Rogerius of Apulia an Italian monk and chronicler who witnessed and survived the invasion pointed out not only the genocidal element of the occupation but also that the Mongols especially found pleasure in humiliating local women 24 But while the Mongols claimed control of Hungary they could not occupy fortified cities such as Fehervar Veszprem Tihany Gyor Pannonhalma Moson Sopron Vasvar Ujhely Zala Leka Pozsony Nyitra Komarom Fulek and Abaujvar Learning from this lesson fortresses came to play a significant role in Hungary King Bela IV rebuilt the country and invested in fortifications Facing a shortage of money he welcomed the settlement of Jewish families investors and tradesmen granting them citizenship rights The King also welcomed tens of thousands of Kun Cumans who had fled the country before the invasion Chinese fire arrows were deployed by Mongols against the city of Buda on December 25 1241 which they overran 25 The Mongolian invasion taught the Magyars a simple lesson although the Mongols had destroyed the countryside the forts and fortified cities had survived To improve their defense capabilities for the future they had to build forts not only on the borders but also inside the country In the siege of Esztergom the defenses managed to hold off the Mongolians despite the latter having overwhelming numerical superiority and 30 siege machines which they had just used to reduce the wooden towers of the city 26 27 During the remaining decades of the 13th century and throughout the 14th century the kings donated more and more royal land to the magnates with the condition that they build forts and ensure their defenses Invasion of Croatia edit nbsp At Klis Fortress the Mongols experienced defeat in 1242 27 During the Middle Ages the Kingdom of Croatia was in a personal union with the Kingdom of Hungary with Bela IV as a king 28 29 30 After being routed on the banks of the Sajo river in 1241 by the Mongols Bela IV fled to today s Zagreb in Croatia Batu sent a few tumens roughly 20 000 men at arms under Khadan in pursuit of Bela The major objective was not the conquest but the capture of the Arpad king The poorly fortified Zagreb was unable to resist the invasion and was destroyed its cathedral burned by Mongols 31 In preparation for a second invasion Gradec was granted a royal charter or Golden Bull of 1242 by King Bela IV after which citizens of Zagreb engaged in building defensive walls and towers around their settlement 32 The Mongols pursuit of Bela IV continued from Zagreb through Pannonia to Dalmatia While in pursuit the Mongols under the leadership of Kadan Qadan attacked Klis Fortress in Croatia in March 1242 Due to the strong fortifications of Klis the Mongols dismounted and climbed over the walls using nearby cliffs The defenders were able to inflict a number of casualties on the Mongols which enraged the latter and caused them to fight hand to hand in the streets and gather a sizable amount of loot from houses As soon as they learned that King Bela was elsewhere they abandoned the attack and split off to attack Split and Trogir 33 The Mongols pursued Bela IV from town to town in Dalmatia while Croatian nobility and Dalmatian towns such as Trogir and Rab helped Bela IV to escape After being defeated by the Croatian soldiers the Mongols retreated and Bela IV was awarded Croatian towns and nobility Only the city of Split did not aid Bela IV in his escape from the Mongols Some historians claim that the mountainous terrain of Croatian Dalmatia was fatal for the Mongols because of the great losses they suffered from Croat ambushes in mountain passes 32 In any case though much of Croatia was plundered and destroyed long term occupation was unsuccessful Saint Margaret January 27 1242 January 18 1271 a daughter of Bela IV and Maria Laskarina was born in Klis Fortress during the Mongol invasion of Hungary Croatia in 1242 34 Historians estimate that up to half of Hungary s two million population at that time were victims of the Mongol invasion of Europe 35 Invasion of Austria edit Main article Mongol incursions in the Holy Roman Empire The subjugation of Hungary opened a pathway for the Mongol Horde to invade Vienna Using similar tactics during their campaigns in previous Eastern and Central European countries the Mongols first launched small squadrons to attack isolated settlements in the outskirts of Vienna in an attempt to instill fear and panic among the populace 36 In 1241 the Mongols raided Wiener Neustadt and its neighboring districts located south of Vienna Wiener Neustadt took the brunt of the attack and like previous invasions the Mongols committed horrible atrocities on the relatively unarmed populace The city of Korneuburg just north of Vienna was also pillaged and destroyed 37 The Duke of Austria Frederick II had previously engaged the Mongols in Olomouc and in the initial stages of the Battle of Mohi Unlike in Hungary however Vienna under the leadership of Duke Frederick and his knights together with their foreign allies managed to rally quicker and annihilate the small Mongolian squadron 38 39 After the battle the Duke estimated that the Mongols lost 300 to upwards of 700 men while the defending Europeans lost 100 40 Austrian knights also subsequently defeated the Mongols at the borders of the River March in the district of Theben 41 After the failed initial raids the rest of the Mongols retreated after learning of the Great Khan Ogedei s death disputed discuss Invasion of Bulgaria edit Main articles Mongol invasion of Bulgaria and Serbia and Mongol invasion of the Latin Empire During his withdrawal from Hungary back into Ruthenia part of Batu Khan s army invaded Bulgaria A Mongolian force was defeated by the Bulgarian army under Tsar Ivan Asen II 42 A larger force returned to raid Bulgaria again the same year though little is known of what happened According to the Persian historian Rashid al Din Hamadani the Bulgarian capital of Tarnovo was sacked This is unlikely but rumor of it spread widely being repeated in Palestine by Bar Hebraeus 43 The invasion of Bulgaria is mentioned in other contemporary sources such as Philippe Mouskes Thomas of Cantimpre and Ricoldo of Montecroce 44 Contemporary documents indicate that by 1253 Kaliman I was a tribute paying vassal of the Mongols a status he had probably been forced to accept during the invasion of 1242 45 European tactics against Mongols editThe traditional European method of warfare of melee combat between knights ended in catastrophe when it was deployed against the Mongol forces as the Mongols were able to keep a distance and advance with superior numbers The New Encyclopaedia Britannica Volume 29 says that Employed against the Mongol invaders of Europe knightly warfare failed even more disastrously for the Poles at the Battle of Legnica and the Hungarians at the Battle of Mohi in 1241 Feudal Europe was saved from sharing the fate of China and the Grand Duchy of Moscow not by its tactical prowess but by the unexpected death of the Mongols supreme ruler Ogedei and the subsequent eastward retreat of his armies 46 However during the initial Mongol invasion and the subsequent raids afterwards heavily armored knights and cavalry proved more effective at fighting the Mongols than their light armored counterparts During the Battle of Mohi for example while the Hungarian light cavalry and infantry were decimated by Mongol forces the heavily armored knights in their employ such as the Knights Templar fought significantly better 47 During the Battle of Liegnitz the Knights Templar that numbered between 65 and 88 during the battle lost only three knights and 2 sergeants 48 Austrian knights under Duke Frederick also fared better in fighting the Mongol invasion in Vienna 39 King Bela IV of Hungary hired the help of the Knights Hospitaller as well as training his own better armed local knights in preparation for the Second Mongol invasion of Hungary 49 In the decades following the Mongolian raids on European settlements Western armies particularly Hungary started to adapt to the Mongol tactics by building better fortifications against siege weapons and improving their heavy cavalry 50 After the division of the Mongol Empire into four fragments when the Golden Horde attempted the next invasion of Hungary Hungary had increased their proportion of knights led by Ladislaus IV of Hungary and they quickly defeated the main Golden Horde Army in the hills of western Transylvania 51 By this time as well many Eastern and Central European countries had ended their hostilities with one another and united to finally drive out the remnants of the Golden Horde 52 Guerrilla warfare and stiff resistance also helped many Europeans particularly those in Croatia and Durdzuketia in preventing the Mongols from setting a permanent hold and driving them off 53 54 Possible Mongol diffusion of gunpowder to Europe editSeveral sources mention the Mongols deploying firearms and gunpowder weapons against European forces at the Battle of Mohi in various forms including bombs hurled via catapult 55 56 57 Professor Kenneth Warren Chase credits the Mongols for introducing gunpowder and its associated weaponry into Europe 58 A later legend arose in Europe about a mysterious Berthold Schwarz who is credited with the invention of gunpowder by 15th through 19th century European literature 59 End of the Mongol advance editDuring 1241 most of the Mongol forces were resting on the Hungarian Plain In late March 1242 they began to withdraw The most common reason given for this withdrawal is the Great Khan Ogedei s death on December 11 1241 Ogedei Khan died at the age of fifty six after a binge of drinking during a hunting trip which forced most of the Mongolian army to retreat back to Mongolia so that the princes of the blood could be present for the election of a new great khan This is attested to by one primary source the chronicle of Giovanni da Pian del Carpine who after visiting the Mongol court stated that the Mongols withdrew for this reason he further stated that God had caused the Great Khan s death to protect Latin Christendom 60 As Stephen Pow pointed out in his analysis of this issue by Carpini s account a messenger would have to be able to make the journey from Mongolia to Central Europe in a little over three months at a minimum the messenger would have to arrive in March meaning he took about three months in the middle of winter from the time of the khan s death Carpini himself accompanied a Mongol party in a much shorter journey from Kiev to Mongolia in 1246 where the party made great speed in order to reach the election ceremony in time and made use of several horses per person while riding nearly all day and night It took five months 61 nbsp Rus states under Mongol controlRashid Al Din a historian of the Mongol Ilkhanate explicitly states in the Ilkhanate s official histories that the Mongols were not even aware of Ogedei s death when they began their withdrawal 62 Rashid Al Din writing under the auspices of the Mongol Empire had access to the official Mongol chronicle when compiling his history Altan Debter John Andrew Boyle asserts based on the orthography that Rashid Al Din s account of the withdrawal from central Europe was taken verbatim from Mongolian records 63 Another theory is that weather data preserved in tree rings points to a series of warm dry summers in the region until 1242 When temperatures dropped and rainfall increased the local climate shifted to a wetter and colder environment That in turn caused flooding of the formerly dry grasslands and created a marshy terrain Those conditions would have been less than ideal for the nomadic Mongol cavalry and their encampments reducing their mobility and pastureland curtailing their invasion into Europe west of the Hungarian plain 64 and hastening their retreat The true reasons for the Mongol withdrawal are not fully known but numerous plausible explanations exist The Mongol invasion had bogged down into a series of costly and frustrating sieges where they gained little loot and ran into stiff resistance They had lost a large number of men despite their victories see above Finally they were stretched thin in the European theater and were experiencing a rebellion by the Cumans Batu returned to put it down and spent roughly a year doing so 65 Others argue Europe s bad weather had an effect Hungary has a high water table so it floods easily An analysis of tree rings there found that Hungary had cold wet weather in early 1242 which likely turned Hungary s central plain into a huge swamp so lacking pastures for their horses the Mongols would have had to fall back to Rus in search of better grasslands 66 Regardless of their reasons the Mongols had completely withdrawn from Central Europe by mid 1242 though they still launched military operations in the west at this time most notably the 1241 1243 Mongol invasion of Anatolia Batu specifically decided against attending the kurultai in favor of staying in Europe which delayed the ceremony for several years 67 The historian Jack Weatherford claims that European survival was due to Mongol unwillingness to fight in the more densely populated German principalities where the weather affected the glue and sinew of the Mongol bows However a counter to this assertion is that the Mongols were willing to fight in the densely populated areas of Song China and India Furthermore the Mongols were able to conquer Southern China which is located in a tropical climate zone and would have received far more rainfall and humidity than anywhere in Europe 68 69 The territory of Western Europe had more forests and castles than the Mongols were accustomed and there were opportunities for the European heavy cavalry to counter attack citation needed Also despite the steppe tactics of the Avars and early Hungarians both were defeated by Western states in the 9th and 10th centuries though many states conquered by the Mongols have also faced steppe tactics successfully before A significant number of important castles and towns in Hungary had also resisted the formidable and infamous Mongol siege tactics John Keegan thought that Europeans had an advantage due to more food surpluses enabling better campaigns and larger horses 70 Some historians believe that the reason for Batu s stopping at the Mohi River was that he never intended to advance further 71 He had made the new Rus conquests secure for the years to come and when the Great Khan died and Batu rushed back to Mongolia to put in his claim for power it ended his westward expansion Subutai s recall at the same time left the Mongol armies without their spiritual head and primary strategist Batu Khan was not able to resume his plans for conquest to the Great Sea the Atlantic Ocean until 1255 after the turmoil after Ogedei s death had finally subsided with the election of Mongke Khan as Great Khan Though he was capable of invading Western Europe he was no longer interested citation needed Mongol infighting edit nbsp Mongol successor khanatesFrom 1241 to 1248 a state of almost open warfare existed between Batu son of Jochi and Guyuk son of Ogedei The Mongol Empire was ruled by a regency under Ogedei s widow Toregene Khatun whose only goal was to secure the Great Khanate for her son Guyuk There was so much bitterness between the two branches of the family that when Guyuk died in 1248 he was on his way to confront Batu to force him to accept his authority Batu also had problems in his last years with the Principality of Halych Volhynia whose ruler Danylo of Halych adopted a policy of confronting the Golden Horde and defeated some Mongol assaults in 1254 He was finally defeated in 1259 when Berke ruled the Horde Batu Khan was unable to turn his army west until 1255 after Mongke had become Great Khan in 1251 and he had repaired his relations with the Great Khanate However as he prepared to finish the invasion of Europe he died His son did not live long enough to implement his father and Subutai s plan to invade Europe and with his death Batu s younger brother Berke became Khan of the Kipchak Khanate Berke was not interested in invading Europe as much as stopping his cousin Hulagu Khan from ravaging the Holy Land Berke had converted to Islam and watched with horror as his cousin destroyed the Abbasid Caliphate the spiritual head of Islam as far as Berke was concerned The Mamluks of Egypt learning through spies that Berke was both a Muslim and not fond of his cousin appealed to him for help and were careful to nourish their ties to him and his Khanate Both entities were Turkic in origin 72 Many of the Mamluks were of Turkic descent and Berke s Khanate was almost totally Turkic also Jochi Genghis Khan s oldest son was of disputed parentage and only received 4 000 Mongol warriors to start his Khanate His warriors were virtually all Turkic people who had submitted to the Mongols Thus the Khanate was Turkic in culture and had more in common with their Muslim Turkic Mamluks brothers than with the Mongol shamanist Hulagu and his horde Thus when Hulagu Khan began to mass his army for war against the Mamluk controlled Holy Land they swiftly appealed to Berke Khan who sent armies against his cousin and forced him to defend his domains in the north Hulagu returned to his lands by 1262 but instead of being able to avenge his defeats had to turn north to face Berke Khan suffering severe defeat in an attempted invasion north of the Caucasus in 1263 after Berke Khan had lured him north and away from the Holy Land Thus the Kipchak Khanate never invaded Europe keeping watch to the south and east instead Berke sent troops into Europe only twice in two relatively light raids in 1259 and 1265 simply to collect booty he needed to pay for his wars against Hulagu from 1262 to 1265 Europe at the time of the Mongol invasion edit nbsp Pope Gregory IX sanctioned a small Crusade against the Mongols in mid 1241The Papacy had rejected the pleas of Georgia in favor of launching crusades in Iberia and the Middle East as well as preaching a Crusade against Kievan Rus in 1238 for refusing to join his earlier Balkan Crusade Meanwhile Emperor Frederick II a well educated ruler wanted to annex Italy to unite his separated kingdoms of the Holy Roman Empire and Sicily In addition to calling a council to depose the Holy Roman Emperor Pope Gregory IX and his successor Innocent IV excommunicated Frederick four times and labeled him the Antichrist 73 In the 1240s the efforts of Christendom were already divided between five Crusades only one of which was aimed against the Mongols Initially when Bela sent messengers to the Pope to request a Crusade against the Mongols the Pope tried to convince them to instead join his Crusade against the Holy Roman Emperor Eventually Pope Gregory IX did promise a Crusade and the Church finally helped sanction a small Crusade against the Mongols in mid 1241 but it was diverted when he died in August 1241 Instead of fighting the Mongols the resources gathered by the Crusade was used to fight a Crusade against the Hohenstaufen dynasty after the German barons revolted against the Holy Roman Emperor s son Conrad in September 1241 74 Later raids editThe Golden Horde raids in the 1280s those in Bulgaria Hungary and Poland were much greater in scale than anything since the 1241 1242 invasion thanks to the lack of civil war in the Mongol Empire at the time They have sometimes been collectively referred to as the second Mongol invasion of Europe the second Tatar Mongol invasion of central and south eastern Europe 75 or the second Mongol invasion of central Europe 76 Against Poland 1259 and 1287 edit This section relies largely or entirely upon a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources at this section March 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Martyrdom of Sadok and 48 Dominican martyrs of Sandomierz during the Second Mongol invasion of PolandMain articles Mongol invasion of Lithuania and Second Mongol invasion of Poland In 1259 eighteen years after the first attack two tumens 20 000 men from the Golden Horde under the leadership of Berke attacked Poland after raiding Lithuania 77 This attack was commanded by general Burundai with young princes Nogai and Talabuga Lublin Sieradz Sandomierz Zawichost Krakow and Bytom were ravaged and plundered Berke had no intention of occupying or conquering Poland After this raid the Pope Alexander IV tried without success to organize a crusade against the Horde Main article Third Mongol invasion of Poland An unsuccessful invasion followed in 1287 led by Talabuga and Nogai Khan 30 000 men three tumens in two columns under Nogai 10 000 Mongol cavalry and Talabuga 20 000 Mongols and Ruthenians respectively raided Lesser Poland to plunder the area and meet up north of Krakow Lublin Mazovia and Sieradz were successfully raided but the Mongols failed to capture Sandomierz and Krakow and were repulsed with heavy casualties when they attempted to assault the cities although the cities were devastated Talabuga s main army the rest of his column having dissolved across the countryside for raiding was defeated by Duke Leszek II at the Battle of Lagow After this severe setback Talabuga linked back up with the raiding parties and fled Poland with the loot that was already taken Nogai s column after suffering losses during the assault on Krakow split up to raid the lands both north and south of the city One detachment headed towards the town of Stary Sacz another to Podolinec and others to the Duchy of Sieradz The first detachment was surprised and defeated by the Poles and their Hungarian allies in the Battle of Stary Sacz while the second devastated the area of Podhale while skirmishing with the locals After the defeat at Stary Sacz Nogai s whole column retreated into Ruthenia 78 Against Byzantine Thrace 1265 1324 and 1337 edit Main article Mongol invasion of Byzantine Thrace During the reign of Berke there was also a raid against Thrace In the winter of 1265 the Bulgarian czar Constantine Tych requested Mongol intervention against the Byzantines in the Balkans Nogai Khan led a Mongol raid of 20 000 cavalry two tumens against the territories of Byzantine eastern Thrace In early 1265 Michael VIII Palaeologus confronted the Mongols but his smaller squadron apparently had very low morale and was quickly routed Most of them were cut down as they fled Michael was forced to retreat to Constantinople on a Genoese ship while Nogai s army plundered all of Thrace Following this defeat the Byzantine emperor made an alliance with the Golden Horde which was massively beneficial for the latter giving his daughter Euphrosyne in marriage to Nogai Michael also sent much valuable fabric to Golden Horde as tribute 79 Thrace also suffered raids in 1324 and 1337 during the reign of Uzbeg Khan 80 Against Bulgaria 1271 1274 1280 and 1285 edit The successors of Tsar Ivan Asen II the regency of Kaliman Asen I decided to pay tax to the Golden Horde In 1271 Nogai Khan led a successful raid against the country which was a vassal of the Golden Horde until the early 14th century Bulgaria was again raided by the Mongols in 1274 1280 and 1285 In 1278 and 1279 Tsar Ivailo led the Bulgarian army and crushed the Mongol raids before being surrounded at Silistra 81 After a three month siege he managed to once again break through the elite Mongol forces forcing them to retreat north of the Danube In 1280 a rebellion inspired by Byzantium left Ivailo without much support and so he fled to Nogai s camp asking him for help before being killed by the Mongols Tsar George I however became a Mongol vassal before the Mongol threat was finally ended with the reign of Theodore Svetoslav nbsp Mongol invasion of Hungary in 1285 Chronicon Pictum 1358 Against Hungary 1285 edit Main article Second Mongol invasion of Hungary In 1285 Nogai Khan led a raid of Hungary alongside Talabuga Nogai lead an army that ravaged Transylvania with success Cities like Reghin Brașov and Bistrița were plundered and ravaged However Talabuga who led the main army in Northern Hungary was stopped by the heavy snow of the Carpathians and the invading force was defeated 82 near Pest by the royal army of Ladislaus IV and ambushed by the Szekely in the return Nogai s own column suffered serious casualties As with later invasions it was repelled handily the Mongols losing much of their invading force The outcome could not have contrasted more sharply with the 1241 invasion mostly due to the reforms of Bela IV which included advances in military tactics and most importantly the widespread building of stone castles both responses to the defeat of the Hungarian Kingdom in 1241 The failed Mongol attack on Hungary greatly reduced the Golden Horde s military power and caused them to stop disputing Hungarian borders 76 83 Against Serbia 1291 edit Main article Serbian conflict with the Nogai Horde nbsp Serbian king Uros II Milutin after victory over MongolsIn 1291 a large Mongol Bulgarian alliance raided into Serbia where Serbian king Stefan Uros II Milutin defeated the Mongolian contingent However after a threat that Nogai himself will return with the Golden Horde the Serbian king acknowledged Nogai s supremacy and sent his son as hostage to prevent further hostility when Nogai threatened to lead a punitive expedition himself 84 Against Germany 1340 edit Contemporary Swiss historian John of Winterthur reports attacks by the Mongols on Hungary the March of Brandenburg and Prussia during the period of 1340 1341 85 Counter invasions of Europe edit By the mid 14th century the grip of the Golden Horde over Central and Eastern Europe had started to weaken Several European kingdoms started various incursions into Mongol controlled lands with the aim of reclaiming captured territories as well as adding new ones from the Empire itself The Kingdom of Georgia under the leadership of King George V the Brilliant restored Georgian dominance in their own lands and even took the Empire of Trebizond from Mongol hands 86 Lithuania taking advantage of internal strifes in the Golden Horde started an invasion of their own defeating the Mongols at the Battle at Blue Waters as well as conquering territories of the Golden Horde such as the Principality of Kiev all the way to the Dnieper River before being halted after their defeat at the Battle of the Vorskla River 87 88 The Duchy of Moscow also started to reclaim many Rus lands eventually developing into the Tsardom of Russia In 1345 the Kingdom of Hungary took the initiative and launched their own invasion force into Mongolian territory capturing what would become Moldavia 89 By this point some Western European armies also started to meet the Mongols in their conquered territories In the siege of Caffa for example when the Mongols under Janibeg besieged Caffa in Crimea a relief force of an Genoese army came and defeated the Mongols killing 15 000 of their troops and destroying their siege engines A year later the Genoese blockaded Mongol ports in the region forcing Janibeg to negotiate and in 1347 the Genoese were allowed to reestablish their colony in Tana on the Sea of Azov 90 Gallery edit nbsp Golden Horde raid at old Ryazan nbsp Golden Horde raid at Kiev nbsp Golden Horde raid at Kozelsk nbsp Golden Horde raid Vladimir nbsp Golden Horde raid Suzdal nbsp The Hungarian King Bela IV on the flight from the Mongols under general Kadan of the Golden Horde See also editFranco Mongol alliance Lists of battles of the Mongol invasion of Europe List of battles of the Mongol invasion of Kievan Rus Mongol invasions and conquests Mongol military tactics and organization Romania in the Early Middle Ages Timeline of the Golden Horde Timeline of the Mongol Empire War of the Heavenly HorsesReferences editCitations edit Thomas T Allsen March 25 2004 Culture and Conquest in Mongol Eurasia Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521602709 Francis Dvornik 1962 The Slavs in European History and Civilization Rutgers UP p 26 ISBN 9780813507996 Michell Robert Forbes Nevell 1914 The Chronicle of Novgorod 1016 1471 Michell London Offices of the society p 64 Retrieved June 4 2014 Eddie Austerlitz 2010 History of the Ogus Eddie Austerlitz p 27 ISBN 9781450729345 Bitwa pod Legnica Chwala Oreza Polskiego Nr 3 Rzeczpospolita and Mowia Wieki Primary author Rafal Jaworski 12 August 2006 in Polish p 8 Bitwa pod Legnica Chwala Oreza Polskiego Nr 3 Rzeczpospolita and Mowia Wieki Primary author Rafal Jaworski 12 August 2006 in Polish p 4 Hungary Culture History amp People britannica com Archived from the original on May 12 2008 Retrieved April 28 2018 Hildinger Erik Mongol Invasions Battle of Liegnitz Archived 2008 07 22 at the Wayback Machine First published as The Mongol Invasion of Europe in Military History June 1997 The Destruction of Kiev Archived 2011 04 27 at archive today Trawinski Allan The Clash of Civilizations Page Publishing Inc March 20 2017 Section 15 ISBN 978 1635687118 Saunders J J 1971 The History of the Mongol Conquests Routledge amp Kegan Paul p 85 ISBN 9780710070739 McLynn Frank Genghis Khan his conquest his empire his legacy a b c d de Hartog Leo Genghis Khan Conqueror of the World Tauris Parke Paperbacks January 17 2004 p 173 ISBN 978 1860649721 Hildinger Eric Warriors Of The Steppe Military History Of Central Asia 500 Bc To 1700 Ad Da Capo Press 3rd printing edition July 21 1997 p 144 ISBN 978 1885119438 Hickman Kenneth Mongol Invasions Battle of Legnica ThoughtsCO com Archived from the original on April 29 2017 August 29 2016 Zimmermann Wilhelm A Popular History of Germany from the Earliest Period to the Present Day Nabu Press February 24 2010 p 1109 ISBN 978 1145783386 Maurice Charles Edmund The Story of Bohemia from the Earliest Times to the Fall of National Independence in 1620 With a Short Summary of Later Events Primary Source Edition Nabu Press March 18 2014 p 75 ISBN 978 1294890225 Berend Nora Central Europe in the High Middle Ages Bohemia Hungary and Poland c 900 c 1300 Cambridge University Press February 17 2014 p 447 ISBN 978 0521786959 Dlugosz The Annals 181 Christianity Europe and Utraquist Bohemia PDF brrp org Archived PDF from the original on April 28 2018 Retrieved April 28 2018 a b Epure Violeta Anca Invazia mongolă in Ungaria si spaţiul romanesc PDF ROCSIR Revista Romana de Studii Culturale pe Internet in Romanian Archived PDF from the original on October 14 2015 Retrieved February 5 2009 Genghis Khan his conquest his empire his legacy by Frank Lynn Michael Prawdin Gerard INT Chaliand The Mongol Empire p 268 Richard Bessel Dirk Schumann 2003 Life after death approaches to a cultural and social history of Europe during the 1940s and 1950s Cambridge University Press pp 143 ISBN 978 0 521 00922 5 Retrieved October 1 2011 Gloria Skurzynski 2010 This Is Rocket Science True Stories of the Risk Taking Scientists Who Figure Out Ways to Explore Beyond Earth illustrated ed National Geographic Books p 1958 ISBN 978 1 4263 0597 9 Retrieved November 28 2011 In A D 1232 an army of 30 000 Mongol warriors invaded the Chinese city of Kai fung fu where the Chinese fought back with fire arrows Mongol leaders learned from their enemies and found ways to make fire arrows even more deadly as their invasion spread toward Europe On Christmas Day 1241 Mongol troops used fire arrows to capture the city of Buda in Hungary and in 1258 to capture the city of Baghdad in what s now Iraq Stephen Pow Lindsay Deep Ditches and Well built walls pp 72 132 a b Z J Kosztolnyik Hungary in the 13th Century East European Monographs 1996 p 174 Croatia History Encarta Archived from the original on October 31 2009 Ltd ICB InterConsult Bulgaria CEEOL Obsolete Link www ceeol com Archived from the original on August 1 2017 Retrieved April 28 2018 Croatia History Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on August 14 2014 750th Anniversary of the Golden Bull Granted by Bela IV Archived April 28 2005 at the Wayback Machine a b Klaic V Povijest Hrvata Knjiga Prva Druga Treca Cetvrta i Peta Zagreb 1982 in Croatian Thomas of Split Historia Salonitana Klis A gateway to Dalmatia PDF Archived from the original PDF on July 18 2011 Hungary History Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved February 18 2023 The country lost about half its population the incidence ranging from 60 percent in the Alfold 100 percent in parts of it to 20 percent in Transdanubia only parts of Transylvania and the northwest came off fairly lightly Map Walk 20132013 The Conquests of the Mongols Cleveland History Archived from the original on March 9 2017 Saunders J J 1971 The History of the Mongol Conquests Routledge amp Kegan Paul ISBN 9780710070739 Jackson Peter The Mongols and the West 1221 1410 Routledge 1 edition April 9 2005 p 67 ISBN 978 0582368965 a b Howorth Henry Hoyle History of the Mongols from the 9th to the 19th Century Part 1 the Mongols Proper and the Kalmyks Cosimo Classics January 1 2013 p 152 ISBN 978 1605201337 Giessauf Johannes 1997 Herzog Friedrich II von Osterreich und die Mongolengefahr 1241 42 PDF In H Ebner W Roth eds Forschungen zur Geschichte des Alpen Adria Raumes Graz pp 173 199 1 30 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link permanent dead link Howorth Sir Henry Hoyle History of the Mongols From the 9th to the 19th Century Volume 1 Forgotten Books June 15 2012 p 152 ASIN B008HHQ8ZY Andreev Andreev Jordan Jordan Lalkov Lalkov Milcho Milcho 1996 Blgarskite hanove i care The Bulgarian Khans and Tsars in Bulgarian Veliko Trnovo Veliko Tarnovo Abagar Abagar ISBN 954 427 216 X pp 192 193 Peter Jackson The Mongols and the West 1221 1410 2005 p 65 Jackson p 79 Jackson p 105 Encyclopaedia Britannica inc 2003 The New Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica p 663 ISBN 978 0 85229 961 6 Peter F Sugar Peter Hanak Tibor Frank A History of Hungary p 27 The majority of the Hungarian forces consisted of light cavalry who appeared foreign to the Western observers Yet this army had given up nomadic battle tactics and proved useless when facing the masters of this style of warfare Hungarian tactics were a mix of eastern and western military traditions as were the ineffective walls of clay bricks and palisades Two elements of the Hungarian defense had proved effective however close combat with mass armored knights and stone fortifications Jackson Peter 2005 The Mongols and the West 1221 1410 Longman p 205 ISBN 0 582 36896 0 Peter F Sugar Peter Hanak Tibor Frank A History of Hungary pp 28 29 Stephen Pow Lindsay Deep Ditches and Well built walls pp 59 76 Z J Kosztolnyik Hungary in the 13th Century East European Monographs 1996 p 286 Peter Jackson The Mongols and the West 1221 1410 2005 p 205 Anchalabze George The Vainakhs Page 24 Klaic V Povijest Hrvata Knjiga Prva Druga Treca Cetvrta i Peta Zagreb 1982 Croatian Michael Kohn 2006 Dateline Mongolia An American Journalist in Nomad s Land RDR Books p 28 ISBN 978 1 57143 155 4 Retrieved July 29 2011 William H McNeill 1992 The Rise of the West A History of the Human Community University of Chicago Press p 492 ISBN 978 0 226 56141 7 Retrieved July 29 2011 Robert Cowley 1993 Robert Cowley ed Experience of War reprint ed Random House Inc p 86 ISBN 978 0 440 50553 2 Retrieved July 29 2011 Kenneth Warren Chase 2003 Firearms a global history to 1700 illustrated ed Cambridge University Press p 58 ISBN 978 0 521 82274 9 Retrieved July 29 2011 Kelly 2005 p 23 John of Plano Carpini History of the Mongols in The Mission to Asia ed Christopher Dawson London Sheed and Ward 1955 44 Carpini History of the Mongols 60 Pow Deep ditches and well built walls pp 19 21 Rashid al Din Successors 70 71 Rashid al Din Successors 10 11 Translated by John Andrew Boyle Boyle s preamble notes There are not infrequent interpolations from the Mongolian chronicle and he even adopts its faulty chronology in accordance with which the events of the European campaign take place a year later than in reality In the present volume Juvaini is down to the reign of Mongke 1251 1259 Rashid al Din s main authority but with considerable additional material from other sources Thus the earlier historian s account of the invasion of eastern Europe 1241 1242 is repeated almost verbatim and is then followed in a later chapter by a much more detailed version of the same events based like the preceding description of the campaigns in Russia 1237 1240 on Mongol records as is evident from the orthography of the proper names Climate probably stopped Mongols cold in Hungary Science News Science Ticker Climate Anthropology By Helen Thompson 2016 Archived from the original on August 3 2016 Retrieved May 26 2016 Rashid al Din Successors 71 72 Buntgen Ulf Di Cosmo Nicola May 26 2016 Climatic and environmental aspects of the Mongol withdrawal from Hungary in 1242 CE Scientific Reports 6 1 25606 Bibcode 2016NatSR 625606B doi 10 1038 srep25606 PMC 4881396 PMID 27228400 J J Saunders The History of the Mongol Conquests London Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1971 79 Climate Rain Wettest known locations Sir John Keegan 1987 The Mask of Command Viking London page 118 The Mongols in the West Journal of Asian History v 33 n 1 By Denis Sinor 1999 Archived from the original on September 1 2009 Retrieved August 16 2009 Amitai Preiss Reuven The Mamluk Ilkhanid War Frank McLynn Genghis Khan 2015 Chris Peers the Mongol War Machine 2015 Timothy May the Mongol Art of War 2016 pp 448 51 Frank McLynn Genghis Khan 2015 Chris Peers the Mongol War Machine 2015 Timothy May the Mongol Art of War 2016 pp 450 1 Peter Jackson The Mongols and the West 2005 Page 199 a b Victor Spinei Moldavia in the 11th 14th centuries Editura Academiei Republicii Socialiste Romania Bucharest 1986 Pages 121 122 Stanislaw Krakowski Polska w walce z najazdami tatarskimi w XIII wieku MON 1956 pp 181 201 Stanislaw Krakowski Polska w walce z najazdami tatarskimi w XIII wieku MON 1956 Rene Grousset The Empire of Steppes page 399 400 Denis Sinor The Mongols in the West Journal of Asian History 1999 pp 1 44 Andreev Andreev Jordan Jordan Lalkov Lalkov Milcho Milcho 1996 Blgarskite hanove i care The Bulgarian Khans and Tsars in Bulgarian Veliko Trnovo Veliko Tarnovo Abagar Abagar ISBN 954 427 216 X pp 222 Pal Engel Tamas Palosfalvi Andrew Ayton The Realm of St Stephen A History of Medieval Hungary 895 1526 I B Tauris amp Co Ltd London pp 109 1 The Roots of Balkanization Eastern Europe C E 500 1500 By Ion Grumeza Google Books Istvan Vasary Cumans and Tatars Oriental military in the pre Ottoman Balkans 1185 1365 p 89 Jackson Peter 2005 The Mongols and the West 1221 1410 Routledge pp 206 227 D Kldiashvili History of the Georgian Heraldry Parlamentis utskebani 1997 p 35 Cherkas Borys December 30 2011 Bitva na Sinih Vodah Yak Ukrayina zvilnilasya vid Zolotoyi Ordi Battle at Blue Waters How Ukraine freed itself from the Golden Horde in Ukrainian istpravda com ua Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved February 22 2016 Sedlar Jean W 1994 East Central Europe in the Middle Ages 1000 1500 University of Washington Press p 380 ISBN 0 295 97290 4 Kortum Hans Henning Transcultural Wars from the Middle Ages to the 21st Century Akademie Verlag March 22 2006 p 227 Wheelis Mark September 1 2002 Biological Warfare at the 1346 Siege of Caffa Emerging Infectious Diseases 8 9 971 975 doi 10 3201 eid0809 010536 PMC 2732530 PMID 12194776 Sources edit Sverdrup Carl 2010 Numbers in Mongol Warfare Journal of Medieval Military History Boydell Press 8 109 17 p 115 ISBN 978 1 84383 596 7 Further reading editAllsen Thomas T March 25 2004 Culture and Conquest in Mongol Eurasia Cambridge UP ISBN 9780521602709 Atwood Christopher P Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire 2004 Chambers James The Devil s Horsemen The Mongol Invasion of Europe London Weidenfeld and Nicolson 1979 Christian David A History of Russia Central Asia and Mongolia Vol 1 Inner Eurasia from Prehistory to the Mongol Empire Blackwell 1998 Cook David Apocalyptic Incidents during the Mongol Invasions in Brandes Wolfram Schmieder Felicitas hg Endzeiten Eschatologie in den monotheistischen Weltreligionen Berlin de Gruyter 2008 Millennium Studien Millennium Studies Studien zu Kultur und Geschichte des ersten Jahrtausends n Chr Studies in the Culture and History of the First Millennium C E 16 293 312 Halperin Charles J Russia and the golden horde the Mongol impact on medieval Russian history Indiana University Press 1985 May Timothy The Mongol conquests in world history Reaktion Books 2013 Morgan David The Mongols ISBN 0 631 17563 6 Nicolle David The Mongol Warlords Brockhampton Press 1998 Reagan Geoffry The Guinness Book of Decisive Battles Canopy Books New York 1992 Saunders J J The History of the Mongol Conquests Routledge amp Kegan Paul Ltd 1971 ISBN 0 8122 1766 7 Sinor Denis 1999 The Mongols in the West Journal of Asian History 33 1 Archived from the original on June 5 2011 Retrieved April 21 2007 also in JSTOR Vernadsky George The Mongols and Russia Yale University Press 1953 Halperin Charles J George Vernadsky Eurasianism the Mongols and Russia Slavic Review 1982 477 493 in JSTOR Craughwell Thomas J February 1 2010 The Rise and Fall of the Second Largest Empire in History How Genghis Khan almost conquered the world Fair Winds ISBN 9781616738518 Kauffman JE April 14 2004 The medieval Fortress Castles Forts and Walled Cities of the medieval ages Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 81358 0 Fagan Brian August 1 2010 The Great Warming Climate Change and the Rise and Fall of Civilization Bloomsbury Press ISBN 978 1 59691 780 4 Penn Imma 2007 Dogma Evolution amp Papal Fallacies An Unveiled History of Catholicism AuthorHouse ISBN 978 1 4343 0874 0 External links editThe Islamic World to 1600 The Golden Horde Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mongol invasion of Europe amp oldid 1205658670, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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