Vytautas barely escaped alive, but many princes of his kin (including his cousins
Demetrius I Starszy and
Andrei of Polotsk) and allies (as for example,
Stephen I of Moldavia and two of his brothers) died in the battle. It is estimated that some 50
princes fought under Vytautas' banners and about 20 of them were killed. lands that were held by the Golden Horde until the
Crimean Khanate broke away from its rule some forty-two years later. After the battle,
Yury of Smolensk revolted against Lithuania and
Smolensk was not recaptured for five years.
Veliky Novgorod and
Pskov also rebelled against Lithuanian rule, drawing Vytautas into a war with the
Grand Principality of Moscow. The
Polish–Lithuanian union was reaffirmed in the
Union of Vilnius and Radom. Vytautas also turned his plans from expansion southwards to east (against Moscow) and west (against the
Teutonic Knights). It has been suggested that Vytautas learned the
staged retreat tactic during the battle and successfully used it himself in the
Battle of Grunwald (1410), an important defeat of the Teutonic Knights. Moscow benefited most from the battle, as it defended itself from the Lithuanian threat. The Tatars saved Moscow from Lithuanian expansion, which allowed it to regain its strength and eventually act against the khanate itself. According to the Lithuanian historian
Edvardas Gudavičius: ==References==