There were also later, larger Mongol invasions of Poland (1259–1260 and 1287–1288). In 1254 or 1255, Daniel of Galicia revolted against the Mongol rule. He repelled the initial Mongol assault under Orda's son Quremsa. In 1259, the Mongols returned under the new command of
Burundai (
Mongolian: Borolday). According to some sources, Daniel fled to Poland leaving his son and brother at the mercy of the Mongol army. He may have hidden in the castle of Galicia instead. The Mongols needed to secure Poland's aid to Daniel and war booty to feed the demand of their soldiers. Lithuanians also attacked
Smolensk and menaced
Torzhok, tributaries of the Golden Horde, in c. 1258. The Mongols sent a
punitive expedition into Lithuania for this. The Lithuanians appear to have not resisted them efficiently. Borolday again demanded Daniel to recruit more troops. After demolishing walls of all towns in Galicia and Volhyinia, in 1259, 18 years after the first attack to Poland, two tumens (20,000 men) from the
Golden Horde, under the leadership of
Berke, attacked Poland after raiding
Lithuania. This attack was commanded by the young prince
Nogai Khan and general Burundai. The
Rus' soldiers under Daniel's son, Lev, and brother, Vasily, joined the Mongol expedition.
Lublin,
Sandomierz,
Zawichost, and
Kraków were ravaged and plundered by the Mongol army. Berke had no intention of occupying or conquering Poland. After this raid
Pope Alexander IV tried without success to organize a
crusade against the Tatars. Northwestern Rus princes complained to the occupying military Mongol masters about the repeated attacks from the Kingdom of Poland. In response to the complaints, Nogai's army recruited troops from Rus principalities, which included: Vlakh, Kipchak, Alan soldiers [respectively] and an unsuccessful raid followed in 1287, led by Talabuga and Nogai Khan. Lublin,
Masovia, Sandomierz, and Sieradz were successfully raided, but they were defeated at Kraków. Despite this, Kraków was devastated. This raid consisted of less than one tumen, since the Golden Horde's armies were tied down in a new conflict which the
Il-Khanate had initiated in 1284. The force retreated instead of facing the larger Polish force. Ozbek Khan and
Jani Beg warred with the powerful kingdom of Poland to secure their claim on western Rus (modern
Belarus and
Ukraine). Towards 1356,
Casimir III the Great reached an agreement with the Golden Horde and apparently undertook to pay tribute in exchange for military support against Lithuania. In a letter to the Teutonic master, he claimed that seven Mongol princes commanding troops were coming to his aid. The Knights, however, were seeking a rapprochement with Lithuania and accused Casimir to the popes as having submitted to the Mongols. ==Notes==