• For reference, in 1428 Haji was at the steppe, Crimea in 1429, the steppe in 1431, Crimea in 1434, hostage in Lithuania in 1441, Crimea in 1442, the steppe, and then Crimea once again in 1449. • At this time the steppe was being contested by
Ulugh Muhammad,
Küchük Muhammad (Big and Little Muhammad) and
Sayid Ahmad I, a grandson of Tokhtamysh near the Don.
Barak Khan was east of the Volga. • Crimea was held by the following: 1419: Ulugh, 1427 Devlet Berdi, 1428 Haji, c1429 Ulugh, 1431: Haji, 1434: Ulugh, 1437: Kuchuk, 1438?: Sayid, 1441: Haji, 1442: Sayid, then no clear ruler, 1447: Haji and thereafter the Giray dynasty. According to Vasary, in 1426/27 Crimea was ruled by Ulugh Mohammad and by March 1427 by Devlet Berdi. In 1428, Haji took over Crimea with the support of 16,000 men, derived from the support of
Vytautas of Lithuania and the Shirin mirzas. He took Solkhat/
Stary Krym and Kyrk-Er/
Chufut-Kale. Once Ulugh Muhammad launched his invasion of the area, many nobles changed sides, including the Shirin chief Tegene-Bey. As a result, Haji fled to the steppes and then finally Lithuania. In 1431 Haji returned with troops raised in the Lithuanian lands. Tegene-Bey joined him at Perekop. Both Ulugh and Küchük failed to drive him out. In 1433, Haji allied with Prince Alexios I of the
Principality of Theodoro. That fall Alexios took the Genoese port of Cembalo/
Balaklava. In the summer of 1434 the Genoese returned with a fleet and captured Balaklava and Alexios. They then took Kalamita/
Inkerman and moved inland, but were defeated by Haji near Stary Krym. When Haji besieged Kaffa, the Genoese paid a ransom and recognized him as Khan. In 1434, Ulugh Mohammad once again invaded Crimea, the Shirins changed sides, and Haji fled to the Lithuanian lands to gather a new army.
Sigismund Kęstutaitis decided to hold him hostage and gave him a castle at
Lida. In 1437, Ulugh was driven out by Kuchuk Mohammad. Soon
Sayid Ahmad I gained Crimea. He became unpopular when his officials greatly increased taxes and nomads several times raided the peninsula. Around 1440 the Crimean nobles asked
Casimir IV Jagiellon of Lithuania to release Haji. He went to
Kiev, met the Beys and went to Crimea with a large army joined by
Radvila Astikas (the founder of the Radziwills) and drove out Sayid's governor. Tegene-Bey of the Shirins then swore his allegiance. ==Reign (1441–1466)==