In 1644 the Ottoman Sultan dismissed İslâm's brother Mehmed IV and placed İslâm on the throne. İslâm appointed his younger brother Kyrym as kalga. As nureddin (a high-ranking title, the third in line after the Khan and the Kalga), he appointed Gazi, the son of his brother Mubarak. In 1651 Kyrym was killed at the
Battle of Berestechko and was replaced by Gazi, with the new appointed nureddin being İslâm's younger brother Adil. Kyrym, Mubarak and Adil were all fathers of khans. İslâm is remembered as a builder and successful administrator. He tended to appoint non-nobles without antagonizing the clan leaders. For the Ukrainian rebellion see below. In 1654 he died of natural causes.
Khmelnytsky Uprising The
Khmelnytsky Uprising of the
Zaporozhian Cossacks against Poland started in January 1648 when Khmelnytsky became hetman of the Cossacks. In March Khmelnytski went to Crimea and made an anti-Polish alliance. This gave him extra cavalry, mainly under
Togay Bey. The Poles tried, with occasional success, to split the alliance. Crimean horsemen accompanied Khmelnytsky on this 1648 campaign when he got almost as far as
Lviv. Next year İslâm helped win the
Battle of Zboriv (1649). The withdrawing Tatars were permitted to ravage the country they passed through. Some claim that İslâm was bribed by the Poles and that he ravaged mostly Cossack territory. In 1651 the Poles sent a large army and won the
Battle of Beresteczko because the Tatars fled the field. Khmelnytsky went after them and was held hostage for a while by İslâm. In 1652, following the
Battle of Batih, the Cossacks purchased the Polish prisoners from the Tatars and slaughtered them. Howorth says that in 1653 İslâm ravaged the country around
Bar and
Kaminetz and left after receiving a ransom. Other sources have İslâm present at the
Battle of Zhvanets at about the same time. In January 1654, by the
Treaty of Pereyaslav, the Cossacks accepted Russian supremacy, thereby provoking the
Russo-Polish War (1654–1667). İslâm died shortly after. ==References==