establishes the Golden Horde. Mausoleum,
Ulytau Region,
Kazakhstan Batu Khan (1242–1256) When the Great
Khatun Töregene invited Batu to elect the next Emperor of the Mongol Empire in 1242, he declined to attend the
kurultai and instead stayed at the
Volga River. Although Batu excused himself by saying he was suffering from old age and illness, it seems that he did not support the election of Güyük Khan. Güyük and
Büri, a grandson of
Chagatai Khan, had quarreled violently with Batu at a victory banquet during the Mongol occupation of Eastern Europe. He sent his brothers to the
kurultai, and the new Khagan of the Mongols was elected in 1246. The Mongols did not conduct any significant military operations in the northwest during Batu's rule, allowing him to develop the system of administration. All the senior princes of Rus', including
Yaroslav II of Vladimir,
Daniel of Galicia, and
Sviatoslav III of Vladimir, acknowledged Batu's supremacy. Originally Batu ordered Daniel to turn the administration of
Galicia over to the Mongols, but Daniel personally visited Batu in 1245 and pledged allegiance to him. After returning from his trip, Daniel was visibly influenced by the Mongols, and equipped his army in the Mongol fashion, his horsemen with Mongol-style cuirasses, and their mounts armoured with shoulder, chest, and head pieces.
Michael of Chernigov, who had
killed a Mongol envoy in 1240, refused to show obeisance and was executed in 1246. When Güyük called Batu to pay him homage several times, Batu sent
Yaroslav II,
Andrey and
Alexander Nevsky to
Karakorum in
Mongolia in 1247. Yaroslav never returned and died in Mongolia. He was probably poisoned by
Töregene Khatun, who probably did it to spite Batu and even her own son Güyük, because he did not approve of her regency. At a council in
Vladimir, it was decided that Yaroslav's brother
Sviatoslav would become grand prince; however, Sviatoslav never went to the khan for confirmation, which caused
Mikhail Khorobrit to expel his brother from Vladimir and claim the throne; however, he died in 1248 during a battle with the Lithuanians. Güyük appointed Andrey as the
grand prince of Vladimir and Alexander was given the princely title of
Kiev. However, when they returned, Andrey went to Vladimir while Alexander went to
Novgorod instead. A bishop by the name of Cyril went to Kiev and found it so devastated that he abandoned the place and went further east instead. The princes of
Vladimir-Suzdal ultimately became responsible for delivering the Russian tribute to the khan. In 1248, Güyük demanded Batu come east to meet him, a move that some contemporaries regarded as a pretext for Batu's arrest. In compliance with the order, Batu approached, bringing a large army. When Güyük moved westwards,
Tolui's widow and a sister of Batu's stepmother
Sorghaghtani warned Batu that the Jochids might be his target. Güyük died on the way, in what is now
Xinjiang, at about the age of 42. Although some modern historians believe that he died of
natural causes because of deteriorating health, he may have succumbed to the combined effects of alcoholism and
gout, or he may have been poisoned.
William of Rubruck and a Muslim chronicler state that Batu killed the imperial envoy, and one of his brothers murdered the Great Khan Güyük, but these claims are not completely corroborated by other major sources. Güyük's widow
Oghul Qaimish took over as regent, but she was unable to keep the succession within her branch of the family. With the assistance of Batu,
Möngke succeeded as Great Khan in 1251. Utilizing the discovery of a plot designed to remove him, Möngke as the new Great Khan began a purge of his opponents. Estimates of the deaths of aristocrats, officials, and Mongol commanders range from 77 to 300. Batu became the most influential person in the Mongol Empire as his friendship with Möngke ensured the unity of the realm. Batu, Möngke, and other princely lines shared rule over the area from Afghanistan to
Turkey. Batu allowed Möngke's census-takers to operate freely in his realm. Local
censuses took place in the 1240s, including the areas of Russia and Turkey. In 1251–1259, Möngke conducted the first empire-wide census of the Mongol Empire. North China was completed in 1252, and in 1257, Möngke appointed a chief
darughachi for the
Volga region with the assistance of counters, known as
chislenitsi in Russian sources. They were able to cover Crimea, the Caucasus, the Kipchak steppe, and possibly up to southern Siberia. The Novgorod region in the far northwest was not counted until the winter of 1258–1259. There was an uprising in
Novgorod against the Mongol census, but Alexander Nevsky mediated between the Mongols and the city, after which the nobles oversaw tax collection directly. Möngke now had direct control over the Rurikid princes. However, Andrey II refused to submit to Batu. Batu sent a punitive expedition under Nevruy, who defeated Andrey and forced him to flee to Novgorod, then
Pskov, and finally to
Sweden. The Mongols overran Vladimir and harshly punished the principality. The
Livonian Knights stopped their advance to Novgorod and Pskov. Thanks to his friendship with
Sartaq Khan, Batu's son, who was a
Christian, Alexander was installed as the grand prince of Vladimir by Batu in 1252.
Berke (1257–1266) ) mint. Struck c. AH 662–665 (AD 1263–1267). After Batu died in 1256, his son
Sartaq Khan was appointed by
Möngke Khan. As soon as he returned from the court of the Great Khan in Mongolia, Sartaq died. The infant
Ulaghchi succeeded him under the regency of
Boragchin Khatun, Batu's widow. The khatun summoned the Rurikid princes to Sarai to renew their patents. In 1256, Andrey traveled to Sarai to ask for pardon. He was once again reappointed as the grand prince of Vladimir. Ulaghchi soon died after a few months and, according to Arabic sources, Boragchin turned to
Hulegu for protection. Batu's younger brother,
Berke, accused Boragchin of high treason and had her executed. Berke, who had been converted to
Islam, was enthroned as khan of the Golden Horde in 1257 or 1258. In 1256, Daniel of Galicia openly defied the Mongols and ousted their troops in northern
Podolia. In 1257, he repelled Mongol assaults led by the prince Kuremsa on Ponyzia and
Volhynia and dispatched an expedition with the aim of taking Kiev. Despite initial successes, in 1259 a Mongol force under
Boroldai entered Galicia and Volhynia and offered an ultimatum: Daniel was to destroy his fortifications or Boroldai would assault the towns. Daniel complied and pulled down the city walls. In 1259 Berke launched savage attacks on
Lithuania and Poland, and demanded the submission of
Béla IV, the Hungarian monarch, and the French king
Louis IX in 1259 and 1260. His assault on
Prussia in 1259–1260 inflicted heavy losses on the
Teutonic Order. The
Lithuanians were probably tributary in the 1260s, when reports reached the
Curia that they were in league with the Mongols. In 1261, Berke approved the establishment of a church in Sarai. After the death of Alexander Nevsky in 1263, the
Novgorodians negotiated with the grand prince for the right to organize tax collection themselves – a proposal the Mongols accepted, provided that the payments continued. From the 1260s, local nobles began collecting taxes on behalf of the Mongols. To keep Russian nobles on their side, the Mongols allowed them to keep their lands. Berke also moved towards Islamic ruling practices and therefore might have applied the
dhimmi system, in which a special tax was applied to non-Muslims.
Toluid Civil War (1260–1264) After Möngke Khan died in 1259, the
Toluid Civil War broke out between
Kublai Khan and
Ariq Böke. While
Hulagu Khan of the
Ilkhanate supported Kublai, Berke sided with Ariq Böke. There is evidence that Berke minted coins in Ariq Böke's name, but he remained militarily neutral. After the defeat of Ariq Böke in 1264, he freely acceded to Kublai's enthronement. However, some elites of the White Horde joined Ariq Böke's resistance.
Berke–Hulagu war (1262–1266) at the
battle of Terek in 1262. Many of Hulagu's men drowned in the Terek River while withdrawing. Möngke ordered the Jochid and
Chagatayid families to join Hulagu's expedition to Iran.
Berke's persuasion might have forced his brother Batu to postpone Hulagu's operation, little suspecting that it would result in eliminating the Jochid predominance there for several years. During the reign of Batu or his first two successors, the Golden Horde dispatched a large Jochid delegation to participate in
Hulagu's expedition in the Middle East in 1256–1257. One of the Jochid princes who joined Hulagu's army was accused of witchcraft and sorcery against Hulagu. After receiving permission from Berke, Hulagu executed him. After that two more Jochid princes died suspiciously. According to some Muslim sources, Hulagu refused to share his war booty with Berke in accordance with Genghis Khan's wish. Berke was a devoted Muslim who had had a close relationship with the
Abbasid Caliph Al-Musta'sim, who had been killed by Hulagu in 1258. The Jochids believed that Hulagu's state eliminated their presence in the
Transcaucasus. Those events increased the anger of Berke and the war between the Golden Horde and the
Ilkhanate soon broke out in 1262. The increasing tension between Berke and Hulagu was a warning to the Golden Horde contingents in Hulagu's army to flee. One contingent reached the Kipchak steppe,
another traversed Khorasan, and a third body took refuge in
Mamluk ruled
Syria where they were well received by Sultan
Baybars (1260–1277). Hulagu harshly punished the rest of the Golden Horde army in Iran. Berke sought a joint attack with Baybars and forged an alliance with the Mamluks against Hulagu. The Golden Horde dispatched the young prince
Nogai to invade the Ilkhanate but Hulagu forced him back in 1262. The Ilkhanid army then crossed the
Terek River, capturing an empty Jochid encampment, only to be routed in a surprise attack by Nogai's forces. Many of them were drowned as the ice broke on the frozen Terek River. The outbreak of conflict was made more annoying to Berke by the rebellion of
Suzdal at the same time, killing Mongol
darughachis and tax-collectors. Berke planned a severe punitive expedition. But after Alexander Nevsky begged Berke not to punish his people, and the cities of Vladimir-Suzdal agreed to pay a large indemnity, Berke relented. Alexander died on his trip back in
Gorodets on the Volga. He was well loved by the people and called the "sun of Suzdal". . Bulghar mint. Dated AH 672 or 3 (AD 1273–1275). When the former
Seljuk Sultan Kaykaus II was arrested in the
Byzantine Empire, his younger brother
Kayqubad II appealed to Berke. An
Egyptian envoy was also detained there. With the assistance of the
Kingdom of Bulgaria (Berke's vassal), Nogai invaded the Empire in 1265. By the next year, the Mongol-Bulgarian army was within reach of
Constantinople. Nogai forced
Michael VIII Palaiologos to release Kaykaus and pay tribute to the Horde. Berke gave Kaykaus
Crimea as an
appanage and had him marry a Mongol woman. Hulagu died in February 1265 and Berke followed the next year while on campaign in
Tiflis, causing his troops to retreat. Ariq Böke had earlier placed Chagatai's grandson
Alghu as
Chagatayid Khan, ruling Central Asia. He took control of
Samarkand and
Bukhara. When the Muslim elites and the Jochid retainers in Bukhara declared their loyalty to Berke, Alghu smashed the Golden Horde's lands in Khorazm. Alghu insisted Hulagu attack the Golden Horde; he accused Berke of purging his family in 1252. In Bukhara, he and Hulagu slaughtered all the retainers of the Golden Horde and reduced their families into slavery, sparing only the Great Khan Kublai's men. After Berke gave his allegiance to Kublai, Alghu declared war on Berke, seizing
Otrar and
Khorazm. While the left bank of Khorazm would eventually be retaken, Berke had lost control over Transoxiana. In 1264 Berke marched past
Tiflis to fight against Hulagu's successor
Abaqa, but he died en route.
Mengu-Timur (1266–1280) inhabited by the descendants of
Nogai Khan Berke left no sons, so Batu's grandson
Mengu-Timur was nominated by Kublai and succeeded his uncle Berke. However, Mengu-Timur secretly supported the
Ögedeid prince
Kaidu against Kublai and the Ilkhanate. After the defeat of
Ghiyas-ud-din Baraq, a peace treaty was concluded in 1267 granting one-third of
Transoxiana to Kaidu and Mengu-Timur. In 1268, when a group of princes operating in Central Asia on Kublai's behalf mutinied and arrested two sons of the Qaghan (Great Khan), they sent them to Mengu-Timur. One of them, Nomoghan, favorite of Kublai, was located in the Crimea. Mengu-Timur might have briefly struggled with Hulagu's successor
Abagha, but the Great Khan Kublai forced them to sign a peace treaty. He was allowed to take his share in Persia. Independently from the Khan, Nogai expressed his desire to ally with
Baibars in 1271. Despite the fact that he was proposing a joint attack on the Ilkhanate with the
Mamluks of Egypt, Mengu-Timur congratulated Abagha when Baraq was defeated by the Ilkhan in 1270. , . In 1267, Mengu-Timur issued a diploma (
jarliq) to exempt
Russian clergy from any taxation. He also gave the
Genoese and
Venice exclusive trading rights in
Caffa and
Azov. Some of Mengu-Timur's relatives converted to Christianity at the same time and settled in Russia; one of them was a prince who settled in
Rostov and became known as . Mengu-Timur determined that Russian peasants would obey the nobles and religious leaders, and so he used the
tarkhan system to co-opt the nobility and win their support. As a result, the Russian clergy were able to establish new landed properties. Even though Nogai invaded the
Orthodox Christian Byzantine Empire in 1271, the Khan sent his envoys to maintain friendly relationship with Michael VIII Palaiologos, who sued for peace and married one of his daughters,
Euphrosyne Palaiologina, to Nogai. Mengu-Timur ordered the grand prince of Vladimir to allow
German merchants free travel through his lands. The gramota says: This decree also allowed Novgorod's merchants to travel throughout the lands of Suzdal without restraint. Mengu Timur honored his vow: when the
Danes and the
Livonian Knights attacked the
Novgorod Republic in 1269, the Khan's great (
darughachi), Amraghan, and many Mongols assisted the army assembled by the grand prince Yaroslav. The Germans and the Danes were so cowed that they sent gifts to the Mongols and abandoned the region of
Narva. The Mongol Khan's authority extended to all principalities, and in 1274–1275 the census took place in all cities, including
Smolensk and
Vitebsk. In 1277, Mengu-Timur launched a campaign against the
Alans north of the
Caucasus. Along with the Mongol army were also some of the princes who were ordered to join him in his expedition, where they took the fortified stronghold of the Alans, Dadakov, in 1278. After his Ossetian expedition, Mengu-Timur turned his attention to affairs with the Byzantine Empire and Egypt in an attempt to curb the authority of Nogai. Following the death of
Constantine of Bulgaria in 1277, Michael VIII and Nogai supported different candidates to the throne, leading to relations to deteriorate. This led to an intervention by Mengu-Timur in Balkan affairs, in which Mengu-Timur and Metropolitan
Kirill sent Bishop Theognost as their joint envoy to Michael VIII and the patriarch of Constantinople with their respective gifts and letters.
Töde Möngke (1280–1287) , 1596 contributed troops for
invasions of Europe by
Nogai Khan and
Talabuga. Mengu-Timur was succeeded in 1281 by his brother
Töde Möngke, who was a Muslim. However,
Nogai Khan was now strong enough to establish himself as an independent ruler. The Golden Horde was thus ruled by two khans. Töde Möngke made peace with Kublai, returned his sons to him, and acknowledged his supremacy. Nogai and
Köchü, Khan of the White Horde and son of Orda Khan, also made peace with the
Yuan dynasty and the
Ilkhanate. According to
Mamluk historians, Töde Möngke sent the Mamluks a letter proposing to fight against their common enemy, the unbelieving Ilkhanate. This indicates that he might have had an interest in Azerbaijan and
Georgia, which were both ruled by the Ilkhans. In the 1270s, Nogai had raided Bulgaria, as well as Lithuania. He blockaded
Michael Asen II inside
Drăstăr in 1279 and executed the rebel emperor
Ivailo in 1280. The king,
George Terter I, married Nogai's daughter and acknowledged Mongol overlordship but was forced to flee by a local boyar and sought refuge in the
Byzantine Empire in 1295. In 1284,
Saqchi came under the Mongol rule during the major invasion of Bulgaria, and coins were struck in the Khan's name.
Smilets was installed by Nogai as emperor of Bulgaria. Accordingly, the reign of Smilets has been considered the height of Mongol overlordship in Bulgaria. When he was expelled by a local
boyars , the Mongols launched another invasion to protect their protege. Nogai compelled Serbian king
Stefan Milutin to accept Mongol supremacy and received his son,
Stefan Dečanski, as hostage in 1287. Under his rule, the
Vlachs, Slavs,
Alans, and
Turco-Mongols lived in modern-day
Moldavia. At the same time, the influence of Nogai greatly increased in the Golden Horde. Backed by him, some princes, such as
Dmitry of Pereslavl, refused to visit the court of Töde Möngke in Sarai, while Dmitry's brother
Andrey of Gorodets sought assistance from Töde Möngke. Nogai vowed to support Dmitry in his struggle for the grand princely throne. On hearing about this, Andrey renounced his claims to Vladimir and Novgorod and returned to Gorodets. He returned with Mongol troops sent by Töde Möngke and seized Vladimir from Dmitry. Dmitry retaliated with the support of Mongol troops from Nogai and retook his holdings. In 1285, Andrey again led a Mongol army under a
Borjigin prince to Vladimir, but Dmitry expelled them. In 1283, Töde Möngke converted to
Islam and abandoned state affairs. Rumors spread that the khan was mentally ill and only cared for clerics and sheikhs. In 1285, Talabuga and Nogai
invaded Hungary. While Nogai was partially successful in raiding
Slovakia, Talabuga stalled north of the
Carpathian Mountains. Talabuga was angered and sacked
Galicia and
Volhynia instead.
Talabuga (1287–1291) After returning, Talabuga slew Töde Möngke, and succeeded him as the Khan of the Golden Horde. In 1287, Talabuga successfully plundered the Kingdom of Ruthenia, especially the region of
Volodymyr. In late 1287-1288, Talabuga and Nogai
attacked Poland but were both defeated. Nogai's army made an unsuccessful attempt to invade the Ilkhanate in 1290. During a bloody punitive expedition against the
Circassians, Talabuga became resentful of Nogai, whom he believed did not provide him with adequate support during the invasions of
Hungary and
Poland. Talabuga may have been deceived into believing that Nogai was ill and on his death bed. Talabuga was ambushed and assassinated by the forces of Nogai in a
coup and replaced with
Toqta in 1291.
Toqta–Nogai Conflict (1291–1299) Andrey, accompanied by a number of Rostov princes and the bishop of Rostov, went to Toqta to renew his patent and complain about Dmitry.
Mikhail Yaroslavich was summoned to appear before Nogai in Sarai, where he chose to side with Nogai and went to him instead for confirmation of his throne, while Dmitry refused to appear, considering himself to be a vassal of Nogai.
Daniel, Alexander Nevsky's youngest son, failed to appear at the court of Toqta. The division of the authority of the Golden Horde led to the creation of two rival groups of Russian princes. Toqta attempted to reassert his authority over
northern Russia; he confirmed Andrey as the grand prince and authorized him to depose Dmitry, who refused to surrender his throne. Toqta sent a punitive expedition led by his brother,
Dyuden, to punish those stubborn subjects, leading to the sacking of a number of cities in 1293, including Vladimir and Moscow, finally forcing Dmitry to abdicate. Only the city of Tver offered stiff resistance to the Mongol invaders, leading to another Mongol army being sent to attack the city. Nogai did not choose to intervene in Russian affairs but was concerned by Toqta's actions; he found it necessary to remind Toqta that he still held supreme power in the affairs of the Golden Horde and consequently sent his senior wife to Toqta in 1293, where she was received with due honor. In the same year, Nogai sent an army to
Serbia and forced the king to acknowledge himself as a vassal. (Mengu). AH 679–687 AD 1280–1287 Qrim (
Crimea) mint. Nogai's daughter married a son of Kublai's niece, Kelmish, who was wife of a
Qongirat general of the Golden Horde. Nogai was angry with Kelmish's family because her
Buddhist son despised his Muslim daughter. For this reason, he demanded Toqta send Kelmish's husband to him. Nogai's independent actions relating to Russian affairs and foreign merchants had already irritated Toqta. Toqta thus refused and declared war on Nogai. Toqta was defeated in their first battle. Nogai's army turned their attention to
Caffa and
Soldaia, looting both cities. Within two years, Toqta returned and killed Nogai in 1299 at the Kagamlik, near the
Dnieper. Toqta had his son stationed troops in Saqchi and along the
Danube as far as the Iron Gate. Nogai's son
Chaka of Bulgaria, first escaped to the Alans, and then Bulgaria where he briefly ruled as emperor before he was murdered by
Theodore Svetoslav on the orders of Toqta. After Mengu-Timur died, rulers of the Golden Horde withdrew their support from
Kaidu, the head of the
House of Ögedei. Kaidu tried to restore his influence in the Golden Horde by sponsoring his own candidate Kobeleg against
Bayan (), Khan of the White Horde. After taking military support from Toqta, Bayan asked help from the Yuan dynasty and the Ilkhanate to organize a unified attack on the
Chagatai Khanate under the leadership of Kaidu and his second-in-command
Duwa. However, the Yuan court was unable to send quick military support.
General peace (1299–1312) From 1300 to 1302, a severe drought occurred in the areas surrounding the
Black Sea. However, the troubles were soon overcome and conditions in the Golden Horde rapidly improved under Toqta's reign. After the defeat of
Nogai Khan, his followers either fled to
Podolia or remained under the service of Toqta, to become what would eventually be known as the
Nogai Horde. Toqta established the
Byzantine–Mongol alliance by marrying
Maria Palaiologina, an illegitimate daughter of
Andronikos II Palaiologos. A report reached Western Europe that Toqta was highly favourable to the Christians. According to Muslim observers, however, Toqta remained an
idol-worshiper (
Buddhism and
Tengerism) and showed favour to religious men of all faiths, though he preferred Muslims. He demanded that the Ilkhan
Ghazan and his successor
Oljeitu give Azerbaijan back but was refused. Then he sought assistance from Egypt against the Ilkhanate. Toqta made his man ruler in
Ghazna, but he was expelled by its people. Toqta dispatched a peace mission to the Ilkhan
Gaykhatu in 1294, and peace was maintained mostly uninterrupted until 1318. In 1304, ambassadors from the Mongol rulers of Central Asia and the Yuan dynasty announced to Toqta their general peace proposal. Toqta immediately accepted the supremacy of Yuan emperor
Temür Öljeytü, and all
yams (postal relays) and commercial networks across the Mongol khanates reopened. Toqta introduced the general peace among the Mongol khanates to the Russian princes at the assembly in
Pereyaslavl (Pereslavl-Zalessky). The Yuan influence seemed to have increased in the Golden Horde as some of Toqta's coins carried
'Phags-pa script in addition to Mongolian script and Persian characters. was still tributary to the Mongols in 1308. As the head of the
Mongol Empire, the Mongol Great Khans of the Yuan sent 100 dings of silver and 300 bolts of silk to the Golden Horde every year and the Jochid ruler Toqta was given additional fiefs in China for his diplomatic and military assistance to the Great Khan. Unlike the early years of the Mongol Empire, only the Great Khan's agents governed Chinese fiefs on the behalf of the Yuan and the Golden Horde until the collapse of the Mongol rule in China. On his southwestern borders, Toqta arrested the Italian residents of Sarai and
besieged Caffa in 1307. The cause was apparently Toqta's displeasure at the Genoese slave trade of his subjects, who were mostly sold as soldiers to Egypt. In 1308, Caffa was plundered by the Mongols. During the late reign of Toqta, tensions between princes of Tver and Moscow became violent.
Daniel of Moscow seized the town of
Kolomna from
Ryazan, which turned to the local
basqaq for protection. However, this did not deter Daniel, who defeated the Ryazan and Mongol troops in 1301, and then seized
Mozhaysk in 1303 and then Pereslavl-Zalessky, which threw off the already weak balance of interprincely relations. Daniel may have been motivated to round out his appanage, which in terms of the modern administrative divisions of Russia, was not larger than
Moskovsky Uyezd before 1917. His tenacity laid the pattern for his successors to become the rulers of all of Russia proper. Toqta organized a new conference for the princes in Pereslavl-Zalessky in the autumn of 1304, which was attended by leading princes including
Andrey of Vladimir,
Mikhail of Tver, and
Yury of Moscow, Daniel's eldest son who succeeded him after his death in March 1304.
Maximos, the metropolitan of the
Russian Orthodox Church, was also in attendance. Toqta possibly intended to completely transform the political organization of his Russian ulus, though there is little information about the last years of his reign, with there only being accounts in the Russian annals of the interrelations among the princes, while Arab and Persian chroniclers focused on the Golden Horde's relations with Egypt and Iran. Toqta probably intended to eliminate the special status of the grand principality of Vladimir, and to place all the Russian princes on the same level as his vassals with a definite appanage assigned to each one of them. Toqta decided to personally visit northern Russia to settle the conflict between the princes, but he fell ill and died while crossing the Volga in 1312, according to the writer who continued
Rashid al-Din's
History. == Islamization ==