First and second reigns In August 1466, the first Khan of Crimea,
Hacı I Giray died and the Crimean
beys elected Nur Devlet to succeed him. His younger brother
Meñli I Giray revolted. Mengli was generally supported by the Crimean nobility, while Nur Devlet was supported by the
Great Horde State. Mengli became khan in 1467, but was quickly driven out and fled to the
Genoese in
Kaffa. In June 1468, a delegation of beys went to Kaffa and elected Mengli as the khan. The delegation and a Genoese detachment marched on the old capital of
Chufut-Kale, and in early 1469, and Nur Devlet was driven out. He fled to the
North Caucasus, where he was pursued, captured and then imprisoned at the Genoese fortress of
Sudak.
Third reign Following the Ottoman invasion of Crimea in 1475, Mengli was captured and imprisoned in
Istanbul. The Turks were more interested in expelling the Genoese than ruling Crimea. Nur Devlet was released and became khan as a vassal and tributary of the Turks. Eminek was a powerful bey of the Shirin clan in eastern Crimea by the
Kerch Peninsula. In 1476, his brother Hadzhike rebelled and fled to
Akhmed Khan of the Great Horde. Akhmed sent an army under Janibeg (son of his brother
Mahmud bin Küchük), which was driven out by Emenik. In the fall of 1476, the Sultan ordered Eminek to lead 10,000 men against
Moldavia, where he was defeated. While he was away, Janibeg invaded Crimea and made himself khan. In 1477, Nur Devlet expelled Janibeg and regained the throne. Eminek was displeased and wrote to the sultan asking that Mengli be restored. In the spring of 1478, Mengli was released and returned with Turkish soldiers. He and Eminek drove out Nur Devlet, who fled to
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. The Poles sent him to Kiev. == Russian exile ==