Central Caucasus Crisis

Last updated
Kabardian conquest of Central Caucasus
Part of Russian expansion and Circassian expansion
Date1562 – 1597
Location
Result Kabardian victory [1]
Territorial
changes
Circassian Conquest of the Central Caucasus.
Belligerents
Temryuk coalition :
Flag of Oryol ship (variant).svg Tsardom of Russia
Flag of Kabardia.svg Kabardia
Nogai flag.svg Nogai Horde
Commanders and leaders
Flag of Oryol ship (variant).svg Ivan IV the Terrible
Flag of Kabardia.svg Temryuk Idar
Nogai flag.svg Tinahmet Bey  [ ru ]
Flag of Kabardia.svg Pshepshuko Kaytukov
Flag of Kabardia.svg Arslanbek Kaitukov
Flag of Kabardia.svg Yansokh Kaitukov
Flag of the Shamkhalate of Tarki.jpg Buday I   [3] [4]
Flag of the Shamkhalate of Tarki.jpg Surkhay I  
Nogai flag.svg Ghazi ibn Urak
Flag of Ingushetia.svg Temishk 
Flag of Ingushetia.svg Burnat (POW)
Flag of Ingushetia.svg Ezdnaur (POW)
Flag of Ingushetia.svg Burnak (POW)
Flag of Ingushetia.svg Dudyl (POW)
Flag of North Ossetia (1991--1994).svg Aznaur (POW)
Flag of North Ossetia (1991--1994).svg Dudar (POW)
Flag of the Crimean Khanate (15th century).svg Devlet I Giray
Flag of the Ottoman Empire (1844-1922).svg Selim II

Central Caucasus Crisis or Circassian conquest of Central Caucasus was a campaign directed against the Ingush, Ossetian societies of Digor, Kurtatin, and Tagaur regions, as well as the Ksani Eristavate in Central Ossetia and Turkic people, as a result of this campaign, the Ingush had to go to the mountains, after this campaign, Kabardian and Russian influence was spread throughout the Caucasus.

Contents

Background

Reign of Temryuk Idar and the Russo-Circassian alliance

Temryuk Idar was a skilled ruler and military leader. He noticed the increasing military support from the Ottomans to the Tatars and feared this would affect the Circassians' ability to thwart any possible assault. Temroqwa explored the possible allies, and settled his choice on the Tsarist Russia. In 1557, Temroqwa sent a delegation to Moscow to seek alliance with the Russians. The delegation included his sons Sultan Qul and Bulat Gery, who were welcomed by Ivan the Terrible. Ivan agreed to join the alliance with Kabardia. [5]

Based on the treaty of alliance between the Circassians and the Russians, Circassian cavalry forces participated in several battles with the Russian army in Poland and the Baltics. Ivan supported Temroqwa's goal to extend his power inside Circassia and to unify the lands of Circassians under his reign. Temroqwa established a fort in Mozdok that enabled the Circassian and Russian forces to perform joint training. Ossetian and Ingushetian lands, as well as the Turkic people, became subjects of the Kabardian raising power. Temroqwa's expansion extended towards the Georgian kingdoms in the south. [6]

In 1560, Anastasia Romanovna, Ivan's first wife, died. It was proposed that Ivan would marry Catherine Jagiellon in order to strengthen diplomatic relations with Poland. However Ivan instead decided to marry Temroqwa's daughter, Gwashanay. A high-level delegation was sent to betroth Gwashanay. She was accompanied by her brother, Sultan Qul, on her way to Moscow. Gwashanay was later baptized and became known as Maria Temryukovna. Her brother married the daughter of a member of the tsar's entourage who handled the state treasury. He was later baptized and became known as Mikhael. [6]

In several narratives, Temroqwa was described as a tyrant who only cared about his rule. However, after his death, many elegies were written for him. Temroqwa allied with Tsarist Russia under the belief of unity against shared enemies. [6] [5]

In 1556 Temroqwa led a military campaign against the Tatars. He managed to expel the Tatars from the Circassian lands and to chase the fleeing troops until Taman Peninsula. There, Temroqwa established the city which is now known as Temryuk. [7]

Budai war

Background

In February 1560, Tsar Ivan IV decided to send the renowned military commander Ivan Semenovich Cheremisinov on a campaign to North Dagestan: "The Tsar sent Ivan Semenovich Cheremisinov with his men to the Shavkal and Tyumen to address the Kabardian princes' grievances and the wrongdoings of Shavkal."[ citation needed ]

V. V. Penskoy suggests that one reason Cheremisinov was chosen for this mission was his two-year tenure as the voivode of Astrakhan, which would have given him valuable knowledge of local politics and the ability to gather intelligence on the region.[ citation needed ]

In the summer of 1560, Cheremisinov's army sailed from Astrakhan to attack the Crimean Shavkal's territory. The Russian army traveled along the western coast of the Caspian Sea to Tarkov, the center of the Tarkov Shahmhal. The army included musketeers, Cossacks, and "Astrakhan people." Upon landing near Tarkov, Cheremisinov led an attack on the city, which was captured in half a day. Cheremisinov chose not to hold Tarkov, but instead plundered and burned it, taking many captives.[ citation needed ]

According to V. V. Penskoy, referencing a later account by historian S. A. Belokurov, Tarkov was not a large fortress like Kazan or Astrakhan, but rather a small town in a naturally fortified location. While it had stone walls that provided some defense against mountain raiders, it was no match for Cheremisinov's well-armed troops, who likely had firearms and possibly cannons.

E. N. Kusheva suggested that by the mid-16th century, Tarkov was already the center of the Tarkov Shahmhal. During the battle, the Shahmhal, whose name is not recorded in the Russian chronicles, retreated into the mountains. According to epigraphic evidence, this leader may have been Budai I ibn Umal-Muhammad.

By 1560, tensions had escalated, leading to a Russian military expedition against the Shamkhalate of Tarki. A Russian force under Ivan Cheremisinov launched an attack, briefly capturing Tarki before retreating due to supply issues. [8]

Military campaigns

Campaign in Ingushetia

In 1562, the Kabardian prince Temryuk Idarovich undertook an aggressive campaign against the Ingush, who lived in anticipation. Detachments of Nogai Murzas come to his aid. The Russian Tsar Ivan IV the Terrible, married to Temryuk's daughter Maria, sent 1,000 Cossacks under the command of Grigory Pleshcheev to help him. As a result of this unification of the Kabardino-Nogai-Cossack campaign for discovery, 164 settlements were defeated, judging by the Russian chronicles. The Ingush went to the mountains again. Kabardians settled on their former territory. [9] [10] [11] [12] [13]

Campaign in Ossetia

After Temryuk Idar launched a military campaign against a Ingush, He invaded the Ossetian societies in the Digor, Kurtatin, and Tagaur regions, as well as the Ksani Eristavate in Central Ossetia. Assisted by a contingent of 500 streltsy and 500 Cossacks from Tsardom of Russia, Temryuk’s forces captured key Ossetian nobles, including Burnat, Aznaur, Burnak, and Dudar, and occupied several settlements. [14] [15] [16] [17] [18] [19]

Campaign against the Biyarslan Clan

In 1562–1563, a joint military campaign was launched by Temryuk of Kabarda and the Tsardom of Russia, led by voivode Grigory Pleshcheyev. The campaign targeted territories in the North Caucasus, including the lands of the Biyarslan noble family, who were seen as political opponents to Temryuk’s growing influence. [20] The allied forces attacked several settlements: the towns of Mokhan, Engir, and Kavan were captured, and the village of Telishka was destroyed. [21] [22] [23] Additional assaults were carried out against the Mshan and Son regions, resulting in heavy casualties and the capture of four local leaders. The campaign strengthened Kabardian-Russian control over strategic mountain routes toward Georgia and weakened local resistance, particularly among Vainakh and Turkic peoples-populated areas. [24] [9] [10] [25]

Circassian attacks on Crimean Khanate 1562-1563

Temryuk Idar — relying on the assistance of Russian military units, carried out a series of major campaigns against Kabardian princes aligned with the Crimean Khanate, led by Psheapshoko Kaitukin. These campaigns helped secure unobstructed connections between Kabarda and the Russian state with Georgia. [26]

Budai war

Grave of Buday I Shamkhal'skaia mogila.webp
Grave of Buday I

By 1560, tensions had escalated, leading to a Russian military expedition against the Shamkhalate of Tarki. A Russian force under Ivan Cheremisinov launched an attack, briefly capturing Tarki before retreating due to supply issues. [27]

Circassian-Kumyk battle 1566

A major battle in 1566 saw the forces of Temryuk Idarov clashing with a coalition led by Shamkhal Budai and Nogai allies. The battle resulted in the death of Shamkhal Budai and a temporary Kabardian occupation of Kumyk lands. [28] [29] [30] [31]

Kaitukins and alliance against Temryuk Idar

Between 1563 and 1567, Kabardia was torn by armed conflict between the pro-Muscovite faction of Temryuk Idar and an anti-Muscovite coalition led by Psheapshoko and Aslanbek of the Kaytuk family, supported by the Crimean Khanate and the Lesser Nogai Horde. In 1563, Temryuk’s opponents launched a large-scale offensive that forced him and his sons to flee to Astrakhan, but soon Ivan IV of Russia dispatched a Muscovite force of about a thousand men — Streltsy and Cossacks under Prince Ivan Dashkov — to restore him. With their help, Temryuk defeated his rivals and reclaimed his lands, forcing the anti-Muscovite chiefs to retreat. Continued skirmishes through 1566–1567 followed, as Temryuk’s enemies sought Crimean and Nogai assistance to counterbalance his growing strength, while he secured permanent Russian support through the construction of the Terek Fortress on the Terek River. Despite Crimean attempts under Devlet I Giray to intervene, their raids failed to dislodge Muscovite or Kabardian forces. By the end of 1567, Temryuk stood victorious — his alliance with Muscovy firmly established him as the dominant power in Kabarda and marked the beginning of enduring Russo-Circassian influence in the North Caucasus. [1]

Daryal war

In 1596, Kabardian forces led by princes Solokh and Aitek-Murza advanced through the Daryal Gorge, seizing fortified settlements (’‘kabaki’’) belonging to the Vainakh noble Sultan-Murza. After establishing control in the highlands, they moved southward into Kartli's mountainous borderlands, specifically targeting the Sioni and Ksani regions. [32] [33] [34] [35] [36]

The same report noted that another Kabardian noble, referred to as “Gosudar Alkas,” had warned King Alexander about Solokh's actions and even released many of the captives taken during the raid. In retaliation, Solokh attempted to incite Russian voivodes stationed in Terek to join him in military action against Alkas. [36]

In response, Alexander sent a letter to the Russian commanders urging them not to act against Alkas. He assured them that if Alkas had offended the Russian Tsar in any way, he would soon “correct his mistake, fully submit to the Tsar, and remain eternally loyal.” [36]

Aftermath

War was of great importance, as the western possessions fell away from Shamkhalate, while it is mentioned that in the 16th century Shamkhals collected "yasaq" (tributes) from the areas stretching to Balkaria and Karachay.

The Idarovs then directed the tsarist campaigns to the Tyumen Khanate, whose ruler Soltaney, in alliance with the Shamkhal, desperately resisted the united Russian-Kabardian invasion. However, in 1588 Streltsy founded the fortress of Terki in the very center of Tyumen Khanate on the river Terek. [37]

Two years later, an attack was made on the lands of the Shamkhals, but the attack was repulsed by the Kumyks. The lands of the Tyumen Khanate were finally conquered and annexed by the Russian Tsardom in 1594. [38]

References

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Category:1560s conflicts