Russo-Crimean Wars

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The Russo-Crimean Wars were fought between the forces of the Tsardom of Russia and the Crimean Khanate during the 16th century over the region around the Volga River.

Contents

In the 16th century, the Wild Steppes in Russia were exposed to the Khanate. During the wars, the Crimean Khanate (supported by the Ottoman army) invaded central Russia, devastated Ryazan, and burned Moscow. However, the next year they were defeated in the Battle of Molodi. Despite the defeat, the raids continued. As a result, the Crimean Khanate was invaded several times, and conquered in the late 18th century. The Tatars eventually lost their influence in the regions.

The raids began shortly after the establishment of the Russian buffer state, Qasim Khanate, and the domination of Russia in the Russo-Kazan Wars of the late 15th century.

History

At the guarding border of the Moscow state. Painting by Sergey Vasilievich Ivanov. S. V. Ivanov. At the guarding border of the Moscow state. (1907).jpg
At the guarding border of the Moscow state. Painting by Sergey Vasilievich Ivanov.

The Crimean invasions of Russia began in 1507, after the death of Moscow's grand duke Ivan III, with the Crimean Khanate attacking the Russian towns of Belev and Kozelsk.

Over the course of the 16th century, the outer border of the Wild Steppes was near the city of Ryazan, outside the Oka River. The main path for the invading forces to Moscow was the Muravsky Trail, running from the Crimean Isthmus of Perekop, between the basins of the Dnieper and Seversky Donets rivers, and finally up to Tula. The Tatars would turn back only after extensive looting and kidnapping, the Tartars usually managed to penetrate 100–200 kilometers into Russian territory. Captives were subsequently sent to the Crimean city of Caffa to be sold into the Crimean slave trade. As a result, the Russian population in the border regions suffered heavily.

Each spring, Russia mobilized up to several thousand soldiers for border service. The defensive lines consisted of a circuit of fortresses and cities.

To protect from invasions by the Nogai Horde in the region between the Volga and Ural rivers, the Volga cities of Samara (1586), Tsaritsyn (1589), and Saratov (1590) were founded.

The most damaging invasions occurred in 1517, 1521 (supported by the Khanate of Kazan), 1537 (supported by the Khanate of Kazan, the Lithuanians, and the Ottoman Empire), 1552, 1555, 1570–72 (supported by Sweden and the Ottoman Empire), 1589, 1593, 1640, 1666–67 (supported by Poland–Lithuania), 1671, and 1688.

Russo-Crimean wars of 1571-1572

Fire of Moscow (1571)

In May 1571, the 60,000-strong Crimean [1] and Ottoman army (40,000 Tatars, 13,000 irregular Turks, and 7,000 janissaries) led by the khan of Crimea Devlet I Giray, and Big and Small Nogai hordes and troops of Circassians, bypassed the Serpukhov defensive fortifications on the Oka River, crossed the Ugra River, and rounded the flank of the 6,000-man Russian army. The sentry troops of Russians were crushed by the Crimeans. Not having forces to stop the invasion, the Russian army retreated to Moscow. The rural Russian population also fled to the capital.

The Crimean army devastated unprotected towns and villages around Moscow, and then set fire to suburbs of the capital. [2] Due to a strong wind, the fire quickly expanded. The townspeople, chased by a fire and refugees, rushed to the northern gate of the capital. At the gate and in the narrow streets, there was a crush, people "went in three lines went on heads one of another, and top pressed those who were under them".[ citation needed ] The army, having mixed up with refugees, lost order, and general prince Belsky died in a fire.

Within three hours, Moscow burnt completely. In one more day, the Crimean army, sated with its pillage, left on the Ryazan road to the steppes. Contemporaries counted up to 80,000 victims of the invasion in 1571, [3] with 150,000 Russian taken as captives. [3] Papal ambassador Possevin testified of the devastation: he counted in 1580 no more than 30,000 inhabitants of Moscow, although in 1520 the Moscow population was about 100,000.[ citation needed ]

Battle of Molodi (1572)

After the burning of Moscow, Devlet Giray Khan, supported by the Ottoman Empire, invaded Russia again in 1572. On 26 July 1572 the huge horde of the khan, equipped with cannons and reinforced by janissaries, crossed the Oka River near Serpukhov, decimated the Russian vanguard of 200 men, and advanced towards Moscow in order to pillage it once again. [4] Little did they know, however, that the Russians had prepared for the second invasion, setting up innovative fortifications just beyond the Oka river. The Cirmean Tatars were this time repelled in the Battle of Molodi. [1] [5]

After 1572

Despite the defeat of the Crimean Tatars at Molodi, the raids against Russia continued until the Russo-Turkish war of 1768-1774. The Russian expansion turned to the Black Sea region and the Crimean Khanate was invaded several times in the 18th century and finally annexed in 1783.

Incomplete list of Tatar raids

Tatar invasion of Russia in 1521 Facial Chronicle - b.18, p. 432 ill - Crimean invasion 1521.jpg
Tatar invasion of Russia in 1521

This list does not include raids into Poland-Lithuania (75 raids during 1474–1569 [6] :17)

References

  1. 1 2 Пенской В. В. "Сражение при Молодях 28 июля – 3 августа 1572 г." // История военного дела: исследования и источники. — St. Petersburg, 2012. — Vol. 2. — P. 156. — ISSN   2308-4286.
  2. Fisher, Alan W. (1987). The Crimean Tatars. Hoover Press. p. 45.
  3. 1 2 Bain, Robert Nisbet (1908). Slavonic Europe: Apolitical History of Poland and Russia from 1447 to 1796. Cambridge University Press. p. 124.
  4. Tucker, Spencer C., ed. (2010). "July 30-August 2, 1572: Eastern Europe: Russia: Battle of Molodi". A Global Chronology of Conflict: From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East. Vol. II. ABC-CLIO. p. 531.
  5. Payne, Robert; Romanoff, Nikita (2002). Ivan the Terrible. Cooper Square Press. p. 329.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Davies, Brian (2007). Warfare, State and Society on the Black Sea Steppe,1500-1700.
  7. Зимин А. А. [coollib.com/b/218132/read Россия на пороге нового времени (Очерки политической истории России первой трети XVI в.)]. — М.: Мысль, 1872.
  8. Волков В. А. Под стягом Москвы. Войны и рати Ивана III и Василия III. — М., 2016
  9. Пенской В. В. Численность и развёртывание московского и татарского войска в кампанию 1521 года // Война и оружие: Новые исследования и материалы. 2-я Международная научно-практическая конференция, 18-20 мая 2011 года. — СПб.: ВИМАИВиВС, 2011. — Т. 2. — ISBN 978-5-903501-12-0.
  10. Stevens, Carol (2007). Russia's Wars of Emergence 1460-1730.
  11. Филиппов, В. В. 100 главных битв Древней Руси и Московского царства / В. В. Филиппов, М. Елисеев. — М. : Яуза : Издательство «Э», 2016
  12. Карамзин Н. М. Глава III // История государства Российского. — СПб.: Тип. Н. Греча, 1816—1829. — Т. 10.
  13. Khodarkovsky, Michael (2002). Russia's Steppe Frontier. p. 22.
  14. Sunderland, Willard (2004). Taming the Wild Field . Cornell University Press. ISBN   9780801442094.
  15. Lord Kinross. The Ottoman Centuries. p. 397.

Sources