1243 1480 event in Rus'. Establishment of the Mongol-Tatar yoke in Rus'

In the 12th century, the Mongol state expanded and their military art improved. The main occupation was cattle breeding; they bred mainly horses and sheep; they did not know agriculture. They lived in felt tents-yurts; they were easy to transport during distant nomads. Every adult Mongol was a warrior, from childhood he sat in the saddle and wielded weapons. A cowardly, unreliable person did not join the warriors and became an outcast.
In 1206, at a congress of the Mongol nobility, Temujin was proclaimed Great Khan with the name Genghis Khan.
The Mongols managed to unite hundreds of tribes under their rule, which allowed them to use foreign human material in their troops during the war. They conquered East Asia (Kyrgyz, Buryats, Yakuts, Uighurs), the Tangut Kingdom (southwest of Mongolia), Northern China, Korea and Central Asia (the largest Central Asian state of Khorezm, Samarkand, Bukhara). As a result, by the end of the 13th century, the Mongols owned half of Eurasia.
In 1223, the Mongols crossed the Caucasus ridge and invaded the Polovtsian lands. The Polovtsians turned to the Russian princes for help, because... Russians and Cumans traded with each other and entered into marriages. The Russians responded, and on June 16, 1223, the first battle between the Mongol-Tatars and the Russian princes took place. The Mongol-Tatar army was reconnaissance, small, i.e. The Mongol-Tatars had to scout out what lands lay ahead. The Russians simply came to fight; they had little idea what kind of enemy was in front of them. Before the Polovtsian request for help, they had not even heard of the Mongols.
The battle ended with the defeat of the Russian troops due to the betrayal of the Polovtsians (they fled from the very beginning of the battle), and also due to the fact that the Russian princes were unable to unite their forces and underestimated the enemy. The Mongols offered the princes to surrender, promising to spare their lives and release them for a ransom. When the princes agreed, the Mongols tied them up, put boards on them, and sitting on top, began to feast on the victory. Russian soldiers, left without leaders, were killed.
The Mongol-Tatars retreated to the Horde, but returned in 1237, already knowing what kind of enemy was in front of them. Batu Khan (Batu), the grandson of Genghis Khan, brought with him a huge army. They preferred to attack the most powerful Russian principalities - and. They defeated and subjugated them, and in the next two years - all of them. After 1240, only one land remained independent - because. Batu had already achieved his main goals; there was no point in losing people near Novgorod.
The Russian princes were unable to unite, so they were defeated, although, according to scientists, Batu lost half of his army in Russian lands. He occupied Russian lands, offered to recognize his power and pay tribute, the so-called “exit.” At first it was collected “in kind” and amounted to 1/10 of the harvest, and then it was transferred to money.
The Mongols established a yoke system in Rus' of total suppression of national life in the occupied territories. In this form, the Tatar-Mongol yoke lasted 10 years, after which the prince offered the Horde a new relationship: Russian princes entered the service of the Mongol khan, were obliged to collect tribute, take it to the Horde and receive there a label for the great reign - a leather belt. At the same time, the prince who paid the most received the label for reign. This order was ensured by the Baskaks - Mongol commanders who walked around the Russian lands with their troops and monitored whether the tribute was collected correctly.
This was a time of vassalage of the Russian princes, but thanks to this act, the Orthodox Church was preserved and the raids stopped.
In the 60s of the 14th century, the Golden Horde split into two warring parts, the border between which was the Volga. In the left-bank Horde there were constant strife with changes in rulers. In the right-bank Horde, Mamai became the ruler.
The beginning of the struggle for liberation from the Tatar-Mongol yoke in Rus' is associated with the name. In 1378, he, sensing the weakening of the Horde, refused to pay tribute and killed all the Baskaks. In 1380, commander Mamai went with the entire Horde to Russian lands, and a battle took place with.
Mamai had 300 thousand “sabers”, and since The Mongols had almost no infantry; he hired the best Italian (Genoese) infantry. Dmitry Donskoy had 160 thousand people, of which only 5 thousand were professional military men. The main weapons of the Russians were metal-bound clubs and wooden spears.
So, the battle with the Mongol-Tatars was suicide for the Russian army, but the Russians still had a chance.
Dmitry Donskoy crossed the Don on the night of September 7-8, 1380 and burned the crossing; there was nowhere to retreat. All that remained was to win or die. He hid 5 thousand warriors in the forest behind his army. The role of the squad was to save the Russian army from being outflanked from the rear.
The battle lasted one day, during which the Mongol-Tatars trampled the Russian army. Then Dmitry Donskoy ordered the ambush regiment to leave the forest. The Mongol-Tatars decided that the main forces of the Russians were coming and, without waiting for everyone to come out, they turned and began to run, trampling the Genoese infantry. The battle turned into a pursuit of a fleeing enemy.
Two years later, a new Horde came with Khan Tokhtamysh. He captured Moscow and Pereyaslavl. Moscow had to resume paying tribute, but it was a turning point in the fight against the Mongol-Tatars, because dependence on the Horde was now weaker.
100 years later, in 1480, the great-grandson of Dmitry Donskoy stopped paying tribute to the Horde.
Khan of the Horde Ahmed came out with a large army against Rus', wanting to punish the rebellious prince. He approached the border of the Moscow principality, the Ugra River, a tributary of the Oka. He also came there. Since the forces turned out to be equal, they stood on the Ugra River throughout spring, summer and autumn. Fearing the approaching winter, the Mongol-Tatars went to the Horde. This was the end of the Tatar-Mongol yoke, because... Ahmed's defeat meant the collapse of Batu's power and the gaining of independence by the Russian state. The Tatar-Mongol yoke lasted 240 years.

So was there a Tatar-Mongol yoke in Rus'?

A passing Tatar. Hell will truly consume these.

(Pass.)

From Ivan Maslov’s parody theatrical play “Elder Paphnutius”, 1867.

The traditional version of the Tatar-Mongol invasion of Rus', the “Tatar-Mongol yoke,” and liberation from it is known to the reader from school. As presented by most historians, the events looked something like this. At the beginning of the 13th century, in the steppes of the Far East, the energetic and brave tribal leader Genghis Khan gathered a huge army of nomads, welded together by iron discipline, and rushed to conquer the world - “to the last sea.” Having conquered their closest neighbors, and then China, the mighty Tatar-Mongol horde rolled west. Having traveled about 5 thousand kilometers, the Mongols defeated Khorezm, then Georgia, and in 1223 they reached the southern outskirts of Rus', where they defeated the army of Russian princes in the battle on the Kalka River. In the winter of 1237, the Tatar-Mongols invaded Russia with all their countless troops, burned and destroyed many Russian cities, and in 1241 they tried to conquer Western Europe, invading Poland, the Czech Republic and Hungary, reached the shores of the Adriatic Sea, but turned back because that they were afraid to leave Russia in their rear, devastated, but still dangerous for them. The Tatar-Mongol yoke began.

The great poet A.S. Pushkin left heartfelt lines: “Russia was destined for a high destiny... its vast plains absorbed the power of the Mongols and stopped their invasion at the very edge of Europe; The barbarians did not dare to leave enslaved Russia in their rear and returned to the steppes of their East. The resulting enlightenment was saved by a torn and dying Russia...”

The huge Mongol power, stretching from China to the Volga, hung like an ominous shadow over Russia. The Mongol khans gave the Russian princes labels to reign, attacked Rus' many times to plunder and plunder, and repeatedly killed Russian princes in their Golden Horde.

Having strengthened over time, Rus' began to resist. In 1380, the Grand Duke of Moscow Dmitry Donskoy defeated the Horde Khan Mamai, and a century later in the so-called “stand on the Ugra” the troops of the Grand Duke Ivan III and the Horde Khan Akhmat met. The opponents camped for a long time on opposite sides of the Ugra River, after which Khan Akhmat, finally realizing that the Russians had become strong and he had little chance of winning the battle, gave the order to retreat and led his horde to the Volga. These events are considered the “end of the Tatar-Mongol yoke.”

But in recent decades this classic version has been called into question. Geographer, ethnographer and historian Lev Gumilev convincingly showed that relations between Russia and the Mongols were much more complex than the usual confrontation between cruel conquerors and their unfortunate victims. Deep knowledge in the field of history and ethnography allowed the scientist to conclude that there was a certain “complementarity” between the Mongols and Russians, that is, compatibility, the ability for symbiosis and mutual support at the cultural and ethnic level. The writer and publicist Alexander Bushkov went even further, “twisting” Gumilyov’s theory to its logical conclusion and expressing a completely original version: what is commonly called the Tatar-Mongol invasion was in fact a struggle of the descendants of Prince Vsevolod the Big Nest (son of Yaroslav and grandson of Alexander Nevsky ) with their rival princes for sole power over Russia. Khans Mamai and Akhmat were not alien raiders, but noble nobles who, according to the dynastic ties of the Russian-Tatar families, had legally valid rights to the great reign. Thus, the Battle of Kulikovo and the “stand on the Ugra” are not episodes of the struggle against foreign aggressors, but pages of the civil war in Rus'. Moreover, this author promulgated a completely “revolutionary” idea: under the names “Genghis Khan” and “Batu” the Russian princes Yaroslav and Alexander Nevsky appear in history, and Dmitry Donskoy is Khan Mamai himself (!).

Of course, the publicist’s conclusions are full of irony and border on postmodern “banter,” but it should be noted that many facts of the history of the Tatar-Mongol invasion and “yoke” really look too mysterious and need closer attention and unbiased research. Let's try to look at some of these mysteries.

Let's start with a general note. Western Europe in the 13th century presented a disappointing picture. The Christian world was experiencing a certain depression. The activity of Europeans shifted to the borders of their range. German feudal lords began to seize the border Slavic lands and turn their population into powerless serfs. The Western Slavs who lived along the Elbe resisted German pressure with all their might, but the forces were unequal.

Who were the Mongols who approached the borders of the Christian world from the east? How did the powerful Mongol state appear? Let's take an excursion into its history.

At the beginning of the 13th century, in 1202–1203, the Mongols defeated first the Merkits and then the Keraits. The fact is that the Keraits were divided into supporters of Genghis Khan and his opponents. The opponents of Genghis Khan were led by the son of Van Khan, the legal heir to the throne - Nilkha. He had reasons to hate Genghis Khan: even at the time when Van Khan was an ally of Genghis, he (the leader of the Keraits), seeing the undeniable talents of the latter, wanted to transfer the Kerait throne to him, bypassing his own son. Thus, the clash between some of the Keraits and the Mongols occurred during Wang Khan’s lifetime. And although the Keraits had a numerical superiority, the Mongols defeated them, as they showed exceptional mobility and took the enemy by surprise.

In the clash with the Keraits, the character of Genghis Khan was fully revealed. When Wang Khan and his son Nilha fled from the battlefield, one of their noyons (military leaders) with a small detachment detained the Mongols, saving their leaders from captivity. This noyon was seized, brought before the eyes of Genghis, and he asked: “Why, noyon, seeing the position of your troops, did not you leave? You had both time and opportunity.” He replied: “I served my khan and gave him the opportunity to escape, and my head is for you, O conqueror.” Genghis Khan said: “Everyone must imitate this man.

Look how brave, faithful, valiant he is. I can’t kill you, noyon, I’m offering you a place in my army.” Noyon became a thousand-man and, of course, served Genghis Khan faithfully, because the Kerait horde disintegrated. Van Khan himself died while trying to escape to the Naiman. Their guards at the border, seeing Kerait, killed him, and presented the old man’s severed head to their khan.

In 1204, there was a clash between the Mongols of Genghis Khan and the powerful Naiman Khanate. And again the Mongols won. The vanquished were included in the horde of Genghis. In the eastern steppe there were no longer any tribes capable of actively resisting the new order, and in 1206, at the great kurultai, Chinggis was again elected khan, but of all Mongolia. This is how the pan-Mongolian state was born. The only tribe hostile to him remained the ancient enemies of the Borjigins - the Merkits, but by 1208 they were forced out into the valley of the Irgiz River.

The growing power of Genghis Khan allowed his horde to assimilate different tribes and peoples quite easily. Because, in accordance with Mongolian stereotypes of behavior, the khan could and should have demanded humility, obedience to orders, and fulfillment of duties, but forcing a person to renounce his faith or customs was considered immoral - the individual had the right to his own choice. This state of affairs was attractive to many. In 1209, the Uighur state sent envoys to Genghis Khan with a request to accept them into his ulus. The request was naturally granted, and Genghis Khan gave the Uyghurs enormous trading privileges. A caravan route passed through Uyghuria, and the Uyghurs, once part of the Mongol state, became rich by selling water, fruit, meat and “pleasures” to hungry caravan riders at high prices. The voluntary union of Uighuria with Mongolia turned out to be useful for the Mongols. With the annexation of Uyghuria, the Mongols went beyond the boundaries of their ethnic area and came into contact with other peoples of the ecumene.

In 1216, on the Irgiz River, the Mongols were attacked by the Khorezmians. Khorezm by that time was the most powerful of the states that arose after the weakening of the power of the Seljuk Turks. The rulers of Khorezm turned from governors of the ruler of Urgench into independent sovereigns and adopted the title of “Khorezmshahs”. They turned out to be energetic, enterprising and militant. This allowed them to conquer most of Central Asia and southern Afghanistan. The Khorezmshahs created a huge state in which the main military force were Turks from the adjacent steppes.

But the state turned out to be fragile, despite the wealth, brave warriors and experienced diplomats. The regime of the military dictatorship relied on tribes alien to the local population, who had a different language, different morals and customs. The cruelty of the mercenaries caused discontent among the residents of Samarkand, Bukhara, Merv and other Central Asian cities. The uprising in Samarkand led to the destruction of the Turkic garrison. Naturally, this was followed by a punitive operation of the Khorezmians, who brutally dealt with the population of Samarkand. Other large and wealthy cities in Central Asia were also affected.

In this situation, Khorezmshah Muhammad decided to confirm his title of “ghazi” - “victor of the infidels” - and become famous for another victory over them. The opportunity presented itself to him in the same year 1216, when the Mongols, fighting with the Merkits, reached Irgiz. Having learned about the arrival of the Mongols, Muhammad sent an army against them on the grounds that the steppe inhabitants needed to be converted to Islam.

The Khorezmian army attacked the Mongols, but in a rearguard battle they themselves went on the offensive and severely battered the Khorezmians. Only the attack of the left wing, commanded by the son of the Khorezmshah, the talented commander Jalal ad-Din, straightened the situation. After this, the Khorezmians retreated, and the Mongols returned home: they did not intend to fight with Khorezm; on the contrary, Genghis Khan wanted to establish ties with the Khorezmshah. After all, the Great Caravan Route went through Central Asia and all the owners of the lands along which it ran grew rich due to the duties paid by merchants. Merchants willingly paid duties because they passed on their costs to consumers without losing anything. Wanting to preserve all the advantages associated with the existence of caravan routes, the Mongols strove for peace and quiet on their borders. The difference of faith, in their opinion, did not give a reason for war and could not justify bloodshed. Probably, the Khorezmshah himself understood the episodic nature of the clash on the Irshza. In 1218, Muhammad sent a trade caravan to Mongolia. Peace was restored, especially since the Mongols had no time for Khorezm: shortly before this, the Naiman prince Kuchluk began a new war with the Mongols.

Once again, Mongol-Khorezm relations were disrupted by the Khorezm Shah himself and his officials. In 1219, a rich caravan from the lands of Genghis Khan approached the Khorezm city of Otrar. The merchants went to the city to replenish food supplies and wash themselves in the bathhouse. There the merchants met two acquaintances, one of whom reported to the ruler of the city that these merchants were spies. He immediately realized that there was an excellent reason to rob travelers. The merchants were killed and their property was confiscated. The ruler of Otrar sent half of the loot to Khorezm, and Muhammad accepted the loot, which means he shared responsibility for what he had done.

Genghis Khan sent envoys to find out what caused the incident. Muhammad became angry when he saw the infidels, and ordered some of the ambassadors to be killed, and some, stripped naked, to be driven out to certain death in the steppe. Two or three Mongols finally made it home and told about what had happened. Genghis Khan's anger knew no bounds. From the Mongolian point of view, two of the most terrible crimes occurred: the deception of those who trusted and the murder of guests. According to custom, Genghis Khan could not leave unavenged either the merchants who were killed in Otrar, or the ambassadors whom the Khorezmshah insulted and killed. Khan had to fight, otherwise his fellow tribesmen would simply refuse to trust him.

In Central Asia, the Khorezmshah had at his disposal a regular army of four hundred thousand. And the Mongols, as the famous Russian orientalist V.V. Bartold believed, had no more than 200 thousand. Genghis Khan demanded military assistance from all allies. Warriors came from the Turks and Kara-Kitai, the Uyghurs sent a detachment of 5 thousand people, only the Tangut ambassador boldly replied: “If you don’t have enough troops, don’t fight.” Genghis Khan considered the answer an insult and said: “Only the dead could I bear such an insult.”

Genghis Khan sent assembled Mongolian, Uighur, Turkic and Kara-Chinese troops to Khorezm. Khorezmshah, having quarreled with his mother Turkan Khatun, did not trust the military leaders related to her. He was afraid to gather them into a fist in order to repel the onslaught of the Mongols, and scattered the army into garrisons. The best commanders of the Shah were his own unloved son Jalal ad-Din and the commandant of the Khojent fortress Timur-Melik. The Mongols took the fortresses one after another, but in Khojent, even after taking the fortress, they were unable to capture the garrison. Timur-Melik put his soldiers on rafts and escaped pursuit along the wide Syr Darya. The scattered garrisons could not hold back the advance of Genghis Khan's troops. Soon all the major cities of the sultanate - Samarkand, Bukhara, Merv, Herat - were captured by the Mongols.

Regarding the capture of Central Asian cities by the Mongols, there is an established version: “Wild nomads destroyed the cultural oases of agricultural peoples.” Is it so? This version, as L.N. Gumilev showed, is based on the legends of court Muslim historians. For example, the fall of Herat was reported by Islamic historians as a disaster in which the entire population of the city was exterminated, except for a few men who managed to escape in the mosque. They hid there, afraid to go out into the streets littered with corpses. Only wild animals roamed the city and tormented the dead. After sitting for some time and coming to their senses, these “heroes” went to distant lands to rob caravans in order to regain their lost wealth.

But is this possible? If the entire population of a large city was exterminated and lay on the streets, then inside the city, in particular in the mosque, the air would be full of corpse miasma, and those hiding there would simply die. No predators, except jackals, live near the city, and they very rarely penetrate into the city. It was simply impossible for exhausted people to move to rob caravans several hundred kilometers from Herat, because they would have to walk, carrying heavy loads - water and provisions. Such a “robber”, having met a caravan, would no longer be able to rob it...

Even more surprising is the information reported by historians about Merv. The Mongols took it in 1219 and also allegedly exterminated all the inhabitants there. But already in 1229 Merv rebelled, and the Mongols had to take the city again. And finally, two years later, Merv sent a detachment of 10 thousand people to fight the Mongols.

We see that the fruits of fantasy and religious hatred gave rise to legends of Mongol atrocities. If you take into account the degree of reliability of sources and ask simple but inevitable questions, it is easy to separate historical truth from literary fiction.

The Mongols occupied Persia almost without fighting, pushing the Khorezmshah's son Jalal ad-Din into northern India. Muhammad II Ghazi himself, broken by the struggle and constant defeats, died in a leper colony on an island in the Caspian Sea (1221). The Mongols made peace with the Shiite population of Iran, which was constantly offended by the Sunnis in power, in particular the Baghdad Caliph and Jalal ad-Din himself. As a result, the Shia population of Persia suffered significantly less than the Sunnis of Central Asia. Be that as it may, in 1221 the state of the Khorezmshahs was ended. Under one ruler - Muhammad II Ghazi - this state achieved both its greatest power and its destruction. As a result, Khorezm, Northern Iran, and Khorasan were annexed to the Mongol Empire.

In 1226, the hour struck for the Tangut state, which, at the decisive moment of the war with Khorezm, refused to help Genghis Khan. The Mongols rightly viewed this move as a betrayal that, according to Yasa, required vengeance. The capital of Tangut was the city of Zhongxing. It was besieged by Genghis Khan in 1227, having defeated the Tangut troops in previous battles.

During the siege of Zhongxing, Genghis Khan died, but the Mongol noyons, by order of their leader, hid his death. The fortress was taken, and the population of the “evil” city, which suffered the collective guilt of betrayal, was executed. The Tangut state disappeared, leaving behind only written evidence of its former culture, but the city survived and lived until 1405, when it was destroyed by the Chinese of the Ming Dynasty.

From the capital of the Tanguts, the Mongols took the body of their great ruler to their native steppes. The funeral ritual was as follows: the remains of Genghis Khan were lowered into a dug grave, along with many valuable things, and all the slaves who performed funeral work were killed. According to custom, exactly one year later it was necessary to celebrate the wake. In order to later find the burial place, the Mongols did the following. At the grave they sacrificed a little camel that had just been taken from its mother. And a year later, the camel herself found in the vast steppe the place where her cub was killed. Having slaughtered this camel, the Mongols performed the required funeral ritual and then left the grave forever. Since then, no one knows where Genghis Khan is buried.

In the last years of his life, he was extremely concerned about the fate of his state. The khan had four sons from his beloved wife Borte and many children from other wives, who, although they were considered legitimate children, had no rights to their father’s throne. The sons from Borte differed in inclinations and character. The eldest son, Jochi, was born shortly after the Merkit captivity of Borte, and therefore not only evil tongues, but also his younger brother Chagatai called him a “Merkit degenerate.” Although Borte invariably defended Jochi, and Genghis Khan himself always recognized him as his son, the shadow of his mother’s Merkit captivity fell on Jochi with the burden of suspicion of illegitimacy. Once, in the presence of his father, Chagatai openly called Jochi illegitimate, and the matter almost ended in a fight between the brothers.

It is curious, but according to the testimony of contemporaries, Jochi’s behavior contained some stable stereotypes that greatly distinguished him from Chinggis. If for Genghis Khan there was no concept of “mercy” in relation to enemies (he left life only for small children adopted by his mother Hoelun, and valiant warriors who went into Mongol service), then Jochi was distinguished by his humanity and kindness. So, during the siege of Gurganj, the Khorezmians, completely exhausted by the war, asked to accept surrender, that is, in other words, to spare them. Jochi spoke out in favor of showing mercy, but Genghis Khan categorically rejected the request for mercy, and as a result, the garrison of Gurganj was partially slaughtered, and the city itself was flooded by the waters of the Amu Darya. The misunderstanding between the father and the eldest son, constantly fueled by the intrigues and slander of relatives, deepened over time and turned into the sovereign's mistrust of his heir. Genghis Khan suspected that Jochi wanted to gain popularity among the conquered peoples and secede from Mongolia. It is unlikely that this was the case, but the fact remains: at the beginning of 1227, Jochi, who was hunting in the steppe, was found dead - his spine was broken. The details of what happened were kept secret, but, without a doubt, Genghis Khan was a person interested in the death of Jochi and was quite capable of ending his son’s life.

In contrast to Jochi, Genghis Khan's second son, Chaga-tai, was a strict, efficient and even cruel man. Therefore, he received the position of "guardian of the Yasa" (something like an attorney general or chief judge). Chagatai strictly observed the law and treated its violators without any mercy.

The third son of the Great Khan, Ogedei, like Jochi, was distinguished by his kindness and tolerance towards people. The character of Ogedei is best illustrated by this incident: one day, on a joint trip, the brothers saw a Muslim washing himself by the water. According to Muslim custom, every believer is obliged to perform prayer and ritual ablution several times a day. Mongolian tradition, on the contrary, forbade a person to wash throughout the summer. The Mongols believed that washing in a river or lake causes a thunderstorm, and a thunderstorm in the steppe is very dangerous for travelers, and therefore “calling a thunderstorm” was considered an attempt on people’s lives. Nuker vigilantes of the ruthless zealot of the law Chagatai captured the Muslim. Anticipating a bloody outcome - the unfortunate man was in danger of having his head cut off - Ogedei sent his man to tell the Muslim to answer that he had dropped a gold piece into the water and was just looking for it there. The Muslim said so to Chagatay. He ordered to look for the coin, and during this time Ogedei’s warrior threw the gold into the water. The found coin was returned to the “rightful owner.” In parting, Ogedei, taking a handful of coins from his pocket, handed them to the rescued person and said: “The next time you drop gold into the water, don’t go after it, don’t break the law.”

The youngest of Genghis' sons, Tului, was born in 1193. Since Genghis Khan was in captivity at that time, this time Borte’s infidelity was quite obvious, but Genghis Khan recognized Tuluya as his legitimate son, although he did not outwardly resemble his father.

Of Genghis Khan's four sons, the youngest had the greatest talents and showed the greatest moral dignity. A good commander and an outstanding administrator, Tuluy was also a loving husband and distinguished by his nobility. He married the daughter of the deceased head of the Keraits, Van Khan, who was a devout Christian. Tuluy himself did not have the right to accept the Christian faith: like Genghisid, he had to profess the Bon religion (paganism). But the khan’s son allowed his wife not only to perform all Christian rituals in a luxurious “church” yurt, but also to have priests with her and receive monks. The death of Tuluy can be called heroic without any exaggeration. When Ogedei fell ill, Tuluy voluntarily took a powerful shamanic potion in an effort to “attract” the disease to himself, and died saving his brother.

All four sons had the right to succeed Genghis Khan. After Jochi was eliminated, there were three heirs left, and when Genghis died and a new khan had not yet been elected, Tului ruled the ulus. But at the kurultai of 1229, the gentle and tolerant Ogedei was chosen as the Great Khan, in accordance with the will of Genghis. Ogedei, as we have already mentioned, had a kind soul, but the kindness of a sovereign is often not to the benefit of the state and his subjects. The management of the ulus under him was carried out mainly thanks to the severity of Chagatai and the diplomatic and administrative skills of Tuluy. The Great Khan himself preferred wanderings with hunts and feasts in Western Mongolia to state concerns.

The grandchildren of Genghis Khan were allocated various areas of the ulus or high positions. Jochi's eldest son, Orda-Ichen, received the White Horde, located between the Irtysh and the Tarbagatai ridge (the area of ​​​​present-day Semipalatinsk). The second son, Batu, began to own the Golden (Great) Horde on the Volga. The third son, Sheibani, received the Blue Horde, which roamed from Tyumen to the Aral Sea. At the same time, the three brothers - the rulers of the uluses - were allocated only one or two thousand Mongol soldiers, while the total number of the Mongol army reached 130 thousand people.

The children of Chagatai also received a thousand soldiers, and the descendants of Tului, being at court, owned the entire grandfather’s and father’s ulus. So the Mongols established a system of inheritance called minorat, in which the youngest son received all the rights of his father as an inheritance, and older brothers received only a share in the common inheritance.

The Great Khan Ogedei also had a son, Guyuk, who claimed the inheritance. The expansion of the clan during the lifetime of Chingis’s children caused the division of the inheritance and enormous difficulties in managing the ulus, which stretched across the territory from the Black to the Yellow Sea. In these difficulties and family scores were hidden the seeds of future strife that destroyed the state created by Genghis Khan and his comrades.

How many Tatar-Mongols came to Rus'? Let's try to sort this issue out.

Russian pre-revolutionary historians mention a “half-million-strong Mongol army.” V. Yang, author of the famous trilogy “Genghis Khan”, “Batu” and “To the Last Sea”, names the number four hundred thousand. However, it is known that a warrior of a nomadic tribe goes on a campaign with three horses (minimum two). One carries luggage (packed rations, horseshoes, spare harness, arrows, armor), and the third needs to be changed from time to time so that one horse can rest if it suddenly has to go into battle.

Simple calculations show that for an army of half a million or four hundred thousand soldiers, at least one and a half million horses are needed. Such a herd is unlikely to be able to effectively move a long distance, since the leading horses will instantly destroy the grass over a vast area, and the rear ones will die from lack of food.

All the main invasions of the Tatar-Mongols into Rus' took place in winter, when the remaining grass was hidden under the snow, and you couldn’t take much fodder with you... The Mongolian horse really knows how to get food from under the snow, but ancient sources do not mention the horses of the Mongolian breed that existed “in service” with the horde. Horse breeding experts prove that the Tatar-Mongol horde rode Turkmens, and this is a completely different breed, looks different, and is not capable of feeding itself in the winter without human help...

In addition, the difference between a horse allowed to wander in winter without any work and a horse forced to make long journeys under a rider and also participate in battles is not taken into account. But in addition to the horsemen, they also had to carry heavy booty! The convoys followed the troops. The cattle that pull the carts also need to be fed... The picture of a huge mass of people moving in the rearguard of an army of half a million with convoys, wives and children seems quite fantastic.

The temptation for a historian to explain the Mongol campaigns of the 13th century by “migrations” is great. But modern researchers show that the Mongol campaigns were not directly related to the movements of huge masses of the population. Victories were won not by hordes of nomads, but by small, well-organized mobile detachments returning to their native steppes after campaigns. And the khans of the Jochi branch - Batu, Horde and Sheybani - received, according to the will of Genghis, only 4 thousand horsemen, i.e. about 12 thousand people settled in the territory from the Carpathians to Altai.

In the end, historians settled on thirty thousand warriors. But here, too, unanswered questions arise. And the first among them will be this: isn’t it enough? Despite the disunity of the Russian principalities, thirty thousand cavalry is too small a figure to cause “fire and ruin” throughout Rus'! After all, they (even supporters of the “classical” version admit this) did not move in a compact mass. Several detachments scattered in different directions, and this reduces the number of “innumerable Tatar hordes” to the limit beyond which elementary mistrust begins: could such a number of aggressors conquer Rus'?

It turns out to be a vicious circle: a huge Tatar-Mongol army, for purely physical reasons, would hardly be able to maintain combat capability in order to move quickly and deliver the notorious “indestructible blows.” A small army would hardly have been able to establish control over most of the territory of Rus'. To get out of this vicious circle, we have to admit: the Tatar-Mongol invasion was in fact only an episode of the bloody civil war that was going on in Rus'. The enemy forces were relatively small; they relied on their own forage reserves accumulated in the cities. And the Tatar-Mongols became an additional external factor, used in the internal struggle in the same way as the troops of the Pechenegs and Polovtsians had previously been used.

The chronicle information that has reached us about the military campaigns of 1237–1238 depicts the classically Russian style of these battles - the battles take place in winter, and the Mongols - the steppe inhabitants - act with amazing skill in the forests (for example, the encirclement and subsequent complete destruction on the City River of a Russian detachment under the command of the great Prince of Vladimir Yuri Vsevolodovich).

Having taken a general look at the history of the creation of the huge Mongol power, we must return to Rus'. Let us take a closer look at the situation with the Battle of the Kalka River, which is not fully understood by historians.

It was not the steppe people who represented the main danger to Kievan Rus at the turn of the 11th–12th centuries. Our ancestors were friends with the Polovtsian khans, married “red Polovtsian girls”, accepted baptized Polovtsians into their midst, and the descendants of the latter became Zaporozhye and Sloboda Cossacks, it is not for nothing that in their nicknames the traditional Slavic suffix of affiliation “ov” (Ivanov) was replaced by the Turkic one - “ enko" (Ivanenko).

At this time, a more formidable phenomenon emerged - a decline in morals, a rejection of traditional Russian ethics and morality. In 1097, a princely congress took place in Lyubech, marking the beginning of a new political form of existence of the country. There it was decided that “let everyone keep his fatherland.” Rus' began to turn into a confederation of independent states. The princes swore to inviolably observe what was proclaimed and kissed the cross in this. But after the death of Mstislav, the Kiev state began to quickly disintegrate. Polotsk was the first to settle down. Then the Novgorod “republic” stopped sending money to Kyiv.

A striking example of the loss of moral values ​​and patriotic feelings was the act of Prince Andrei Bogolyubsky. In 1169, having captured Kyiv, Andrei gave the city to his warriors for three days of plunder. Until that moment, in Rus' it was customary to do this only with foreign cities. During any civil strife, such a practice was never extended to Russian cities.

Igor Svyatoslavich, a descendant of Prince Oleg, the hero of “The Tale of Igor’s Campaign,” who became the Prince of Chernigov in 1198, set himself the goal of dealing with Kiev, a city where the rivals of his dynasty were constantly strengthening. He agreed with the Smolensk prince Rurik Rostislavich and called on the Polovtsians for help. Prince Roman Volynsky spoke in defense of Kyiv, the “mother of Russian cities,” relying on the Torcan troops allied to him.

The plan of the Chernigov prince was implemented after his death (1202). Rurik, Prince of Smolensk, and the Olgovichi with the Polovtsy in January 1203, in a battle that was fought mainly between the Polovtsy and the Torks of Roman Volynsky, gained the upper hand. Having captured Kyiv, Rurik Rostislavich subjected the city to a terrible defeat. The Tithe Church and the Kiev Pechersk Lavra were destroyed, and the city itself was burned. “They have created a great evil that has not existed since baptism in the Russian land,” the chronicler left a message.

After the fateful year of 1203, Kyiv never recovered.

According to L.N. Gumilyov, by this time the ancient Russians had lost their passionarity, that is, their cultural and energetic “charge”. In such conditions, a clash with a strong enemy could not but become tragic for the country.

Meanwhile, the Mongol regiments were approaching the Russian borders. At that time, the main enemy of the Mongols in the west was the Cumans. Their enmity began in 1216, when the Cumans accepted the blood enemies of Genghis - the Merkits. The Polovtsians actively pursued their anti-Mongol policy, constantly supporting the Finno-Ugric tribes hostile to the Mongols. At the same time, the Cumans of the steppe were as mobile as the Mongols themselves. Seeing the futility of cavalry clashes with the Cumans, the Mongols sent an expeditionary force behind enemy lines.

Talented commanders Subetei and Jebe led a corps of three tumens across the Caucasus. The Georgian king George Lasha tried to attack them, but was destroyed along with his army. The Mongols managed to capture the guides who showed the way through the Daryal Gorge. So they went to the upper reaches of the Kuban, to the rear of the Polovtsians. They, having discovered the enemy in their rear, retreated to the Russian border and asked for help from the Russian princes.

It should be noted that the relations between Rus' and the Polovtsians do not fit into the scheme of irreconcilable confrontation “sedentary - nomadic”. In 1223, the Russian princes became allies of the Polovtsians. The three strongest princes of Rus' - Mstislav the Udaloy from Galich, Mstislav of Kiev and Mstislav of Chernigov - gathered troops and tried to protect them.

The clash on Kalka in 1223 is described in some detail in the chronicles; In addition, there is another source - “The Tale of the Battle of Kalka, and of the Russian Princes, and of the Seventy Heroes.” However, the abundance of information does not always bring clarity...

Historical science has long not denied the fact that the events on Kalka were not the aggression of evil aliens, but an attack by the Russians. The Mongols themselves did not seek war with Russia. The ambassadors who arrived to the Russian princes quite friendly asked the Russians not to interfere in their relations with the Polovtsians. But, true to their allied obligations, the Russian princes rejected peace proposals. In doing so, they made a fatal mistake that had bitter consequences. All the ambassadors were killed (according to some sources, they were not just killed, but “tortured”). At all times, the murder of an ambassador or envoy was considered a serious crime; According to Mongolian law, deceiving someone who trusted was an unforgivable crime.

Following this, the Russian army sets out on a long march. Having left the borders of Rus', it first attacks the Tatar camp, takes booty, steals cattle, after which it moves outside its territory for another eight days. A decisive battle takes place on the Kalka River: the eighty-thousandth Russian-Polovtsian army attacked the twenty-thousandth (!) detachment of the Mongols. This battle was lost by the Allies due to their inability to coordinate their actions. The Polovtsy left the battlefield in panic. Mstislav Udaloy and his “younger” prince Daniil fled across the Dnieper; They were the first to reach the shore and managed to jump into the boats. At the same time, the prince chopped up the rest of the boats, fearing that the Tatars would be able to cross after him, “and, filled with fear, I reached Galich on foot.” Thus, he doomed his comrades, whose horses were worse than princely ones, to death. The enemies killed everyone they overtook.

The other princes are left alone with the enemy, fight off his attacks for three days, after which, believing the assurances of the Tatars, they surrender. Here lies another mystery. It turns out that the princes surrendered after a certain Russian named Ploskinya, who was in the enemy’s battle formations, solemnly kissed the pectoral cross that the Russians would be spared and their blood would not be shed. The Mongols, according to their custom, kept their word: having tied up the captives, they laid them on the ground, covered them with planks and sat down to feast on the bodies. Not a drop of blood was actually shed! And the latter, according to Mongolian views, was considered extremely important. (By the way, only the “Tale of the Battle of Kalka” reports that the captured princes were put under planks. Other sources write that the princes were simply killed without mockery, and still others that they were “captured.” So the story with a feast on the bodies is just one version.)

Different peoples perceive the rule of law and the concept of honesty differently. The Russians believed that the Mongols, by killing the captives, broke their oath. But from the point of view of the Mongols, they kept their oath, and the execution was the highest justice, because the princes committed the terrible sin of killing someone who trusted them. Therefore, the point is not in deceit (history provides a lot of evidence of how the Russian princes themselves violated the “kiss of the cross”), but in the personality of Ploskini himself - a Russian, a Christian, who somehow mysteriously found himself among the warriors of the “unknown people”.

Why did the Russian princes surrender after listening to Ploskini’s entreaties? “The Tale of the Battle of Kalka” writes: “There were also wanderers along with the Tatars, and their commander was Ploskinya.” Brodniks are Russian free warriors who lived in those places, the predecessors of the Cossacks. However, establishing Ploschini's social status only confuses the matter. It turns out that the wanderers in a short time managed to come to an agreement with the “unknown peoples” and became so close to them that they jointly struck at their brothers in blood and faith? One thing can be stated with certainty: part of the army with which the Russian princes fought on Kalka was Slavic, Christian.

The Russian princes do not look their best in this whole story. But let's return to our riddles. For some reason, the “Tale of the Battle of Kalka” that we mentioned is not able to definitely name the enemy of the Russians! Here is the quote: “...Because of our sins, unknown peoples came, the godless Moabites [symbolic name from the Bible], about whom no one knows exactly who they are and where they came from, and what their language is, and what tribe they are, and what faith. And they call them Tatars, while others say Taurmen, and others say Pechenegs.”

Amazing lines! They were written much later than the events described, when it was supposed to be known exactly who the Russian princes fought on Kalka. After all, part of the army (albeit small) nevertheless returned from Kalka. Moreover, the victors, pursuing the defeated Russian regiments, chased them to Novgorod-Svyatopolch (on the Dnieper), where they attacked the civilian population, so that among the townspeople there should have been witnesses who saw the enemy with their own eyes. And yet he remains “unknown”! This statement further confuses the matter. After all, by the time described, the Polovtsians were well known in Rus' - they lived nearby for many years, then fought, then became related... The Taurmen - a nomadic Turkic tribe that lived in the Northern Black Sea region - were again well known to the Russians. It is curious that in the “Tale of Igor’s Campaign” certain “Tatars” are mentioned among the nomadic Turks who served the Chernigov prince.

One gets the impression that the chronicler is hiding something. For some reason unknown to us, he does not want to directly name the Russian enemy in that battle. Maybe the battle on Kalka is not a clash with unknown peoples at all, but one of the episodes of the internecine war waged among themselves by Russian Christians, Polovtsian Christians and the Tatars who got involved in the matter?

After the Battle of Kalka, some of the Mongols turned their horses to the east, trying to report on the completion of the assigned task - the victory over the Cumans. But on the banks of the Volga, the army was ambushed by the Volga Bulgars. The Muslims, who hated the Mongols as pagans, unexpectedly attacked them during the crossing. Here the victors at Kalka were defeated and lost many people. Those who managed to cross the Volga left the steppes to the east and united with the main forces of Genghis Khan. Thus ended the first meeting of the Mongols and Russians.

L.N. Gumilyov collected a huge amount of material, clearly demonstrating that the relationship between Russia and the Horde CAN be described by the word “symbiosis”. After Gumilev, they write especially a lot and often about how Russian princes and “Mongol khans” became brothers-in-law, relatives, sons-in-law and fathers-in-law, how they went on joint military campaigns, how (let’s call a spade a spade) they were friends. Relations of this kind are unique in their own way - the Tatars did not behave this way in any country they conquered. This symbiosis, brotherhood in arms leads to such an interweaving of names and events that sometimes it is even difficult to understand where the Russians end and the Tatars begin...

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2. The Tatar-Mongol invasion as the unification of Rus' under the rule of the Novgorod = Yaroslavl dynasty of George = Genghis Khan and then his brother Yaroslav = Batu = Ivan Kalita Above, we have already begun to talk about the “Tatar-Mongol invasion” as the unification of the Russian

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7.4. Fourth period: the Tatar-Mongol yoke from the battle of the City in 1238 to the “standing on the Ugra” in 1481, considered today the “official end of the Tatar-Mongol yoke” BATY KHAN from 1238. YAROSLAV VSEVOLODOVICH 1238–1248, ruled for 10 years, capital - Vladimir. Came from Novgorod

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2. The Tatar-Mongol invasion as the unification of Rus' under the rule of the Novgorod = Yaroslavl dynasty of George = Genghis Khan and then his brother Yaroslav = Batu = Ivan Kalita Above, we have already begun to talk about the “Tatar-Mongol invasion” as a process of unification of the Russian

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3. The Tatar-Mongol yoke in Rus' is a period of military control in the United Russian Empire 3.1. What is the difference between our version and the Miller-Romanov version? The Miller-Romanov story paints the era of the 13th–15th centuries in the dark colors of a fierce foreign yoke in Rus'. WITH

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Golden Horde- one of the saddest pages in Russian history. Some time after the victory in Battle of Kalka, the Mongols began to prepare a new invasion of Russian lands, having studied the tactics and characteristics of the future enemy.

Golden Horde.

The Golden Horde (Ulus Juni) was formed in 1224 as a result of the division Mongol Empire Genghis Khan between his sons to the western and eastern parts. The Golden Horde became the western part of the empire from 1224 to 1266. Under the new khan, Mengu-Timur became virtually (although not formally) independent from the Mongol Empire.

Like many states of that era, in the 15th century it experienced feudal fragmentation and as a result (and there were a lot of enemies offended by the Mongols) by the 16th century it finally ceased to exist.

In the 14th century, Islam became the state religion of the Mongol Empire. It is noteworthy that in the territories under their control the Horde khans (including in Rus') did not particularly impose their religion. The concept of “Golden” became established among the Horde only in the 16th century because of the golden tents of its khans.

Tatar-Mongol yoke.

Tatar-Mongol yoke, as well as Mongol-Tatar yoke, - not entirely true from a historical point of view. Genghis Khan considered the Tatars his main enemies, and destroyed most of them (almost all) tribes, while the rest submitted to the Mongol Empire. The number of Tatars in the Mongol troops was scanty, but due to the fact that the empire occupied all the former lands of the Tatars, Genghis Khan’s troops began to be called Tatar-Mongolian or Mongol-Tatar conquerors. In reality, it was about Mongol yoke.

So, the Mongolian, or Horde, yoke is a system of political dependence of Ancient Rus' on the Mongol Empire, and a little later on the Golden Horde as a separate state. The complete elimination of the Mongol yoke occurred only at the beginning of the 15th century, although the actual one was somewhat earlier.

The Mongol invasion began after the death of Genghis Khan Batu Khan(or Khan Batu) in 1237. The main Mongol troops converged on the territories near present-day Voronezh, which had previously been controlled by the Volga Bulgars until they were almost destroyed by the Mongols.

In 1237, the Golden Horde captured Ryazan and destroyed the entire Ryazan principality, including small villages and towns.

In January-March 1238, the same fate befell the Vladimir-Suzdal principality and Pereyaslavl-Zalessky. The last to be taken were Tver and Torzhok. There was a threat of taking the Novgorod principality, but after the capture of Torzhok on March 5, 1238, less than 100 km from Novgorod, the Mongols turned around and returned to the steppes.

Until the end of 38, the Mongols only made periodic raids, and in 1239 they moved to Southern Rus' and took Chernigov on October 18, 1239. Putivl (the scene of “Yaroslavna’s Lament”), Glukhov, Rylsk and other cities in the territory of present-day Sumy, Kharkov and Belgorod regions were destroyed.

This year Ögedey(the next ruler of the Mongol Empire after Genghis Khan) sent additional troops to Batu from Transcaucasia and in the fall of 1240 Batu Khan besieged Kyiv, having previously plundered all the surrounding lands. The Kyiv, Volyn and Galician principalities at that time were ruled by Danila Galitsky, son of Roman Mstislavovich, who at that moment was in Hungary, unsuccessfully trying to conclude an alliance with the Hungarian king. Perhaps later, the Hungarians regretted their refusal to Prince Danil, when Batu's Horde captured all of Poland and Hungary. Kyiv was taken by early December 1240 after several weeks of siege. The Mongols began to control most of Rus', including even those areas (on an economic and political level) that they did not capture.

Kyiv, Vladimir, Suzdal, Tver, Chernigov, Ryazan, Pereyaslavl and many other cities were completely or partially destroyed.

An economic and cultural decline set in in Rus' - this explains the almost complete absence of chronicles of contemporaries, and as a result - a lack of information for today's historians.

For some time, the Mongols were distracted from Rus' due to raids and invasions of Polish, Lithuanian, Hungarian and other European lands.

(ROK - many already know that the prince of Kievan Rus, Vladimir the Bloody, did not “baptize” the Russians into Christianity, but converted them to the “Greek Faith” monks of Byzantium - the Lunar Cult, only after the death of the great knight-prince Svyatoslav Khorobre! Since the people resisted with all their might for almost 300 years the black monks of Byzantium and the mercenaries of Kyiv, the latter used GENOCIDE, burning all those who disagreed in the log houses. They decided to disguise the monstrous crimes - the murder of about 9 million victims - under the guise of the “Tatar-Mongol” yoke! But the truth is already breaking through the Judeo-Christian deceptions of the Middle Ages).

Great (Grande) i.e. Mogul Tartaria is Mogul Tartaria

Many members of the editorial board are personally acquainted with the inhabitants of Mongolia, who were surprised to learn about their supposed 300-year rule over Russia. Of course, this news filled the Mongols with a sense of national pride, but at the same time they asked: “Who is Genghis Khan?” (from the magazine “Vedic Culture No. 2”)

In the chronicles of the Orthodox Old Believers it is said unequivocally about the “Tatar-Mongol yoke”: “There was Fedot, but not the same one.” Let's turn to the Old Slovenian language. Having adapted runic images to modern perception, we get: thief - enemy, robber; Mughal - powerful; yoke - order. It turns out that the “Tata of the Aryans” (from the point of view of the Christian flock), with the light hand of the chroniclers, were called “Tatars”, (There is another meaning: “Tata” is the father. Tatar - Tata of the Aryans, i.e. Fathers (Ancestors or more the elders) Aryans) powerful - by the Mongols, and the yoke - the 300-year-old order in the State, which stopped the bloody civil war that broke out on the basis of the forced baptism of Russia - “martyrdom”. Horde is a derivative of the word Order, where “Or” is strength, and day is the daylight hours or simply “light.” Accordingly, “Order” is the Force of Light, and “Horde” is the Forces of Light. Were there dark-haired, stocky, dark-skinned, hook-nosed, narrow-eyed, bow-legged and very angry warriors in the Horde? Were. Detachments of mercenaries of different nationalities, who, as in any other army, were driven in the front ranks, preserving the main Slavic-Aryan Troops from losses on the front line.

Hard to believe? All Scandinavian countries and Denmark were part of Russia, which extended only to the mountains, Moreover, the Principality of Muscovy is shown as an independent state, not part of Rus'. In the east, beyond the Urals, the principalities of Obdora, Siberia, Yugoria, Grustina, Lukomorye, Belovodye are depicted, which were part of the Ancient Power of the Slavs and Aryans - Great (Grand) Tartaria (Tartaria - lands under the patronage of the God Tarkh Perunovich and the Goddess Tara Perunovna - Son and Daughter of the Supreme God Perun - Ancestor of the Slavs and Aryans).

Do you need a lot of intelligence to draw an analogy: Great (Grand) Tartaria = Mogolo + Tartaria = “Mongol-Tataria”? Not only in the 13th, but until the 18th century, Grand (Mogolo) Tartary existed as real as the faceless Russian Federation now.

The “history scribblers” were not able to distort and hide everything from the people. Their repeatedly darned and patched “Trishka caftan”, covering the Truth, is constantly bursting at the seams. Through the gaps, the Truth reaches the consciousness of our contemporaries bit by bit. They do not have truthful information, so they are often mistaken in the interpretation of certain factors, but the general conclusion they draw is correct: what school teachers taught to several dozen generations of Russians is deception, slander, falsehood.

The classic version of the “Mongol-Tatar invasion of Rus'” has been known to many since school. She looks like this. At the beginning of the 13th century, in the Mongolian steppes, Genghis Khan gathered a huge army of nomads, subject to iron discipline, and planned to conquer the whole world. Having defeated China, Genghis Khan's army rushed to the west, and in 1223 it reached the south of Rus', where it defeated the squads of Russian princes on the Kalka River. In the winter of 1237, the Tatar-Mongols invaded Rus', burned many cities, then invaded Poland, the Czech Republic and reached the shores of the Adriatic Sea, but suddenly turned back because they were afraid to leave devastated, but still dangerous Rus' in their rear. The Tatar-Mongol yoke began in Rus'. The huge Golden Horde had borders from Beijing to the Volga and collected tribute from the Russian princes. The khans gave the Russian princes labels to reign and terrorized the population with atrocities and robberies.

Even the official version says that there were many Christians among the Mongols and some Russian princes established very warm relations with the Horde khans. Another oddity: with the help of the Horde troops, some princes remained on the throne. The princes were very close people to the khans. And in some cases, the Russians fought on the side of the Horde. Aren't there a lot of strange things? Is this how the Russians should have treated the occupiers?

Having strengthened, Rus' began to resist, and in 1380 Dmitry Donskoy defeated the Horde Khan Mamai on the Kulikovo Field, and a century later the troops of Grand Duke Ivan III and the Horde Khan Akhmat met. The opponents camped for a long time on opposite sides of the Ugra River, after which the khan realized that he had no chance, gave the order to retreat and went to the Volga. These events are considered the end of the “Tatar-Mongol yoke.”

A number of scientists, including academician Anatoly Fomenko, made a sensational conclusion based on a mathematical analysis of the manuscripts: there was no invasion from the territory of modern Mongolia! And there was a civil war in Rus', the princes fought with each other. There were no traces of any representatives of the Mongoloid race who came to Rus'. Yes, there were individual Tatars in the army, but not aliens, but residents of the Volga region, who lived in the neighborhood of the Russians long before the notorious “invasion.”

What is commonly called the “Tatar-Mongol invasion” was in fact a struggle between the descendants of Prince Vsevolod the “Big Nest” and their rivals for sole power over Russia. The fact of war between princes is generally recognized; unfortunately, Rus' did not unite immediately, and quite strong rulers fought among themselves.

But who did Dmitry Donskoy fight with? In other words, who is Mamai?

The era of the Golden Horde was distinguished by the fact that, along with secular power, there was a strong military power. There were two rulers: a secular one, called the prince, and a military one, he was called the khan, i.e. "military leader" In the chronicles you can find the following entry: “There were also wanderers along with the Tatars, and their governor was so-and-so,” that is, the Horde troops were led by governors! And the Brodniks are Russian free warriors, the predecessors of the Cossacks.

Authoritative scholars have concluded that the Horde is the name of the Russian regular army (like the “Red Army”). And Tatar-Mongolia is Great Rus' itself. It turns out that it was not the “Mongols,” but the Russians who conquered a vast territory from the Pacific to the Atlantic Ocean and from the Arctic to the Indian. It was our troops who made Europe tremble. Most likely, it was fear of the powerful Russians that caused the Germans to rewrite Russian history and turn their national humiliation into ours.

A few more words about names. Most people of that time had two names: one in the world, and the other received at baptism or a military nickname. According to the scientists who proposed this version, Prince Yaroslav and his son Alexander Nevsky act under the names of Genghis Khan and Batu. Ancient sources depict Genghis Khan as tall, with a luxurious long beard, and “lynx-like” green-yellow eyes. Note that people of the Mongoloid race do not have a beard at all. The Persian historian of the Horde, Rashid al-Din, writes that in the family of Genghis Khan, children “were mostly born with gray eyes and blond hair.”

Genghis Khan, according to scientists, is Prince Yaroslav. He just had a middle name - Chinggis (who had a rank called gis) with the prefix “khan”, which meant “military leader”. Batu (father) Batuhan (if you read it in Cyrillic it is given by the Vatican) - his son Alexander (Nevsky). In the manuscripts you can find the following phrase: “Alexander Yaroslavich Nevsky, nicknamed Batu.” By the way, according to the description of his contemporaries, Batu had fair hair, a light beard and light eyes! It turns out that it was the Horde khan who defeated the crusaders on Lake Peipsi!

Having studied the chronicles, scientists discovered that Mamai and Akhmat were also noble nobles, who, according to the dynastic ties of the Russian-Tatar families, had the right to a great reign. Accordingly, “Mamaevo’s Massacre” and “Standing on the Ugra” are episodes of the civil war in Rus', the struggle of princely families for power.

At the beginning of the 18th century, Peter 1 founded the Russian Academy of Sciences. Over the 120 years of its existence, there have been 33 academic historians in the historical department of the Academy of Sciences. Of these, only three are Russians, including M.V. Lomonosov, the rest are Germans. The history of Ancient Rus' until the beginning of the 17th century was written by the Germans, and some of them did not even know Russian! This fact is well known to professional historians, but they make no effort to carefully review what kind of history the Germans wrote.

It is known that M.V. Lomonosov wrote the history of Rus' and that he had constant disputes with German academics. After Lomonosov's death, his archives disappeared without a trace. However, his works on the history of Rus' were published, but under the editorship of Miller. Meanwhile, it was Miller who persecuted M.V. Lomonosov during his lifetime! The works of Lomonosov on the history of Rus' published by Miller are falsifications, this was shown by computer analysis. There is little left of Lomonosov in them.

Everyone knows about the conquest of Rus' by the Mongols. They also know that the Russian lands paid tribute to the Horde for more than two centuries. “Russian Planet” will tell you how this tribute was collected and how much it amounted to in rubles.

“And I counted the number, and began to pay tribute on them.”

The events of 1237-1240, when Batu’s troops captured most of Rus' and destroyed two-thirds of Russian cities, were simply called the “Western Campaign” in the capital of the Mongol Empire, Karakorum. Indeed, the Russian lands captured by Batu were then very modest trophies in comparison with the largest and richest cities of China, Central Asia and Persia.

If on the eve of the assault by the Mongols in 1240, Kiev, which remained the largest city in Rus', had about 50 thousand inhabitants, then the capital of the Jin Empire located in northern China, captured by the Mongols in 1233, accommodated 400 thousand inhabitants. At least 300 thousand people lived in Samarkand, the largest city in Central Asia, captured by Genghis Khan in 1220. His grandson Batu, 17 years later, received a more modest booty - according to archaeologists, the population of Vladimir and Ryazan ranged from 15 to 25 thousand people. For consolation, we note that the main city of Poland, Krakow, captured by Batu in 1241, had less than 10 thousand inhabitants. Novgorod, which was not captured, but eventually submitted to the Mongols, was then inhabited by about 30 thousand.

The population of the Vladimir-Suzdal principality is estimated by historians at a maximum of 800 thousand people. In general, the ancient Russian lands during the period of the “Batu invasion” from Novgorod to Kyiv, from Vladimir-Volynsky in the west of the future Ukraine to Vladimir-Zalessky in the center of the future Muscovy, numbered about 5-7 million inhabitants.

For comparison, let us give the population of other countries captured by Genghis Khan, his children and grandchildren - the state of the Khorezmshahs, which included Central Asia and modern Iran, was inhabited by about 20 million, and the population of all of China, then divided into several states and empires (Xi-Xia, Jin, Song), successively captured by the Mongols, already exceeded 100 million.

But such modesty and comparative poverty did not make it any easier for the Russian people. In the first years of the conquest, the Mongols, in addition to seizing military booty during the fighting, collected military indemnities from the conquered lands. The Moscow chronicle tells about tithe “in everything, in princes and in people and in horses,” as a requirement of the Mongols at the very beginning of the conquest.

However, the Mongols of the era of Genghis Khan differed from all other conquerors in their systematic approach in everything - from the organization of the army to the well-thought-out scheme of robbing the conquered. Almost immediately after the completion of the campaigns of 1237-1240, they, not limiting themselves to one-time robberies, began to introduce their own taxation system in Rus'.

“The battle between the Mongols and the Chinese in 1211” from the historical work “Jami at-tawarikh”, 1430

The beginning of the payment of regular tribute is usually dated back to 1245, when a record appears in the Novgorod Chronicle about the first actions of the Mongols after the conquest: “And they counted the number, and began to impose tribute on them.” The following year, 1246, the Italian monk Plano Carpini, sent by the Pope to the Mongol Emperor, passed through Kiev and wrote in his diary that at that time “one Saracen, as they said from the Batu party,” was sent to “Russia”, who “counted everything population, according to their custom”, “that everyone, both small and large, even a one-day-old baby, or poor or rich, should pay such a tribute, namely, that he would give one bear skin, one black beaver, one black sable and one fox skin."

It is clear that in the first years after the conquest, this system was in its infancy and covered only part of the Russian lands, where the garrisons of Batu, who remained in Eastern Europe after the completion of the “Western Campaign,” settled nearby for the winter. Most of the Russian lands, having survived the raids of the steppe cavalry, avoided paying regular tribute.

In 1247, 10 years after the start of the conquest, Prince Andrei Yaroslavich, the younger brother of Alexander Nevsky, went to pay his respects to the new authorities in Mongolia. There, from the hands of the Great Khan Guyuk, he received a label to reign in Vladimir, becoming, by the will of the distant eastern overlord, the Grand Duke of Vladimir. In addition to the label for reign, Andrei received from Guyuk an order to conduct a detailed census of the population in his lands in order to impose a systematic tribute in favor of the Genghisid empire.

However, the “capital city” Vladimir was separated from the Mongol headquarters in Karakorum by almost five thousand kilometers and half a year of travel - having returned to reign with a label, Andrei Yaroslavich ignored the order to conduct a census, especially since the great Khan Guyuk died a year later. Systematic tribute from northeastern Rus' never went to Mongolia.

“Destroying the entire land of Suzhdal and Ryazan...”

This was a common phenomenon - many of the outskirts of the Mongol empire, having experienced a devastating conquest, tried to evade paying tribute after the departure of the conquering army. Therefore, the new great Khan Mongke, at the same congress-kurultai of Mongol commanders that elected him head of state, decided to conduct a general census of the empire’s population in order to create a unified tax system.

In 1250, such a census began in the part of China subject to the Mongols, in 1253 - in Iran, in 1254 - in the part of the Caucasus conquered by the Mongols. The order for a census came to Rus' in 1252 along with Berke’s “Bitekchi” detachment. “Bitekchi” (translated from Turkic as clerk) was the name of the position of the first civil officials in the empire of Genghis Khan. In Russian chronicles they were called “chislenniks”, whose task was precisely the calculation - the census of the population and property, the organization of the tax system and control over its successful activities.

The Grand Duke of Vladimir Andrei Yaroslavich, and the entire population of Rus', already knew how carefully the Mongols treated the execution of their orders - according to the laws set out in the Yas of Genghis Khan, the death penalty was imposed for failure to comply with orders. Ordinary people had their heads cut off, and nobles, such as Prince Andrei, had their backs broken. But the people who had just survived Batu’s campaign did not want and could not resist the Mongols.

Diorama “The heroic defense of Old Ryazan from the Mongol-Tatar troops in 1237” in Oleg’s palace, Ryazan. Photo: Denis Konkov / poputi.su

The “numberman” Berke was accompanied by a power resource in the form of a Mongol detachment of about a thousand horsemen under the command of the Mongol officer Nyuryn. He was the grandson of Temnik Burundai, Batu's deputy during the conquest of Rus'. It is known that in 1237-1240 Nyuryn himself took part in the assault on Rostov, Yaroslavl and Kyiv, so he knew the Russian theater of military operations well.

In Russian chronicles, Nyuryn appears as Nevryuy. Therefore, the events of 1252 in Rus' are called the “Nevryuev’s Army” - Nyuryn’s detachment accompanying the “numeral” Berke, unexpectedly for the Russians, went to Vladimir and defeated the squad of Prince Andrei. The Grand Duke of Vladimir himself hastily fled to Sweden through Novgorod. The Mongols appointed Alexander Nevsky as the new Grand Duke, and the Bitekchi-counter Berke tried to begin a population census.

However, here the census encountered sabotage not by the Russians, but by the Mongols - Batu Khan, who ruled the western outskirts of the empire, clearly did not want taxes from Rus' to go past him to distant Mongolia. Batu was much more satisfied with receiving a non-fixed tribute to his personal treasury directly from the Russian princes than with creating a general imperial tax system, which was controlled not by him, but by the headquarters of the Great Khan in Karakorum.

As a result, Batu and the enumerator Berke never carried out a census in Rus' in 1252, which aroused the anger of the disciplined Nyuryn, who went to Mongolia with a complaint against Batu. In the future, this man, known to Russian chronicles as “Nevryuy”, will become well known to the chroniclers of China - it is he who will command the Mongol corps that will finally conquer the south of the Celestial Empire. This, by the way, well illustrates the scope of the Mongol Empire, whose commanders operated throughout the entire Eurasian space, from Poland to Korea, from the Caucasus to Vietnam.

The headquarters of the Great Khan in Mongolia was able to organize a census of Russian tributaries only after the death of the too independent Batu. In 1257, the same number-bitekchi Berke again appeared in Rus', but this time accompanied by a controller sent from Mongolia, who appointed a “daruga” (commissioner) named Kitai or Kitat, a distant relative of the Genghis Khan family. Russian chronicles call this pair of Mongolian tax officials “raw food eaters Berkai and Kasachik.” Medieval Chinese chronicles call the second one - “Kitat, the son of Kaan Lachin’s son-in-law, darug for pacification and maintaining order among the Russians.”

The most complete story about the census in North-Eastern Rus' was preserved as part of the Laurentian Chronicle in the records for 1257: “The same winter, a number of people arrived, exhausted the entire land of Suzhal and Ryazan, and Murom, and installed foremen, and centurions, and thousanders, and temniks. There’s nothing like abbots, cherntsovs, priests...”

Mongolian tax officials introduced a general imperial taxation system in Rus', developed by Yelu Chutsai, the first civilian official of Genghis Khan. Born in the north of modern China, this son of a Mongol father and a Chinese mother served as secretary to the governor of Beijing on the eve of the conquest of the city by the troops of Genghis Khan. It was Yelu, based on the experience of the great Chinese empires of the past (Qin, Han, Sui, Tang, Song), who developed for the Mongols the entire system of taxation and civil administration in their vast empire. In the winter of 1257-1258, the Mongols forcibly transferred this Chinese experience to Russian lands.

“We are darkness, and darkness...”

The words of the chronicle “stavisha tens, and centurions, and thousand, and temniks” means that the mechanism of accounting and collection of tribute was based on the decimal system. The unit of taxation became the peasant farm, the yard (in the Russian terminology of that time, “smoke” or “plow”). Ten peasant farms were united into a dozen under the control of a foreman, and then this simple but effective system grew upward - a hundred, a thousand and “darkness” (ten thousand), existing parallel to the princely power and the previous divisions into cities, lands, clans and communities.

“Feud of Russian princes in the Golden Horde for a label for the great reign”, Boris Chorikov, 1836

Teners, centurions and thousanders were appointed from the local population. At the head of the thousand and the “darkness” were placed Mongolian officials, authorized darugs (“darug” in literal translation - “seal presser”, “official who puts a seal on documents”). Russian chronicles call such commissioners “baskaks” - a Turkic term literally corresponding to the Mongolian “daruga”.

Since it was the “darugs” (in the writing of some ancient Russian documents - “roads”) that ensured the creation and functioning of the “Yamskaya chase”, horse relay races, a permanent system of transport and communication, from the city of Vladimir to the capital in Khanbalyk (Beijing), a number of researchers believe that that the term “road” itself, meaning a roadway, took root in the Russian language in this meaning precisely because of the Mongolian “darugs” and the routes organized by them.

The chief tax inspector, responsible for the entire Grand Duchy of Vladimir, is called “the great Baskak” in Russian chronicles; his residence was located in Murom. Each Baskak, in order to maintain order and discipline in his area, had a detachment of troops made up of Mongolian, Turkic and Russian soldiers. It is known from the chronicles that in 1283 there were “more than 30 people” in the detachment of the Kursk Baskak Akhmad. In fact, Baskak combined in one person the functions of a tax inspector, head of the state post office and military commissar - according to orders from the headquarters of the Great Khan, he was responsible for sending auxiliary Russian detachments to the Mongol troops.

Baskak, his officials and “siloviki” were located in separate farmsteads, some of which over time became settlements that have survived to this day. On the territory of the former Grand Duchy of Vladimir, today there are almost two dozen villages called Baskakovo or Baskaki.

The Ustyug chronicle even contains the romantic story of the Baskak Buga and the Russian girl Maria, whom he made his concubine, taking as tribute from his peasant father (“by violence for yasak,” as the chronicler says). The girl converted the Mongol pagan Bugu to Christianity, telling him that the order had come from the prince to kill all the Tatars. As a result, the baptized Buga took the name Ivan, married Mary, became a righteous Christian and built a temple of John the Baptist in the city of Ustyug. Later, the Russian Orthodox Church canonized this married couple as saints - “Righteous John and Mary of Ustyug.” So Russian Christianity even has one holy tax collector, the Mongolian Baskak.

In total, on the territory of Rus' by the end of the 13th century there were 43 tax “darknesses” - 16 in Western Rus' and 27 in Eastern Russia. Western Russia, according to the Mongolian division, consisted of the following “topics” (the plural declension of the term “darkness” accepted in historical science): Kiev, Vladimir-Volynsky, Lutsk, Sokal (now a regional center in the Lviv region), three “darknesses” in Podolia in the south -west of modern Ukraine, Chernigov, Kursk, the so-called “Darkness of Egoldey” south of the Kursk region, Lyubutsk (now a village in the west of the Kaluga region), Ohura (in the area of ​​​​modern Kharkov), Smolensk and the Principality of Galicia in the very west of modern Ukraine as part of three "themes".

According to the results of the Mongol tax reform, Eastern Rus' included 15 “topics” in the Vladimir Principality, five “topics” each in the Novgorod Land and the Tver Principality, and two “topics” that made up the Ryazan Principality. The concept and division into “darkness” during the period of Mongol rule was so ingrained in Russian society that the name of the Novgorod land as “pyatitem” or “pyatem” appears even two centuries later in the official documents of the Grand Duchy of Moscow. For example, the “five items of Novgorod” are used in the agreement between the Moscow prince Dmitry Shemyaka and the Suzdal princes in the middle of the 15th century, in that era when the Baskaks had long been forgotten and stopped paying regular tribute to the Horde.

“And the priests were granted from us according to the previous charter...”

The establishment of the Mongolian tax system in Rus' took several years. The Novgorod Chronicle describes the beginning of 1258 as follows: “And more and more people drove through the streets, writing about peasant houses...” Novgorod responded to the attempt at a census with an uprising, which was suppressed by Alexander Nevsky.

“Baskaki”, Sergei Ivanov, 1909

In the west of Rus', in Galich and Volyn, a census was carried out only in 1260 after the punitive expedition of Temnik-General Burundai (grandfather of the above-mentioned Nevryu, who at that time was already fighting in southern China). In 1274-1275, a repeat census was carried out in Eastern Rus', and also for the first time in the Smolensk principality.

These were the first capitation censuses in Rus'. And also for the first time in the history of Russian civilization, all people and all categories of the population were included in the tax system, with one single exception. Previously, before the Mongol conquest, the obligation to pay direct taxes, designated by the universal term “tribute,” extended only to certain categories of personally dependent peasants and artisans. The bulk of the population of Ancient Rus' entered into financial relations with the state indirectly, through indirect taxes and communal authorities. Since 1258, the situation has changed fundamentally - so the income tax, which all citizens of the Russian Federation now pay, can safely be considered a legacy of the Tatar-Mongol yoke.

An exception in Genghis Khan's tax system was provided only for priests and church property: they were exempt from any extortions and taxes, they were granted protection and immunity in exchange for the only duty - to officially and publicly pray for the Mongol leader and his power. This was a completely conscious policy of Genghis and his descendants - religious structures in all countries conquered by the Mongols, be they Buddhists, Muslims or Orthodox, with this approach became not inspirers of resistance, but completely loyal intermediaries between the Mongol authorities and the conquered peoples.

The oldest of the khan's labels that have come down to us on the exemption of the Orthodox Church from taxes dates back to August 1267 and was issued by Khan Mengu-Timur, the grandson of Batu. The document was preserved translated from Mongolian into Russian in a 15th-century manuscript: “Tsar Genghis decreed that if there is tribute or food, then let them not touch the church people, but with sincere hearts they pray to God for us and for our tribe and bless us... And subsequent kings granted priests in the same way... And we, praying to God, did not alter their letters... Whatever the tribute, let them not demand or give; or if anything belongs to the church - land, water, vegetable gardens, mills, winter huts, summer huts - let them not cover it up. And if they took it, then let them give it back. And don’t let them take away the church masters—falconers, pardus makers—whoever they are. Or that according to the law, they - books or anything else - should not be taken away, captured, torn apart, or damaged. And whoever blasphemes their faith, that person will be guilty and die... And the priests were granted from us according to the previous charter, so that they would pray to God and bless them. And if anyone prays for us with an insincere heart, that sin will be on you...”

As for the rest of the population, they had to pay tribute in full. At the same time, the tax structure was thoughtful and varied. The main direct tax, “yasak,” was collected from the rural population; initially it amounted to a tenth of “everything” and was paid in kind, including the supply of living goods and people to Mongol property. Over time, this tithe was regularized, and tribute was paid on the annual harvest either in silver or in specially specified goods. For example, in the Novgorod land of the 14th century, such tribute was called “black forest”, since it was originally paid with the skins of black martens. In contrast to such “black” payments, payments in silver were called “white”.

In addition to this main tax, there was a whole group of emergency and special taxes. So in 1259, the Novgorod chronicler wrote: “And there was great confusion in Novgorod, when the damned Tatars gathered a tuska and caused a lot of evil to people in the countryside.” The term “Tuska” comes from the Turkic concept tuzghu, which meant “gifts to visiting rulers or envoys.” The Novgorod “tuska” became a fine for the rebellion of the townspeople during the 1258 census.

“The Murder of the First Grand Duke of Moscow Yuri Danilovich in the Horde” by an unknown artist, second half of the 19th century

The Mongols also levied a special tax on the maintenance of horse-drawn postal stations, a structure that would later be called the “Yamsk service” in the Moscow state. This tax was called “yam”. There was an emergency war tax, “kulush”, it was collected in those years when recruits were not taken into the Horde

The main tax from cities was called “tamga”, it was paid by merchants and merchants. In both Mongolian and Turkic languages, the term “tamga” originally denoted the clan emblem, the family mark used to mark horses and other types of property belonging to the clan. Later, with the emergence of a state among the Mongols, “tamga” became a mark, a seal that marked goods received as tribute.

“Tamga” was paid annually, either from the amount of capital or from turnover. It is known that in the first case the tax rate was approximately 0.4% of capital. For example, Persian and Central Asian merchants annually paid one dinar out of every 240 dinars of their capital into the Mongol treasury. In the case of payment of “tamga” from turnover, the amount of tax in different cities varied from 3 to 5%. It is known that in the cities of Crimea, merchants paid 3%, and in the city of Tana (modern Azov at the mouth of the Don) “tamga” was 5%.

Unfortunately, the exact rates of the “tamga” tax for different Russian cities are unknown, but it is unlikely that they were higher than the Crimean or Asian ones. But it is known that from the Hanseatic merchants who purchased raw skins in Novgorod, the Mongols collected a tax (now they would say excise tax) of 40%, but when supplying European goods to the Volga region, the Hanseatic merchants were exempted by the Mongol authorities from paying taxes and travel fees.

“Tamga” was paid in gold, or at least counted in gold. The richest merchants (in Russian - “guests”) were taxed individually, while simpler merchants united in associations that collectively paid “tamga”. In modern Russian, the term “customs” comes precisely from the word “tamga”.

The stolen tribute and the mare of Deacon Dudko

At the end of the 13th century, the Mongols, trying to save on the tax apparatus and obtain precious coins in bulk, practiced transferring the collection of taxes from Rus' to wealthy Muslim merchants from large cities in Central Asia. As the Russian chronicler writes: “Take away tribute from the Tatars.” Tax farmers paid tax amounts in advance to the Mongolian treasury, after which they received the right to collect tribute from certain regions of Rus' in their favor.

Although such a system was extremely cheap for the conquerors, it gave rise to constant problems - tax farmers sought to collect as much taxes as possible, receiving in response riots of the local population. As a result, by the beginning of the 14th century, the authorities of the Golden Horde gradually moved from the direct collection of tribute by the Baskaks and the practice of farming out to the simplest, most convenient and cheapest scheme - from now on, the tribute to the conquerors, the “Horde exit”, was collected by the Russian princes themselves. The size of the tribute received with this approach decreased, control became nominal (“per capita” censuses were no longer carried out), but this method of receiving tribute did not require any costs from the Horde.

Among other things, a banal shortage of personnel affected this - in constant conquests throughout Eurasia and in several internal wars, the Mongols by the 14th century undermined their mobilization potential; there were barely enough people to control China and Central Asia, on the distant and relatively poor northwestern outskirts of the empire they were no longer enough. At the same time, such a transfer of tribute collection into the hands of the Russian princes allowed the latter to accumulate considerable funds, which ultimately led to the strengthening of Moscow and the emergence in the future of a centralized Russian state.

In the west of Rus', direct collection of tribute continued somewhat longer. It is known that the Horde Baskak and his detachment sat in Kyiv until 1362.

The rise of Moscow was precisely facilitated by the last major incident with the Horde Baskak in eastern Rus'. In 1327 (that is, exactly a century after the start of the Mongol conquest of the Russian principalities), Chol Khan, a cousin of the Golden Horde Khan Uzbek, arrived in Tver to collect tribute. Chol Khan (in Russian chronicles “Shevkal” or even “Schelkan”) settled in the palace of the Tver prince and began to extort tax arrears from the population. In response, on August 15, 1327, an uprising broke out in Tver, the Horde tax officer was burned with his guards and retinue right along with the princely palace. The reason for the uprising was an attempt by the Tatars from Chol Khan’s retinue to take away a mare from a certain Tver deacon Dudko...

The harsh actions of Chol Khan, which provoked this uprising, were in turn provoked by the corruption machinations of the Tver and Moscow princes around the Horde tribute. The fact is that in 1321, the Tver prince Dmitry transferred the Horde tribute from the entire Tver principality to the Moscow prince Yuri, who at that time had a label for the “great reign” and was therefore responsible for delivering the tribute to the Horde. But Yuri, instead of sending the Tver tribute to its destination, took it to Novgorod and, through intermediary merchants, put the amount intended for the Horde Khan into circulation at interest. The size of this amount is known - 2000 rubles in silver (approximately 200 kilograms of the precious metal).

The showdown between Tver Dmitry, Moscow Yuri and Horde Uzbek over tribute went on for several years - the matter was complicated by the fact that Yuri was a relative of Khan Uzbek, the husband of his younger sister. Without waiting for the investigation into the issue of tribute to be completed, during a meeting in Sarai, the capital of the Golden Horde, in 1325 the Tver prince hacked to death the Moscow prince. And although the Horde khan morally approved the murder of the financial schemer from Moscow, he acted according to the law and executed the Tver prince “for arbitrariness,” and sent his cousin to Tver for a new tribute. It was there that the story happened with Deacon Dudko’s mare, which ultimately sent the entire history of the country in a new direction...

The younger brother of the murdered Moscow prince Yuri, Ivan Kalita, also a financial schemer, but unlike his brother, was more careful and subtle, took advantage of the events. He quickly received from the enraged Uzbek Khan a label for a great reign and, with the help of Horde troops, defeated the Tver Principality, which had previously competed with Moscow for leadership in the northeast of Rus'. From that time on, Tver never recovered and Moscow’s influence began to gradually grow throughout the region.

In many ways, this growth of the future capital was ensured precisely by the central role of Moscow in collecting the “Horde exit”, tribute to the Horde. For example, in 1330, Moscow troops, on the orders of Khan Uzbek, extracted tax arrears from the Rostov principality - as a result, the Muscovites not only collected the Horde tribute and hanged the main boyar Averky among the Rostovites, but also annexed half of the Rostov lands to Moscow. Part of the funds collected for the Horde imperceptibly but constantly ended up in the bins of Ivan Kalita. It is no coincidence that his nickname “Kalita”, from the Turkic “kalta”, meant pocket or wallet in the Russian language of that century.

“And give them Novgorodians 2000 silver...”

So how much did Rus' pay to the Horde? According to the results of the last Horde census in the north-east of Rus', held in 1275, the tribute amounted to “half a hryvnia per plow.” Based on the standard weight of the Old Russian silver hryvnia of 150-200 grams, historians have calculated that that year Vladimir-Suzdal Rus' paid the Horde about one and a half tons of silver. The amount for a country that did not have its own silver mines is very impressive, even huge, but not fantastic.

It is known that the Golden Horde (aka “Ulus of Jochi”), as part of the Mongol Empire, for some time received tribute not only from the principalities of Rus', but also from three distant provinces in the north of modern China: Jinzhou, Pingyang-fu, Yongzhou. Every year, 4.5 tons of silver were sent from the banks of the Yellow River to the banks of the Volga. The Song Empire, which had not yet been conquered by the Mongols, occupied the southern half of China, bought off Mongol raids with an annual tribute of 7.5 tons of silver, not counting large volumes of silk. Therefore, one and a half Russian tons do not look extremely huge against this background. However, judging by available sources, in other years the tribute was less and was paid with greater delays.

As already mentioned, the territory of Rus' according to the Mongolian tax system was divided into tax districts - “darkness”. And on average, each such “darkness” in the north-east of Rus' in the middle of the 14th century paid 400 rubles in tribute, the “Horde exit”. So the Tver Principality and the Novgorod Land were each divided into five such tax districts and paid 2,000 rubles in tribute. The above-mentioned machinations of the Moscow princes with 2000 Tver rubles in 1321 were recorded for history by the Moscow chronicle. The Novgorod Chronicle for 1328 writes: “And the Tatars sent ambassadors to Novgorod, and the Novgorodians gave them 2000 silver and sent their ambassadors with them with many gifts.”

By the way, it was precisely the need to pay Mongolian tribute that in the 13th-14th centuries prompted the Novgorodians and Vladimir-Suzdal residents to begin expansion to the northeast, into the forest lands of the White Sea and the Urals, into “Biarmia” and “Perm the Great”, so that by imposing fur taxes on the aborigines compensate for the tax oppression of the Horde. Later, after the collapse of the Horde yoke, it was this movement to the northeast that would develop into the conquest of Siberia...

The amounts of tribute from various appanages of North-Eastern Rus' during the reign of Dmitry Donskoy are known in relatively detail. The tribute from the Grand Duchy of Vladimir was 5,000 rubles. During the same period, the Nizhny Novgorod-Suzdal principality paid 1,500 rubles. The tribute from the territories of the Moscow Principality proper was 1,280 rubles.

For comparison, only one city, Khadzhitarkhan (Astrakhan), through which large transit trade took place in those centuries, gave 60 thousand altyn (1800 rubles) taxes annually to the treasury of the Golden Horde.

The city of Galich, now the regional center of the Kostroma region, and then “Galich Mersky”, the center of a fairly large principality with rich salt mines by the standards of Vladimir Rus', paid 525 rubles in tribute. The city of Kolomna with its surroundings paid 342 rubles, Zvenigorod with its surroundings - 272 rubles, Mozhaisk - 167 rubles.

The city of Serpukhov, or rather the small Principality of Serpukhov, paid 320 rubles, and the very small Principality of Gorodets paid 160 rubles in tribute. The city of Dmitrov paid 111 rubles, and Vyatka “from cities and volosts” 128 rubles.

According to historians, all of North-Eastern Rus' during this period paid about 12-14 thousand rubles to the Horde. Most historians believe that the silver ruble was then equal to half the “Novgorod hryvnia” and contained 100 grams of silver. In general, the same one and a half tons of precious metal are obtained.

However, the frequency of such tribute is not clear from the surviving chronicles. Theoretically, it should have been paid annually, but in practice, especially during the period of civil strife between Russian princes or Horde khans, it was not paid or was paid partially. Again, for comparison, we point out that at the heyday of the Mongol Empire, when the descendants of Genghis Khan owned all of China, only tax collections from Chinese cities gave ten times more silver to the Mongol treasury than all the tribute from northeastern Rus'.

After the battle on the Kulikovo Field, the “output” of tribute to the Horde continued, but on a smaller scale. Dmitry Donskoy and his heirs paid no more than 10 thousand rubles. At the beginning of the 15th century, one could buy 100 pounds of rye for a Moscow ruble. That is, the entire “Horde output” in the last century of the Tatar-Mongol yoke cost as much as 16 thousand tons of rye - at modern prices, such a volume of rye would cost a ridiculous amount on a state scale, no more than 100 million rubles. But six centuries ago these were completely different prices and different conditions: then 16 thousand tons of rye could feed approximately 100 thousand peasants or a substantial medieval army of 10-15 thousand horsemen for a year.

Studying the history of monetary relations between Rus' and the Horde, we can conclude that the Horde tribute was a well-thought-out financial measure of the conquerors. The tribute was not monstrous and completely ruinous, but over the centuries it regularly washed away the funds necessary for development from the country and its economy.