(Redirected from Kulikovo)
'The Battle of Kulikovo' () was fought by the
Tartaro-
Mongols (the
Golden Horde) and the
Moskovians. The battle took place on
September 8,
1380 at the
Kulikovo Field (Snipes' Field) near the
Don River (now
Tula Oblast) and resulted in a Moskovian victory. The battle's site is commemorated by a memorial church, built to a design by
Aleksey Shchusev.
Combined Russian
armies under the command of the Grand Prince of
Vladimir,
Dmitri Ivanovich of Moscow (called "Dmitry of the Don" afterwards) faced a much larger Tatar force under the command of
Mamai, a strongman of the
Golden Horde. Mamai's , Grand Prince Oleg of
Ryazan and Grand Prince
Jogaila of
Lithuania were late to the battle. The old Russian poem
Zadonshchina says 150,000 Russians and 300,000 Tartaro-Mongols, but the actual size of the Kulikovo Field would not allow such a quantity of troops. Most likely the figures were closer to 80,000 Russians including seven thousand rebel Lithuanians and 125,000 Tatars.

Dmitry Donskoy in the thick of fray.
On the morning of
September 8, a thick fog covered the Kulikovo Field. The fog cleared around 11 A.M, at which point both armies began simultaneously advancing on each other.
The battle was allegedly opened by a single combat of two champions. The Russian champion was
Alexander Peresvet, a monk from the
Trinity Abbey sent to the battle by
Saint Sergius. The Horde champion was Temir-murza (also Chelubey or Cheli-bey). The champions killed each other in the first run, though according to Russian
legend, Peresvet did not fall from the
saddle, while Temir-murza fell.
After approximately three hours of battle (from noon to 3 p.m.) the Russian forces were successful, although suffering great casualties, in holding off the Horde's attack. The cavalry of
Vladimir, Prince of Serpukhov (Dmitri's cousin), led by Dmitri Bobrok, Prince of
Volynia launched a flanking surprise counter strike and achieved victory over the Horde forces.
Mamai escaped to
Crimea, where he was assassinated by his enemies, leaving the Horde under the command of
Tokhtamysh.
This victory was the beginning of the end of the supposed
Mongol rule in Rus, which officially ended with the
great standing on the Ugra river a century later. Its spiritual importance for the unification of the Russian lands was even more important. As one historian put it, the Russians went to the Kulikovo Field as citizens of various principalities and returned as a united Russian nation. This view, however - made from the perspective of later Russian history - was possibly not shared at the time by the Russian of
Ryazan who had fought on the losing side.
See also
★
Sergius of Radonezh
★
Dmitri Donskoi
★
Alexander Peresvet
★
Kulikovo Field
★
Stepan Nechaev
★
Golden Horde
★
Tatar invasions
★
Russo-Kazan Wars
★
Mongol invasion of Rus
★
Grand Duchy of Moscow
★
Timeline of the Tataro-Mongol Yoke in Russia
'References'
★
The Zadonshchina
★
The Battle of Kulikovo
★
History of Kulikovo Battle