(Redirected from Olug Moxammad)'Olug Moxammat' (Ulugh Muhammed, Makhmet, Ulu-Makhmet,
Tatar: 'Oluğ Möxämmät') (d.
1445) was
khan of the
Golden Horde (
1419 -
1422/
23 and
1428 -
1433), the founder and the first
khan of
Kazan Khanate (
1437 -
1445). Olug Moxammat was a descendant of
Jochi, and consequently a
Genghizid. By some accounts, he was a son of
Jalal ad-Din khan, and grandson of
Tokhtamysh, by other accounts he was a son of Khasan, one of
Edigu's puppet khans.
Olug Moxammat together with
Devlet Berdi was one of the two major powers in the disintegrating
Golden Horde. He acted as a khan of the Horde from 1419 until he and Devlet Berdi were defeated by
Baraq Khan in 1422 or 1423. In
1424 he appeared at the court of
Vytautas the Great in
Grand Duchy of Lithuania, while Devlet Berdi went to
Crimea. Before
1428, with help of Vytautas, Olug Moxammad assembled an army and took
Saray from Baraq, establishing himself again as a major power on the territories of the Golden Horde. A letter dated
March 14 1428, from Olug Moxammat to
Murad II,
sultan of
Ottoman Empire is known. In this letter Olug Moxammat writes that relations with the sultan were interrupted by Baraq, who temporarily gained power in Golden Horde (Desht-i Qipchaq, as the steppe was called). Now, he is victorious and his army defeated and routed Baraq and
Mansur.
After regaining the throne of the Horde, Olug Moxammat unsuccessfully invaded
Crimea against his old rival Devlet Berdi. He was likely supported by
Qarachi. In
1430 Olug Moxammad lost his major supporter as Vytautas died. That put an end to Moxammat's plans to conquer Crimea. The priorities shifted to Lithuania, where he supported
Sigismund I Kestutian against
Svitrigaila in the fight for Lithuanian throne. Displaced
Svitrigaila in turn supported Moxammat's rival
Sayyid Ahmad I, who in
1433 gained the Golden Horde throne.
Vasili II of Russia also supported Sayyid Ahmad in order to weaken Olug Moxammat.
Sigismund was a weaker leader than Vytautas and could not offer as much support. Sayyid Ahmad quickly consolidated power. In 1433 he participated in a civil war in Crimea and took
Solkhat, capital of the Crimean Yurt which resulted in
Haci I Giray becoming a ruler there. Moxammat was forced to leave Horde and move to upstream
Volga, where in
1437 he captured town
Belev (now in
Tula Oblast) and attempted to establish a dominion there. He could not maintan control. Vasili II recaptured the town next year.
In 1437—1438 Moxammat besieged and then captured
Kazan, where he established
Kazan Khanate. An alternative theory suggests that Moxammat usurped the throne of principality which asserted a degree of independence from Golden Horde earlier.
In
1439 he made a raid on
Moscow, sieged it for ten days, burned villages around it, but failed to capture the city. A few years later he captured
Nizhny Novgorod. In the Spring of
1445 he sent an army under command of his sons
Yusuf and
Maxmud to Muscovy. The campaign was exceptionally successful. The most significant battle was fought on
June 7 1445 near Yefimyev monastery (
Battle of Suzdal). Kazan army managed not only to defeat Russian army, but also to capture Vasili II.
Grand Duke was released after paying a ransom on
October 1 that year.
Upon his death, the throne passed to his son Maxmud. The other two sons
Qasim and Yusuf fled. There are at least three versions of Moxammat's death. According to the first, he died from old age or disease. According to the second, offered by
Kazan Chronicle, he was killed by Maxmudek. This Chronicle also claims that brothers were killed as well, which undermines the validity of this claim because both brother were known to live much longer than 1445. And by the third, Moxammat was killed by his brother
Qara-Yusuf, with Qasim and Yusuf siding with uncle, while Maxmud with father.
Olug Moxammat's descendants ruled Kazan until
1518.
Olug Moxammat kept in touch with
Shah Rukh (Timurid dynasty).
'Olug/Uligh/Ulu' was not his personal name, but a title which could be loosely translated as ''Major'', ''Great'' or ''Patriarch''. The title was allegedly used to distinguish him from
Kuchuk Muhammad (literally "Muhammad Junior" or "Muhammad Minor"), khan of the
Great Horde.
See also
★
List of Khans of the Golden Horde
★
List of Kazan khans