(Redirected from Tokhtamysh-Timur War)The 'Tokhtamysh-Timur war' was fought in the
1380s and early
1390s between
Tokhtamysh, khan of the
Golden Horde and the Turkic warrior
Timur, in the areas of the
Caucasus mountains,
Turkistan and
southern
Russia. The battle between the two Turkic rulers played a key role in the decline of the Turkic power in southern Russia.
Background
In the late
1370s and early
1380s, Timur helped Tokhtamysh to take the power in
White Horde, against Urus. After this he united the White and Blue Hordes, forming the
Golden Horde, and launched a massive military punitive campaign against the Russian principalities between
1381 and
1382, restoring the mongol-tartar power in
Russia after the defeat in the
Battle of Kulikovo. The Golden Horde, after a period of anarchy between early
1360s and late
1370s, passed for a briefly reestablishing as a dominant regional power, defeating
Lithuania in
Poltava around
1383. But Tokhtamysh has territorial ambitions in
Persia and
Central Asia. For account of this he turned against his old ally,
Timur.
The war
After the death of
Abu Sa'id in
1335, the last ruler of the
Ilkhanid Dynasty, there was a power vacuum in Persia. In 1383 Timur started military conquest of
Persia. In
1385 he captured
Herat,
Khorasan and all of eastern Persia. In the same year Tokhtamysh raided
Azerbaijan and northwest
Iran. The city of
Tabriz was plundered and then he retired with the booty.
Between
1389 and
1391, the two entered in war, with the
defeat of Tokhtamysh. But Tokhtamysh recovered his position and in the spring of
1395 raided the timurid territory of
Shirvan. Timur then promoted and new attack, reconquering the area. After this Timur began his offensive, raiding the Golden Horde's territories. He defeated Tokhtamysh in the
Battle of the Terek river in
april 15 of
1395. In the same year Timur also plundered
Sarai,
Ukek,
Majar,
Azaq and
Astrakhan was burnt by Timur's army .
Aftermath
After the defeat in the
Battle of the Terek River, Tokhtamysh was deposed of the throne in Golden Horde. He was replaced by
Edigu. Then Tokhtamysh escaped to the Ukrainian steppes and asked for help from the Grand Duke
Vytautas of
Lithuania. The two combined his forces in the
Battle of the Vorskla River in
1399, but were defeat and annihilated by khan
Temur Qutlugh and
Edigu, two of Tamerlane's generals. Around
1406 Tokhtamysh was killed in
Siberia by Edigu's men. The Golden Horde never recovered from after this war. In the middle of the
15th century, fragmented in smaller khanates like the
Kazan khanate,
Nogai Horde,
Qasim Khanate,
Crimean Khanate and
Astrakhan Khanate. For account of this the mongol-tartar power in
Russia was weakened and in
1480 they were defeated in the
Great standing on the Ugra River. The last remnant of the Golden Horde was destroyed by the
Crimean Khanate in
1502, and the khanates that arosed after the Golden Horde's fragmentantion was annexed by
Muscovite Russia between the
1550s and early
17th century, except the Crimean Khanate which survived until
1783, under the
Ottoman protection.
References