- The Turkish Yearbook of International Relations
- Issue: 21
- Struggle for East-European Empire: 1400-1700
Struggle for East-European Empire: 1400-1700
Authors : Halil Inalcik
Pages : 1-16
Doi:10.1501/Intrel_0000000161
View : 28 | Download : 0
Publication Date : 1982-05-01
Article Type : Research
Abstract :The empire of the Golden Horde, built by Batu, son of Djodji and the grand son of Genghis Khan, around 1240, was an empire which united the whole East-Europe under its domination. The Golden Horde empire comprised ali of the remnants of the earlier nomadic peoples of Turkic language in the steppe area which were then known under the common name of Tatar within this new political framework. The Golden Horde ruled directly över the Eurasian steppe from Khwarezm to the Danube and över the Russian principalities in the forest zone indirectly as tribute-paying states. Already in the second half of the 13th century the western part of the steppe from the Don river to the Danube tended to become a separate political entity under the powerful emir Noghay. In the second half of the 14th century rival branches of the Djodjid dynasty, each supported by a group of the dissident clans, started a long struggle for the Ulugh-Yurd, the core of the empire in the lower itil (Volga) river, and for the title of Ulugh Khan which meant the supreme ruler of the empire.Keywords : Struggle, East-European, Empire