Battles of the 13th century in Rus'. Consequences of the events of the 13th century

The 13th century in the history of Rus' began without any special external shocks, but in the midst of endless internal strife. The princes divided the lands and fought for power. But soon the internal troubles of Rus' were joined by danger from outside. Brutal conquerors from the depths of Asia under the leadership of Temujin (Genghis Khan - that is, the Great Khan) began their actions. The armies of the nomadic Mongols mercilessly destroyed people and conquered lands. Soon, the Polovsk khans asked for help from the Russian princes. And they agreed to oppose the approaching enemy. So, in 1223 a battle took place on the river. Kalke. But due to the fragmented actions of the princes and the lack of a unified command, the Russian warriors suffered heavy losses and left the battlefield. The Mongol troops pursued them to the very outskirts of Rus'. Having plundered and devastated them, they moved no further. In 1237, the troops of Temuchin’s grandson, Batu, entered the Ryazan principality. Ryazan fell. The conquests continued. In 1238 on the river. The city army of Yuri Vsevolodovich entered into battle with the invader’s army, but turned out in favor of the Tatar-Mongols. At the same time, the South Russian princes and Novgorod remained on the sidelines and did not come to the rescue. In 1239 – 1240 Having replenished the army, Batu undertook a new campaign against the Russian lands. At this time, the unaffected northwestern regions of Rus' (Novgorod and Pskov lands) were endangered by the crusading knights who had settled in the Baltic states. They wanted to force him to accept Catholic faith and on the territory of Rus'. United by a common idea, the Swedes and German knights were about to unite, but the Swedes were the first to act. In 1240 (July 15) - Battle of the Neva - the Swedish fleet entered the mouth of the river. Not you. The Novgorodians turned to the Great Prince of Vladimir Yaroslav Vsevolodovich for help. His son, the young prince Alexander, immediately set off with his army, counting on the surprise and speed of the onslaught (the army was inferior in number, even with the Novgorodians and commoners who had joined). Alexander's strategy worked. In this battle, Rus' won, and Alexander received the nickname Nevsky. Meanwhile, the German knights gained strength and began military operations against Pskov and Novgorod. Again Alexander came to the rescue. April 5, 1242 – Battle on the Ice- troops converged on the ice of Lake Peipus. Alexander won again, thanks to a change in the formation order and coordinated actions. And the knights’ uniforms played against them; when they retreated, the ice began to break. In 1243 - Formation of the Golden Horde. Formally, the Russian lands were not part of the newly formed state, but were subject lands. That is, they were obliged to replenish its treasury, and the princes had to receive labels for reigning at the khan’s headquarters. During the second half of the 13th century, the Horde more than once made devastating campaigns against Rus'. Cities and villages were ruined. 1251 - 1263 - reign of Alexander Nevsky. Due to the invasions of conquerors, during which settlements were plundered and destroyed, many cultural monuments were lost Ancient Rus' 10th - 13th centuries. Churches, cathedrals, icons, as well as works of literature, religious objects and jewelry remained intact. The basis of ancient Russian culture is the heritage of the East Slavic tribes. It was influenced by nomadic peoples, the Varangians. The adoption of Christianity, as well as Byzantium and the countries of Western Europe, significantly influenced. The adoption of Christianity influenced the spread of literacy, the development of writing, education and the introduction of Byzantine customs. This also influenced the clothing of the 13th century in Rus'. The cut of the clothes was simple, and they differed mainly in fabric. The suit itself has become longer and looser, not emphasizing the figure, but giving it a static look. The nobility wore expensive foreign fabrics (velvet, brocade, taffeta, silk) and furs (sable, otter, marten). Ordinary people used canvas fabric, hare fur, squirrels, and sheepskin for clothing.


The Russian state, formed on the border of Europe and Asia, which reached its peak in the 10th - early 11th centuries, has always been distinguished by its mentality: unity, strength and courage. The people have always stood united against the enemy. But at the beginning of the 12th century, as a natural stage in the development of the country, it broke up into many principalities during feudal fragmentation. The reason for this was, firstly, the feudal mode of production, and, secondly, the formation of almost independent politics, economics and other spheres of individual principalities. Communication between the princes almost ceased, the lands became isolated. The external defense of the Russian land was especially weakened. Now the princes of individual principalities pursued their own separate policies, considering primarily the interests of the local feudal nobility and entered into endless internecine wars. This led to the loss of centralized control and to a severe weakening of the state as a whole. It was during this period that the Mongol-Tatars invaded the Russian lands, unprepared for a long and strong confrontation with their opponents.

Prerequisites for the Tatar campaign against Rus'

At the kurultai 1204 – 1205. The Mongols were given the task of conquering world domination. Northern China was already in the hands of the Mongols. Having won and realizing their military power, they wanted more significant conquests and victories. And now, without stopping or leaving the marked path, they walked west. Soon, after certain events, their military mission was more clearly defined. The Mongols decided to conquer the big and rich, as they believed, Western countries, and first of all Rus'. They understood that in order to accomplish this task, they first needed to take the small, weak peoples located near Rus' and on its borders. So what were the main prerequisites for the Mongol-Tatars’ campaign against Rus' and further to the west?

Battle of Kalka

Moving west, in 1219 the Mongols first defeated the Central Asian Khorezmians, then advanced into Northern Iran. In 1221, Genghis Khan's army, led by his best commanders Jebe and Subede, invaded Azerbaijan and then received orders to cross the Caucasus. Pursuing their long-time enemies the Alans (Ossetians), who were hiding among the Polovtsians, both commanders had to hit the latter and return home, bypassing the Caspian Sea.

In 1222, the Mongol army moved into the lands of the Polovtsians. The Battle of the Don took place, in which their army defeated the main forces of the Polovtsians. At the beginning of 1223, she invaded Crimea, where she captured the ancient Byzantine city of Surozh (Sudak). The Polovtsians fled to Rus' to ask for help. But the Russian princes did not trust their old opponents and greeted their request with doubt. And they perceived the appearance of a new Mongol army on the border of Rus' as another weak horde of nomads emerging from the steppe. Therefore, only a small part of the Russian princes came to the aid of the Polovtsians. A small but strong Russian-Polovtsian army was formed, ready to defeat the unprecedented Mongol army.

On May 31, 1223, the Russian-Polovtsian army reached the Kalka River. There they were met by a powerful onslaught of Mongol cavalry. Already at the beginning of the battle, some of the Russians could not resist the skilled Mongol archers and ran. Even the frantic onslaught of Mstislav the Udal’s squad, which almost broke through the Mongol battle lines, ended in failure. The Polovtsian troops turned out to be very unstable in battle: the Polovtsians could not withstand the blow of the Mongol cavalry and fled, disrupting the battle formations of the Russian squads. Even one of the strongest Russian princes, Mstislav of Kiev, never entered into battle with his numerous and well-armed regiment. He died ingloriously, surrendering to the Mongols who surrounded him. The Mongol cavalry pursued the remnants of the Russian squads to the Dnieper. The rest of the Russian-Polovtsian squad tried to fight to the last. But ultimately the Mongol army was victorious. The Russian warriors were cut to pieces. The Mongols themselves placed the princes under a wooden platform and crushed them, holding a festive banquet on it.

Russian losses in the battle were very high. The Mongolian army, already exhausted by battles in Central Asia and the Caucasus, was able to defeat even the selected Russian regiments of Mstislav the Udal, which speaks of its military force and power. At the Battle of Kalka, the Mongols first encountered Russian methods of warfare. This battle showed the superiority of Mongolian military traditions over European ones: collective discipline over individual heroism, trained archers over heavy cavalry and infantry. These tactical differences became the key to Mongol success on Kalka, and subsequently to the lightning-fast conquest of Eastern and Central Europe.

For Rus', the battle on Kalka turned into a catastrophe, “which has never happened before.” The historical center of the country - the southern and central Russian lands - lost their princes and troops. Fifteen years before Mongol invasion In Rus', these territories were never able to restore their potential. The battle turned out to be a harbinger of difficult times to come Kievan Rus during the Mongol invasion.

Kurultai 1235

In 1235, the Mongols held another kurultai, at which they decided on a new campaign of conquest in Europe, “to the last sea.” After all, according to their information, Rus' was located there, and it was famous for its numerous riches.

All of Mongolia began to prepare for a new grandiose campaign of conquest to the West. The army was carefully prepared. The best military leaders, a number of Mongol princes, were involved. A new khan, Genghis Khan’s son Jochi, was placed at the head of the campaign. But in 1227 they both died, so the campaign to Europe was entrusted to Jochi’s son, Batu. The new Great Khan Udegei sent troops from Mongolia to reinforce Batu under the command of one of the best commanders - the wise old Subede, who participated in the battle of Kalka, to conquer Volga Bulgaria and Rus'. As always, Mongolian intelligence was on top level. With the help of merchants who traded along the Great Silk Road (from China to Spain), all necessary information about the state of the Russian lands, about the routes leading to the cities, about the size of the Russian army, and many other information. After which it was decided to first completely defeat the Polovtsy and Volga Bulgars in order to secure the rear, and then attack Rus'.

Hike to north-eastern Rus'. On the way to Rus'

The Mongol-Tatars headed towards the southeast of Europe. In the fall of 1236, their main forces, which came from Mongolia, united with the Jochi troops sent to help within Bulgaria. In the late autumn of 1236, the Mongols began its conquest. “The same autumn,” as the Laurentian Chronicle says, “the godless Tatars came from the eastern countries to the Bulgarian land, and took the glorious Great Bulgarian city and beat with weapons from the old man to the old man and to the mere infant, and took a lot of goods, and burned their city fire, and took their whole land into captivity.” Eastern sources also report the complete defeat of Bulgaria. Rashid ad-Din (“That Winter”) writes that the Mongols “reached the city of Bulgar the Great and its other regions, defeated the local army and forced them to submit.” Volga Bulgaria was terribly devastated. Almost all of its cities were destroyed. Rural areas were also subjected to massive devastation. In the basin of the Berda and Aktai rivers, almost all settlements were destroyed.

By the spring of 1237, the conquest of Volga Bulgaria was completed. A large Mongol army led by Subede moved to the Caspian steppes, where the war with the Cumans, which began in 1230, continued.

The first blow in the spring of 1237 was dealt by the Mongols to the Cumans and Alans. From the Lower Volga, Mongol troops moved “in a raid, and the country that fell into it was captured, marching in formations.” The Mongol-Tatars crossed the Caspian steppes on a wide front and united somewhere in the Lower Don region. The Polovtsians and Alans suffered a strong, crushing blow.

The next stage of the war of 1237 in South-Eastern Europe was an attack on the Burtases, Mokshas and Mordovians. The conquest of the Mordovian lands, as well as the lands of the Burtases and Ardzhans, ended in the autumn of that year.

The campaign of 1237 was intended to prepare a springboard for the invasion of North-Eastern Rus'. The Mongols dealt a strong blow to the Polovtsians and Alans, pushing the Polovtsian nomads to the west, beyond the Don, and conquered the lands of the Burtases, Mokshas and Mordovians, after which preparations began for the campaign against Rus'.

In the autumn of 1237, the Mongol-Tatars began preparations for a winter campaign against North-Eastern Rus'. Rashid ad-Din reports that “in the autumn of the mentioned year (1237) all the princes who were there organized a kurultai and, by general agreement, went to war against the Russians.” This kurultai was attended by both Mongol khans, who destroyed the lands of the Burtases, Mokshas and Mordovians, and the khans who fought in the south with the Polovtsians and Alans. All the forces of the Mongol-Tatars gathered for a campaign against North-Eastern Rus'. The place of concentration of Mongol troops in the fall of 1237 was the lower reaches of the Voronezh River. Mongol troops who had ended the war with the Polovtsians and Alans arrived here. The Tatars were ready for an important and complex offensive against the Russian state.

Hike to the northeast of Rus'

In December 1237, Batu's troops appeared on the frozen rivers Sura, Voronezh, a tributary of the Volga and Don. Winter opened the way for them along the ice of rivers to North-Eastern Rus'.

“An unheard-of army has come, the godless Moabites, and their name is Tatars, but no one knows who they are and where they came from, and what their language is, and what tribe they are, and what their faith is. And some say Taurmen, and others say Pechenegs.” With these words begins the chronicle of the Mongol-Tatar invasion of Russian soil.

Ryazan land

At the beginning of the winter of 1237, the Mongol-Tatars moved from the Voronezh River along the eastern edge of the forests stretching in its floodplain to the borders of the Ryazan principality. Along this path, covered by forests from the Ryazan guard posts, the Mongol-Tatars silently walked to the middle reaches of Lesnoy and Polny Voronezh. But they were noticed there by Ryazan patrols and from that moment came to the attention of Russian chroniclers. Another group of Mongols also approached here. Here they stayed for quite a long time, during which the troops were arranged and prepared for the campaign.

Russian troops could do nothing to oppose the strong Mongol troops. Strife and strife between the princes did not allow united forces to be deployed against Batu. The princes of Vladimir and Chernigov refused to help Ryazan.

Approaching the Ryazan land, Batu demanded from the Ryazan princes a tenth of everything that was in the city. In the hope of reaching an agreement with Batu, the Ryazan prince sent an embassy to him with rich gifts. The Khan accepted the gifts, but put forward humiliating and arrogant demands: in addition to the huge tribute, he should give the prince’s sisters and daughters as wives to the Mongolian nobility. And for himself personally, he set his sights on the beautiful Eupraksinya, Fedor’s wife. The Russian prince responded with a decisive refusal and, together with the ambassadors, was executed. And the beautiful princess, together with her little son, so as not to fall to the conquerors, threw herself down from the high bell tower. The Ryazan army moved to the Voronezh River to strengthen the garrisons on the fortified lines and prevent the Tatars from going deep into the Ryazan land. However, the Ryazan squads did not have time to reach Voronezh. Batu quickly invaded the Ryazan principality. Somewhere on the outskirts of Ryazan there was a battle between the united Ryazan army and the hordes of Batu. The battle, in which the Ryazan, Murom and Pron squads took part, was stubborn and bloody. 12 times the Russian squad came out of encirclement, “one Ryazan man fought with a thousand, and two with darkness (ten thousand)” - this is what the chronicle writes about this battle. But Batu had a great superiority in strength, and the Ryazan army suffered heavy losses.

After the defeat of the Ryazan squads, the Mongol-Tatars immediately moved deeper into the Ryazan principality. They passed through the space between Ranova and Pronya, and went down the Prony River, destroying the Pronian cities. On December 16, the Mongol-Tatars approached Ryazan. The siege has begun. Ryazan held out for 5 days, on the sixth day, on the morning of December 21, it was taken. The entire city was destroyed and all the inhabitants were exterminated. The Mongol-Tatars left only ashes behind them. The Ryazan prince and his family also died. The surviving inhabitants of the Ryazan land gathered a squad (about 1,700 people), led by Evpatiy Kolovrat. They caught up with the enemy in Suzdal and began to wage guerrilla warfare against him, inflicting heavy losses on the Mongols.

Principality of Vladimir

Now in front of Batu lay several roads into the depths of the Vladimir-Suzdal land. Since Batu was faced with the task of conquering all of Rus' in one winter, he headed to Vladimir along the Oka, through Moscow and Kolomna. The invasion moved close to the borders of the Vladimir principality. Grand Duke Yuri Vsevolodovich, who at one time refused to help the Ryazan princes, himself found himself in danger.

“And Batu went to Suzdal and Vladimir, intending to captivate the Russian land, and eradicate the Christian faith, and destroy the churches of God to the ground,” - this is how the Russian chronicle writes. Batu knew that the troops of the Vladimir and Chernigov princes were coming towards him, and expected to meet them somewhere in the Moscow or Kolomna region. And he turned out to be right.

The Laurentian Chronicle writes this way: “The Tatars surrounded them at Kolomna and fought hard, there was a great battle, they killed Prince Roman and the governor Eremey, and Vsevolod with a small squad ran to Vladimir.” The Vladimir army died in this battle. Having defeated the Vladimir regiments near Kolomna, Batu approached Moscow, quickly took and burned the city in mid-January, and killed the inhabitants or took them prisoner.

On February 4, 1238, the Mongol-Tatars approached Vladimir. The capital of North-Eastern Rus', the city of Vladimir, surrounded by new walls with powerful stone gate towers, was a strong fortress. From the south it was covered by the Klyazma River, from the east and north by the Lybid River with steep banks and ravines.

By the time of the siege, a very alarming situation had developed in the city. Prince Vsevolod Yuryevich brought news of the defeat of the Russian regiments near Kolomna. New troops had not yet gathered, and there was no time to wait for them, since the Mongol-Tatars were already close to Vladimir. Under these conditions, Yuri Vsevolodovich decided to leave part of the collected troops for the defense of the city, and go north himself and continue collecting troops. After the departure of the Grand Duke, a small part of the troops remained in Vladimir, led by the governor and the sons of Yuri - Vsevolod and Mstislav.

Batu approached Vladimir on February 4 from the most vulnerable side, from the west, where a flat field lay in front of the Golden Gate. The Mongol detachment, leading Prince Vladimir Yuryevich, who was captured during the defeat of Moscow, appeared in front of the Golden Gate and demanded the voluntary surrender of the city. After the refusal of the Vladimir people, the Tatars killed the captured prince in front of his brothers. To inspect the fortifications of Vladimir, part of the Tatar detachments traveled around the city, and Batu’s main forces camped in front of the Golden Gate. The siege began.

Before the assault on Vladimir, the Tatar detachment destroyed the city of Suzdal. This short hike is quite understandable. Beginning the siege of the capital, the Tatars learned about Yuri Vsevolodovich’s exit from the city with part of the army and feared a sudden attack. And the most likely direction of the Russian prince’s attack could be Suzdal, which covered the road from Vladimir to the north along the Nerl River. Yuri Vsevolodovich could rely on this fortress, which was located only 30 km from the capital.

Suzdal was left almost without defenders and was deprived of its main water cover due to winter time. That is why the city was taken by the Mongol-Tatars immediately. Suzdal was plundered and burned, its population was killed or taken prisoner. Settlements and monasteries in the vicinity of the city were also destroyed.

At this time, preparations for the assault on Vladimir continued. To intimidate the city’s defenders, the conquerors held thousands of prisoners under the walls. On the eve of the general assault, the Russian princes who led the defense fled from the city. On February 6, the Mongol-Tatar battering machines broke through the Vladimir walls in several places, but on that day the Russian defenders managed to repel the assault and did not allow them into the city.

The next day, early in the morning, the Mongol-Tatar battering guns finally broke through the city wall. A little later, the fortifications of the “New City” were broken through in several more places. By the middle of the day on February 7, the “New City,” engulfed in fire, was captured by the Mongol-Tatars. The defenders who survived fled to the middle, “Pecherny city”. Pursuing them, the Mongol-Tatars entered the “Middle City”. And again, the Mongol-Tatars immediately broke through the stone walls of the Vladimir castle and set it on fire. It was the last stronghold of the defenders of the Vladimir capital. Many residents, including the princely family, took refuge in the Assumption Cathedral, but the fire overtook them there too. The fire destroyed the most valuable monuments of literature and art. Numerous temples of the city turned into ruins.

The fierce resistance of the defenders of Vladimir, despite the significant numerical superiority of the Mongol-Tatars and the flight of the princes from the city, caused great damage to the Mongol-Tatars. Eastern sources, reporting the capture of Vladimir, create a picture of a long and stubborn battle. Rashid ad-Din says that the Mongols “took the city of Yuri the Great in 8 days. They (the besieged) fought fiercely. Mengu Khan personally performed heroic feats until he defeated them.”

Trek deep into Rus'

After the capture of Vladimir, the Mongol-Tatars began to destroy the cities of the Vladimir-Suzdal land. This stage of the campaign is characterized by the death of most cities between the Klyazma and Upper Volga rivers.

In February 1238, the conquerors moved from the capital in several large detachments along the main river and trade routes, destroying urban centers of resistance.

The campaigns of the Mongol-Tatars in February 1238 were aimed at the destruction of cities - centers of resistance, as well as the destruction of the remnants of the Vladimir troops, which were collected by the fleeing Yuri Vsevolodovich. They also had to cut off the grand ducal “camp” from Southern Rus' and Novgorod, from where reinforcements could be expected. Solving these problems, the Mongol troops moved from Vladimir in three main directions: to the north - to Rostov, to the east - to the Middle Volga (to Gorodets), to the northwest - to Tver and Torzhok.

The main forces of Batu went from Vladimir to the north to defeat Grand Duke Yuri Vsevolodovich. The Tatar army passed along the ice of the Nerl River and, before reaching Pereyaslavl-Zalessky, turned north to Lake Nero. Rostov was abandoned by the prince and his squad, so he surrendered without a fight.

From Rostov, the Mongol troops went in two directions: a large army headed north along the ice of the Ustye River and further along the plain to Uglich, and another large detachment moved along the Kotorosl River to Yaroslavl. These directions of movement of the Tatar detachments from Rostov are quite understandable. Through Uglich lay the shortest road to the tributaries of the Mologa, to the City, where Grand Duke Yuri Vsevolodovich was camped. The march to Yaroslavl and further along the Volga to Kostroma through the rich Volga cities cut off Yuri Vsevolodovich’s retreat to the Volga and ensured a meeting somewhere in the Kostroma region with another Tatar detachment moving up the Volga from Gorodets.

The chroniclers do not report any details of the capture of Yaroslavl, Kostroma and other cities along the Volga. Only on the basis of archaeological data can we assume that Yaroslavl was severely destroyed and could not be restored for a long time. There is even less information about the capture of Kostroma. Kostroma, apparently, was the place where the Tatar detachments that came from Yaroslavl and Gorodets met. Chroniclers report on campaigns of Tatar troops even to Vologda.

The Mongol detachment, which moved from Vladimir to the northwest, was the first to encounter the city of Pereyaslavl-Zalessky - a strong fortress on the shortest route waterway from the Klyazma River basin to Novgorod. A large Tatar army approached Pereyaslavl along the Nerl River in mid-February and, after a five-day siege, took the city by storm.

From Pereyaslavl-Zalessky, Tatar detachments moved in several directions. As the chronicle reports, some of them went to help the Tatar Khan Burundai in Rostov. The other part joined the Tatar army, which had earlier turned from the Nerl to Yuryev. The remaining troops moved across the ice of Lake Pleshcheevo and the Nerl River to Ksnyatin to cut the Volga route. The Tatar army, moving along the Nerl to the Volga, took Ksnyatin and quickly moved up the Volga to Tver and Torzhok. Another Mongol army captured Yuryev and went further west, through Dmitrov, Volokolamsk and Tver to Torzhok. Near Tver, Tatar troops joined forces with troops rising up the Volga from Ksnyatin.

As a result of the February campaigns of 1238, the Mongol-Tatars destroyed Russian cities over a vast territory, from the Middle Volga to Tver.

Battle on the City

By the beginning of March 1238, the Mongol-Tatar detachments that pursued the Vladimir prince Yuri Vsevolodovich, who had fled from the city, reached the Upper Volga line on a wide front. Grand Duke Yuri Vsevolodovich, who was gathering troops in a camp on the City River, found himself close to the Tatar army. The large Tatar army moved from Uglich and Kashin to the City River. On the morning of March 4 they were at the river. Prince Yuri Vsevolodovich was never able to gather sufficient forces. A fight ensued. Despite the surprise of the attack and the large numerical superiority of the Tatar army, the battle was stubborn and lengthy. But still, the army of the Vladimir prince could not withstand the blow of the Tatar cavalry and ran. As a result, the Russian army was defeated, and the Grand Duke himself died. The historical source Rashid ad-Din did not attach importance to the battle of the City special significance, in his mind it was simply a pursuit of the prince who had fled and was hiding in the forests.

Siege of Torzhok

Almost simultaneously with the Battle of the City, in March 1238, a Tatar detachment captured the city of Torzhok, a fortress on the southern borders of the Novgorod land. The city was a transit point for wealthy Novgorod merchants and traders from Vladimir and Ryazan, who supplied Novgorod with bread. Torzhok always had large reserves of grain. Here the Mongols hoped to replenish their food supplies that had become depleted over the winter.

Torzhok occupied an advantageous strategic position: it blocked the shortest route from the “Nizovskaya land” to Novgorod along the Tvertsa River. The defensive earthen rampart on the Borisoglebskaya side of Torzhok had a height of 6 fathoms. However, in winter conditions this important advantage The city largely disappeared, but still Torzhok was a serious obstacle on the way to Novgorod and delayed the advance of the Mongol-Tatars for a long time.

The Tatars approached Torzhok on February 22. There was neither a prince nor princely squad, and the entire burden of defense was taken upon the shoulders of the townspeople, led by elected mayors. After a two-week siege and the continuous work of the Tatar siege engines, the city people weakened. Finally, Torzhok, exhausted by a two-week siege, fell. The city was subjected to a terrible defeat, most of its inhabitants died.

Hike to Novgorod

Regarding Batu's campaign against Novgorod, historians usually say that by this time significant forces of the Mongol-Tatars had concentrated near Torzhok. And only the Mongol troops, weakened from continuous battles, due to the approach of spring with its thaw and floods, were forced to return, not reaching 100 versts to Novgorod.

However, chroniclers report that the Mongol-Tatars headed towards Novgorod immediately after the capture of Torzhok, pursuing the surviving defenders of the city. Taking into account the location of all the Mongol-Tatar troops at this time, one can reasonably assume that only a small separate detachment of Tatar cavalry was moving towards Novgorod. Therefore, his campaign did not have the goal of taking the city: it was a simple pursuit of a defeated enemy, usual for the tactics of the Mongol-Tatars.

After the capture of Torzhok, the Mongol-Tatar detachment began to pursue the defenders of the city who had emerged from encirclement along the Seliger route further. But, not having reached Novgorod a hundred miles, this Mongol-Tatar cavalry detachment united with the main forces of Batu.

And yet the turn away from Novgorod is usually explained by spring floods. In addition, in the 4-month battles with the Russians, the Mongol-Tatars suffered huge losses, and Batu’s troops found themselves scattered. So the Mongol-Tatars did not try to attack Novgorod in the spring of 1238.

Kozelsk

After Torzhok, Batu turns south. He walked across the entire territory of Rus', using hunting raid tactics. In the upper reaches of the Oka, the Mongols met fierce resistance from the small fortress of Kozelsk. Despite the fact that the city prince Vasilko Konstantinovich was still too young, and despite the fact that the Mongols demanded to surrender the city, the Kozel residents decided to defend themselves. The heroic defense of Kozelsk lasted for seven weeks. The Kozel residents destroyed about 4 thousand Mongols, but were unable to defend the city. Bringing siege equipment to it, the Mongol troops destroyed the city walls and entered Kozelsk. Batu did not spare anyone, despite his age, he killed the entire population in the city. He ordered the city to be razed to the ground, the ground plowed up and the place filled with salt so that it could never be rebuilt. Prince Vasilko Konstantinovich, according to legend, drowned in blood. Batu called the city of Kozelsk an “evil town.” From Kozelsk, the combined forces of the Mongol-Tatars, without stopping, moved south to the Polovtsian steppes.

Mongol-Tatars in the Polovtsian steppes

Stay of the Mongol-Tatars in the Polovtsian steppes from the summer of 1238 to the autumn of 1240. is one of the least studied periods of the invasion. In historical sources, there is an opinion that this period of invasion is the time of the Mongols’ retreat to the steppes for rest, restoration of regiments and horse army after a difficult winter campaign in North-Eastern Rus'. The entire stay of the Mongol-Tatars in the Polovtsian steppes is perceived as a break in the invasion, filled with restoration of strength and preparation for the big campaign to the West.

However, eastern sources describe this period in a completely different way: the entire period of Batu’s stay in the Polovtsian steppes was filled with continuous wars with the Polovtsians, Alans and Circassians, numerous invasions of border Russian cities, and the suppression of popular uprisings.

Military operations began in the fall of 1238. A large Mongol-Tatar army headed towards the land of the Circassians, beyond the Kuban. Almost simultaneously, a war began with the Polovtsians, whom the Mongol-Tatars had previously forced out across the Don. The war with the Polovtsians was long and bloody, a huge number of Polovtsians were killed. As the chronicles write, all the forces of the Tatars were thrown into the fight against the Polovtsians, so Rus' was peaceful at that time.

In 1239, the Mongol-Tatars intensified military operations against the Russian principalities. Their campaigns hit the lands that were located next to the Polovtsian steppes, and were carried out with the aim of expanding the land they conquered.

In winter, a large Mongol army moved north to the region of Mordva and Murom. During this campaign, the Mongol-Tatars suppressed the uprising of the Mordovian tribes, took and destroyed Murom, devastated the lands along the Nizhnyaya Klyazma and reached Nizhny Novgorod.

In the steppes between the Northern Donets and the Dnieper, the war between the Mongol troops and the Polovtsians continued. In the spring of 1239, one of the Tatar detachments that approached the Dnieper defeated the city of Pereyaslavl, a strong fortress on the borders of Southern Rus'.

This capture was one of the stages of preparation for a large campaign to the west. The next campaign had the goal of defeating Chernigov and the cities along the Lower Desna and Seim, since the Chernigov-Seversk land was not yet conquered and threatened the right flank of the Mongol-Tatar army.

Chernigov was a well-fortified city. Three defensive lines protected him from enemies. The geographical position near the borders of the Russian land and active participation in internecine wars created in Rus' the opinion of Chernigov as a city famous for its large number of warriors and courageous population.

The Mongol-Tatars appeared within the Chernigov principality in the fall of 1239, invaded these lands from the southeast and surrounded them. A fierce battle began on the walls of the city. The defenders of Chernigov, as the Laurentian Chronicle describes, threw heavy stones from the walls of the city at the Tatars. After a fierce battle on the walls, the enemies burst into the city. Having taken it, the Tatars beat up the local population, plundered the monasteries and set fire to the city.

From Chernigov, the Mongol-Tatars moved east along the Desna and further along the Seim. There, numerous cities built to protect against nomads (Putivl, Glukhov, Vyr, Rylsk, etc.) were destroyed and the countryside was devastated. Then the Mongol army turned south, to the upper reaches of the Northern Donets.

The last Mongol-Tatar campaign in 1239 was the conquest of Crimea. The Polovtsians, defeated by the Mongols in the Black Sea steppes, fled here, to the steppes of the northern Crimea and further to the sea. Pursuing them, Mongol troops came to Crimea. The city was taken.

Thus, during 1239, the Mongol-Tatars defeated the remnants of the Polovtsian tribes that they had not conquered, made significant campaigns in the Mordovian and Murom lands, and conquered almost the entire Left Bank of the Dnieper and the Crimea. Now the Tatar possessions came close to the borders of Southern Rus'. The southwestern direction of Rus' was the next target for the Mongol invasion.

A trip to southwestern Rus'. Preparing for the hike

At the beginning of 1240, in winter, the Mongol army approached Kyiv. This trip can be regarded as reconnaissance of the area before the start of hostilities. Since the Tatars did not have the strength to take fortified Kyiv, they limited themselves to reconnaissance and a short throw to the right bank of the Dnieper to pursue the retreating Prince of Kyiv Mikhail Vsevolodovich. Having captured the "full", the Tatars turned back.

In the spring of 1240, a significant army was moved south, along the Caspian coast, to Derbent. This advance to the south, to the Caucasus, was not accidental. The forces of the Jochi ulus, partially freed after the campaign against North-Eastern Rus', were used to complete the conquest operation of the Caucasus. Previously, the Mongols continuously attacked the Caucasus from the south: in 1236, Mongol troops devastated Georgia and Armenia; 1238 conquered the lands between the Kura and Araks; in 1239 they captured Kars and the city of Ani, the former capital of Armenia. The troops of the Jochi ulus took part in the general Mongol offensive in the Caucasus with attacks from the north. The peoples of the North Caucasus stubbornly resisted the conquerors.

By the fall of 1240, preparations for a large campaign to the west were completed. The Mongols conquered areas that were not conquered in the campaign of 1237-38, suppressed popular uprisings in the Mordovian lands and Volga Bulgaria, occupied the Crimea and North Caucasus, destroyed Russian fortified cities on the left bank of the Dnieper (Pereyaslavl, Chernigov) and came close to Kyiv. He was the first point of attack.

Hike to the southwest of Rus'

IN historical literature the presentation of the facts of Batu’s campaign against Southern Rus' usually begins with the siege of Kyiv. He, “the mother of Russian cities,” was the first large city on the path of the new Mongol invasion. The bridgehead for the invasion had already been prepared: Pereyaslavl, the only large city that covered the approaches to Kyiv from this side, was taken and destroyed in the spring of 1239.

The news of Batu's impending campaign reached Kyiv. However, despite the immediate danger of invasion, no attempts were noticeable in Southern Rus' to unite to repel the enemy. Princely strife continued. Kyiv was actually left to its own on our own. He did not receive any help from other southern Russian principalities.

Batu began the invasion in the fall of 1240, again gathering under his command all the people devoted to himself. In November he approached Kyiv, the Tatar army surrounded the city. Spread over the high hills above the Dnieper, the great city was heavily fortified. The powerful ramparts of the Yaroslav city covered Kyiv from the east, south and west. Kyiv resisted the incoming enemies with full force. The people of Kiev defended every street, every house. But, nevertheless, with the help of powerful battering guns and rapids, on December 6, 1240, the city fell. It was terribly devastated, most of the buildings were destroyed in the fire, the inhabitants were killed by the Tatars. Kyiv lost its significance as a major urban center for a long time.

Now, after the capture of great Kyiv, the path to all centers of Southern Rus' and of Eastern Europe was open to the Mongol-Tatars. It's Europe's turn.

Batu's exit from Rus'

From the destroyed Kyiv, the Mongol-Tatars moved further west, to general direction to Vladimir-Volynsky. In December 1240, under the onslaught of Mongol-Tatar troops, the cities along Middle Teterev were abandoned by the population and garrisons. Most of the Bolokhov cities also surrendered without a fight. The Tatars confidently, without turning aside, walked west. On the way, they encountered strong resistance from small towns on the outskirts of Rus'. Archaeological studies of fortifications in the area recreate the picture heroic defense and the destruction of fortified towns under the blows of superior forces of the Mongol-Tatars. Vladimir-Volynsky was also taken by the Mongols by storm after a short siege. The final point of the “raid”, where the Mongol-Tatar detachments united after the devastation of South-Western Rus', was the city of Galich. After the Tatar pogrom, Galich became deserted.

As a result, having defeated the Galician and Volyn lands, Batu left the Russian lands. In 1241, a campaign began in Poland and Hungary. Batu’s entire campaign against Southern Rus' thus took very little time. With the departure of the Mongol-Tatar troops abroad, the Mongol-Tatar campaign against Russian lands ended.

Coming out of Rus', Batu’s troops invade the states of Europe, where they instill horror and fear in the inhabitants. In Europe it was stated that the Mongols had escaped from hell, and everyone was waiting for the end of the world. But Rus' still resisted. In 1241 Batu returned to Rus'. In 1242, in the lower reaches of the Volga, he established his new capital - Sarai-bata. At the end of the 13th century, after Batu created the state of the Golden Horde, the Horde yoke was established in Rus'.

Establishment of the yoke in Rus'

The Mongol-Tatar campaign against Russian lands ended. Rus' was devastated after the terrible invasion, but gradually it begins to recover, normal life is restored. The surviving princes return to their capitals. The dispersed population is gradually returning to Russian lands. Cities are being restored, villages and villages are being repopulated.

In the first years after the invasion, the Russian princes were more worried about their destroyed cities, engaged in their restoration, and the distribution of princely tables. They were now less concerned about the problem of establishing any kind of relations with the Mongol-Tatars. The invasion of the Tatars did not have much impact on the interpersonal relations of the princes: in the capital of the country, Yaroslav Vsevolodovich sat on the grand-ducal throne, and transferred the remaining lands into the possession of his younger brothers.

But the calm of Rus' was disrupted again when the Mongol-Tatars, after a campaign against Central Europe, appeared on Russian lands. The Russian princes were faced with the question of establishing some kind of relationship with the conquerors. Touching upon the question further relations with the Tatars, the problem of disputes between the princes arose: opinions differed in further actions. The cities captured by the Mongol armies were in a terrible state of destruction. Some cities were completely burned out. Temples, churches, cultural monuments were destroyed and also burned. To restore the city before the time of the Mongol invasion, enormous forces, funds and time were needed. The Russian people had no strength: neither to restore cities, nor to fight the Tatars. Strong and wealthy cities in the northwestern and western outskirts that were not subject to the Mongol invasion (Novgorod, Pskov, Polotsk, Minsk, Vitebsk, Smolensk) joined the opposition. They, accordingly, opposed the recognition of dependence on the Horde khans. They were not harmed, retaining their lands, wealth and armies.

The existence of these two groups - the northwestern one, which opposed the recognition of dependence on the Horde, and the Rostov one, which was inclined to establish peaceful relations with the conquerors - largely determined the policy of the Grand Duke of Vladimir. In the first decade after Batu's invasion, it was ambivalent. But the people of northeastern Rus' did not have the strength to openly resist the conquerors, which made the recognition of Rus'’s dependence on the Golden Horde khans inevitable.

In addition, the prince’s decision was influenced by a significant circumstance: the voluntary recognition of the power of the Horde khan provided the Grand Duke personally with certain advantages in the struggle to subjugate other Russian princes to his influence. In case of non-recognition of the dependence of the Russian land on the Horde, the prince could be overthrown from his grand-ducal table. But on the other hand, the prince’s decision was influenced by the existence of strong opposition to the Horde power in North-Western Rus' and the West’s repeated promises of military assistance against the Mongol-Tatars. These circumstances could awaken hope, under certain conditions, to resist the claims of the conquerors. In addition, in Rus' the masses constantly spoke out against the foreign yoke, with whom the Grand Duke could not help but take them into account. As a result, formal recognition of Rus'’s dependence on the Golden Horde was proclaimed. But the fact of recognition of this power did not actually mean the establishment of a foreign yoke over the country.

The first decade after the invasion is the period when the foreign yoke was just taking shape. At this time, popular forces in Rus' spoke out for Tatar rule, and so far they were victorious.

The Russian princes, recognizing their dependence on the Mongol-Tatars, tried to establish relations with them, for which they often visited the Horde khan. Following the Grand Duke, other princes flocked to the Horde “about their fatherland.” Probably, the trip of the Russian princes to the Horde was somehow connected with the formalization of tributary relations.

Meanwhile, strife continued in North-Eastern Rus'. And among the princes, two oppositions stood out: for and against dependence on the Golden Horde.

But in general, in the early 50s of the 13th century, a fairly strong anti-Tatar group formed in Rus', ready to resist the conquerors.

However, the policy of Grand Duke Andrei Yaroslavich, aimed at organizing resistance to the Tatars, encountered foreign policy Alexander Yaroslavich, who considered it necessary to maintain peaceful relations with the Horde to restore the strength of the Russian princes and prevent new Tatar campaigns.

New Tatar invasions could be prevented by establishing peaceful relations with the Horde, that is, recognizing its power. Under these conditions, the Russian princes made a certain compromise with the Mongol-Tatars. They recognized the supreme power of the khan and donated part of the feudal rent to the Mongol-Tatar feudal lords. In return, the Russian princes received confidence in the absence of the danger of a new invasion from the Mongols, and they also more firmly established themselves on their princely throne. The princes who opposed the power of the khan risked losing their power, which, with the help of the Mongol khan, could pass to another Russian prince. The Horde khans, in turn, were also interested in an agreement with the local princes, since they received additional weapons to maintain their rule over the masses.

Later, the Mongol-Tatars established a “regime of systematic terror” in Rus'. The slightest disobedience of the Russians caused punitive expeditions of the Mongols. During the second half of the 13th century, they carried out no less than twenty devastating campaigns against Rus', each of which was accompanied by the destruction of cities and villages and the taking of Russian people into captivity.

As a result of Russia's recognition of dependence on the Golden Horde, Rus' continued to live a turbulent, complex, tense life for many years. There was a struggle between the princes for and against the Golden Horde, and frequent strife occurred. Anti-Tatar groups constantly spoke out. Both some Russian princes and Mongol khans opposed the popular mass uprisings. The people experienced constant pressure from the Golden Horde. Rus', already once shocked by the terrible tragedy of the Mongol invasion, now again lived in constant fear of a new destructive offensive of the Golden Horde. Rus' was in such a dependent position on the Golden Horde until the end of the 14th century on September 8, 1380. Grand Duke Dmitry Donskoy in the Battle of Kulikovo Field defeated the main forces of the Golden Horde, and dealt a serious blow to its military and political dominance. This was a victory over the Mongol-Tatars, and the final liberation of Rus' from the dependence of the Golden Horde.


History of Russia from ancient times to the end of the 20th century Nikolaev Igor Mikhailovich

Consequences events XIII V.

Consequences of the events of the 13th century.

The events of this century marked the beginning of the Russian lands falling behind the countries of Western Europe. The Golden Horde yoke caused enormous damage to the economic, political and cultural development of Rus'. A significant portion of the income in the form of tribute was sent to Golden Horde. The old agricultural centers fell into decay. The agricultural frontier moved north, the more fertile southern lands were abandoned and became known as the “wild field.” From three-field there was a return to two-field. Russian cities were subjected to massive destruction. Many crafts became simplified and sometimes even disappeared altogether. The human losses were also great. The yoke contributed to feudal fragmentation, ties between principalities were weakened, and the pace of cultural development slowed down.

However, the consequences of even hostile contact different cultures, civilizations are always multi-valued. The three-hundred-year yoke did not pass without a trace for the Russian people: in a situation of isolation from Europe in political, economic and cultural life Asian traditions have taken root in Rus'.

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The culture of our country is so interesting and diverse that I want to study it more and more deeply. Let's plunge into the history of our country in the 13th century.
Russian man is great person, he must know the history of his homeland.
Without knowing the history of their country, not a single civilized society will develop, but, on the contrary, will begin to lag behind in its development, and perhaps stop altogether.
The period of culture of the 13th century is usually called the pre-Mongol period, that is, before the arrival of the Mongols in our state. During this period of time, Byzantium had a great influence on the development of culture. Thanks to Byzantium, Orthodoxy appeared in Rus'.

Ancient culture Rus' XIII centuries - a great creation of the past. Each period of time in history is so unrepeatable that each period separately is worthy of in-depth study. Looking at historical monuments, we can say that culture has entered modern spiritual life. Despite the fact that many works of art have not survived to our times, the beauty of that time continues to delight and surprise us with its scale.

Features of the culture of the 13th century:
- the religious worldview prevailed;
- during this period, many signs were invented, there were no explanations for them by science, and to this day they cannot be explained;
- great attention paid attention to traditions, revered grandfathers;
-slow pace of development;
The tasks facing the masters of that time:
- unity - the unity of the entire Russian people, at that time in the fight against enemies;
- glorification of great princes and boyars;
- evaluated all previous ones historical events. The culture of the 13th century is closely connected with the past.

During this time, literature continued to develop. The work “Prayer” was written by Daniil Zatochnik. The book was dedicated to Prince Yaroslav Vsevolodovich, son of Vsevolod the Big Nest. The book used Speaking, combined with satire. In it, the author condemns the dominance of the boyars, the tyranny that they committed. He created a prince who protected orphans and widows, thereby trying to show that good and good-natured people were not extinct in Rus'.
The centers for storing books were still monasteries and churches. Books were copied and chronicles were kept on their territory.
The genre - Life, the main idea - has become widespread. These works were a description of the lives of saints. Special attention focused on the lives of monks and ordinary people.

They began to write parables.

An important place in the development of literature was occupied by chronicles, where everything that happened in people's lives was written, everything was described year by year.
Epics glorified the exploits of soldiers who defended their homeland. The epics were based on events that actually happened.

Architecture.

During this period, construction began to develop. As already mentioned, the entire culture of this period was imbued with the trends of Byzantium, which could not have a positive effect on the culture of Rus'. The transition from wood construction to the stone one.
In addition, Byzantine culture always put the church and icon painting in first place, cutting off everything that contradicted Christian principles.
The arriving principles of art were faced with the fact that East Slavs worship the sun and wind. But the power of the cultural heritage of Byzantium left its mark on the culture of Ancient Rus'.
The main symbol of construction of this period of time was Saint Sophia Cathedral. The walls of the cathedral, for the first time in Rus', were made of red brick. The church had five domes, behind them stood eight more small ones. The ceiling and walls were decorated with frescoes and mosaics. Many of the frescoes were not on a religious theme; there were many everyday drawings dedicated to the family of the Grand Duke.
Wood carving has developed greatly. The houses of the boyars were decorated with cuttings.
In addition to churches at this time, the wealthy segments of the population began to build stone houses made of pink brick.

Painting.

The paintings of the 13th century were marked by the cities where the masters worked. Thus, Novgorod painters sought to simplify the style of their craft. He achieved his greatest expression in the painting of the Church of St. George in Staraya Ladoga.
At the same time, they began to paint mosaics directly on the walls of temples. Frescoes became widespread. Fresco is a painting painted with water paints directly on walls covered with plaster.

Folklore.

The history of Rus' is so great that it is impossible not to talk about folklore. Folklore occupies a huge place in the life of the Russian people. By reading epics you can learn about the entire life of the Russian people. They glorified the exploits of heroes, their strength and courage. Bogatyrs have always been glorified as protectors of the Russian population.

Life and customs of the people.

The culture of our country is inextricably linked with its people, way of life, and morals. People lived in cities and villages. The main type of housing was the estate; houses were built log house. Kyiv in the 13th century was a very rich city. It had palaces, estates, mansions of boyars and rich merchants. The favorite pastime of the rich population was hunting hawks and falcons. The common population staged fist fights and horse races.
The clothes were made of cloth. The main costume was a long shirt and trousers for men.
Women wore long skirts made of cloth. Married women wore a headscarf. Unmarried girls had long beautiful braids; they could only be cut off when they got married.
Weddings were played on a large scale in the villages; the entire village gathered for them. Huge, long tables were set right in the courtyard of the house.
Since the church played a large role in the life of the population in the 13th century, church posts, holidays were sacredly observed by the residents.

In the interval from his death to his appearance on the historical stage Dmitry Ivanovich, on Rus' his descendants ruled.

Considering feudal fragmentation, historians by Russia of that period usually mean the principalities of Moscow, Vladimir and Novgorod (sometimes also Kiev and Galicia-Volyn).

Daniil Alexandrovich.

Daniil Alexandrovich- Jr son of Alexander Nevsky, was born at the end of 1261 just two years before his father’s death, so he was raised by his brother Alexandra Yaroslav Yaroslavovich, after whose death in 1272 Daniel became Prince of Moscow.

During the reign of Daniil Alexandrovich in Rus', another civil strife between Nevsky's sons Daniil and Andrey, as well as grandson Ivan and nephew Mikhail from Tver for the principality of Vladimir. Thanks to Daniel’s justice and peacefulness, all rivals were brought together to Dmitrov Congress Russian princes, where partially internecine war managed to stop, but some local conflicts continued to arise.

This civil strife was extremely Negative consequences for the economy and culture of Rus' of that period. Daniel's brother Andrey Alexandrovich, for example, asked for help from Golden Horde in this confrontation. The Mongols took this issue seriously and launched a joint campaign with the Horde commander Tudan ( Dudenev's army) turned into the capture and plunder of Murom, Suzdal, Vladimir, Pereyaslavl, Yuryev, Rostov, Uglich, Yaroslavl, Kolomna, Moscow, Zvenigorod, Serpukhov, Mozhaisk and, possibly, other cities about which the chronicles are silent. This was one of the largest pogroms in Rus' since Batu's invasion .

Thus, the Dmitrov Congress was a step forward in the development of diplomacy, although the truce did not last long.

In addition, during his reign, Prince Daniil annexed Moscow Principality territories of Pereyaslavl and Kolomna, and he also tried to do this with Novgorod and Ryazan.

Daniil Alexandrovich built the Church of the Holy Apostles Peter and Paul in the area of ​​​​the current Assumption Cathedral in Moscow.

Prince Daniil Alexandrovich died in Moscow on March 5, 103, leaving behind five sons.

Ivan Kalita.

Ivan Danilovich (Ivan I, Ivan Kalita), grandson of Alexander Nevsky, was born into the family of Daniil Alexandrovich around 1283. Future Prince of Moscow, Prince of Novgorod And Grand Duke Vladimir Already at the age of 13 he became his father's governor in Novgorod.

In 1325 he became the Prince of Moscow, and three years later the Grand Duke of Vladimir.

Ivan Danilovich was nicknamed Kalita for his habit of always carrying a kalita with small change (kalita - wallet) for the poor; he was known as a generous and fair prince towards the common people.

During his reign, Prince Ivan transported from Vladimir to Moscow metropolitan, and thus made Moscow the spiritual capital of Rus'.

In the 30s of the 14th century, Ivan Danilovich became known as a great diplomat, preventing open military conflicts in the contradictions of Moscow, Novgorod, Tver and Smolensk, as well as restraining the discontent of the Golden Horde due to the irregular payment of tribute by the Russian principalities (its desire to resolve this problem with one military blow was is quite real). In addition, he had to take into account the interests of the Principality of Lithuania in relation to Rus'.

Ivan Kalita built the Assumption Cathedral in Moscow from white stone, the Archangel Cathedral, the Church of St. John, Moscow Kremlin(wooden) and the Cathedral of the Savior on Bor, which, unfortunately, has not survived (it was demolished in 1933). During his time in Moscow the famous Siya Gospel on parchment.

Thanks to the reign of Prince Kalita, peace reigned in the Moscow principality for 40 years (1328-1368), there were no military conflicts - this was the result of a competent policy with the Horde, Lithuania and other Russian princes. In addition, influence and territory Moscow Principality have increased significantly.

Ivan Danilovich Kalita died on March 31, 1340, leaving behind four sons and four daughters. In his honor, the Moskvich automobile plant produced a car from 1998 to 2001 executive class"Moskvich - Ivan Kalita."

Ivan Krasny.

Ivan Ivanovich (Ivan II, Ivan Krasny, Ivan the Merciful, Ivan Korotky), Prince of Zvenigorod, Prince of Novgorod, Prince of Moscow, Grand Duke Vladimir, great-grandson of Alexander Nevsky, was born into the family of Ivan Kalita.

March 30, 1326 in Moscow. Thanks to his appearance, he received the prefix “Red” (as a synonym for the word “beautiful”). Another version is based on the time of birth (on the Sunday following Easter - Krasnaya Gorka).

The downside of the reign of Ivan the Red was the weakening of the political influence of Moscow, achieved by his father, to the point that the Principality of Lithuania managed to install its metropolitan in Kyiv, and the Principality of Vladimir was lost immediately after his death and Ivan the Red’s son Dmitry had to re-establish his rights to Vladimir the Great .

Ivan Ivanovich died on November 13, 1359. His main achievement was his eldest son (the youngest died at the age of 10) - Dmitry Ivanovich, better known as