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Nur Devlet | |
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Khan of Crimea | |
1st reign | 1466–1467 |
Predecessor | Hacı I Giray |
Successor | Meñli I Giray |
2nd reign | 1467–1469 |
Predecessor | Meñli I Giray |
Successor | Meñli I Giray |
3rd reign | 1475–1478 |
Predecessor | Hayder Giray |
Successor | Meñli I Giray |
Khan of Qasim | |
Reign | 1486–1491 |
Predecessor | Daniyal ibn Qasim |
Successor | Satylghan ibn Nur Daulat |
Died | 1503 Kasimov |
Burial | Mausoleum of Haji Giray, Bakhchisaray |
Issue |
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Dynasty | Giray dynasty |
Father | Hacı I Giray |
Religion | Islam |
Nur Devlet Giray (died 1503) was the khan of the Crimean Khanate from 1466 to 1467, 1467 to 1469, and 1475 to 1476. He was a son of Hacı I Giray, the founder of Crimean Khanate.
In 1466, Hacı I Giray died and Nur Devlet succeeded him as the Khan of Crimea, but he was expelled by his brother Menli. In 1475, the Ottomans invaded and put Nur Devlet on the throne. In 1478, the Turks replaced him with Mengli. Nur Devlet then entered Russian service. The Qasim Khanate was a Russian vassal, and in 1486, its ruling house died out and Nur Devlet was made the Khan of Qasim. In 1490, he gave the throne to his son, and in 1503, he died after a long illness.
Khan of Crimea
First and second reigns
In August 1466, the first Khan of Crimea, Hacı I Giray died and the Crimean beys elected his eldest son Nur Devlet to succeed him. His younger brother Meñli I Giray revolted. Mengli was generally supported by the Crimean nobility, while Nur Devlet was supported by the Great Horde State. Mengli became the khan in 1467, but was quickly driven out and fled to the Genoese in Kaffa. In June 1468, a delegation of beys went to Kaffa and elected Mengli as the khan. The delegation and a Genoese detachment marched on the old capital of Chufut-Kale, and in early 1469, Nur Devlet was driven out. He fled to the North Caucasus, where he was pursued, captured and then imprisoned at the Genoese fortress of Sudak.
Third reign
Following the Ottoman invasion of Crimea in 1475, Mengli was captured and imprisoned in Istanbul. The Turks were more interested in expelling the Genoese than ruling Crimea. Nur Devlet was released and became khan as a vassal and tributary of the Turks.
Eminek was a powerful bey of the Shirin clan in eastern Crimea by the Kerch Peninsula. In 1476, his brother Hadzhike rebelled and fled to Akhmed Khan of the Great Horde. Akhmed sent an army under Janibeg (son of his brother Mahmud bin Küchük), which was driven out by Emenik. In the fall of 1476, the Sultan ordered Eminek to lead 10,000 men against Moldavia, where he was defeated. While he was away, Janibeg invaded Crimea and made himself the khan of Crimea. In 1477, Nur Devlet expelled Janibeg and regained the throne. Eminek was displeased and wrote to the sultan asking that Mengli be restored. In the spring of 1478, Mengli was released and returned with Turkish soldiers. He and Eminek drove out Nur Devlet, who fled to Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. The Poles sent him to Kiev, and in 1479, he entered Russian service.
Russian exile
Nur Devlet and his brother Hayder fled to Poland, and in 1479, he entered Russian service. In 1480, at the time of the Great Stand on the Ugra River, he and Vasily Nozdrovaty were sent to attack Akhmed's capital of Sarai as a diversion. His son Ber Devlet was killed by a Tatar and he avenged his son's death.
In the north, the Qasim Khanate was a Muslim vassal state of the Russians. In 1486, its ruler died without any sons. Since Nur Devlet was a Muslim and also a descendant of Genghis, which gave him a right to be a khan, the Russians made him the khan of Qasim. He may also have held Kashira at some point. In the first year of his reign, the steppe warlord Murtaza sought to overthrow Mengli with the help of Nur Devlet and Ivan III. Ivan warned Mengli. Nur Devlet was sent to guard the southern frontier. During 1478–1490, he campaigned against the sons of Akhmed bin Kuchuk. Towards the end of 1490, he gave the throne to his son Satylgan. In 1503, he died after a long illness. At the request of Satylgan and Mengli, his remains were sent to Crimea, where he is buried.
Notes
- Crimean Tatar, Ottoman Turkish and Persian: نور دولت کرای
References
- Family tree of Giray dynasty
- The business about Sudak comes from Gaivoronsky (next note). Other sources say he went to Moscow, without details.
- This account of the third reign is extracted from the Russian Misplaced Pages article on Mengli Giray which follows Oleksa Gaivoronsky,Rulers of Two Continents, Kiev-Bakhchisaray, 2007. There does not appear to be a good account in English
Sources
- Alan W. Fisher, The Crimean Tatars, Hoover Institution Press, Stanford California, 1987 ISBN 0-81-796662-5, p. 9–11.
- Joseph von Hammer-Purgstall, Histoire de l'Empire ottoman, « Tome deuxième 1453-1494 », Bellizard, Barthès, Dufour, Lowell, Paris, 1886.
Preceded byHacı I Giray | Khan of Crimea 1466–1467 |
Succeeded byMeñli I Giray |
Preceded byMeñli I Giray | Khan of Crimea 1467–1469 |
Succeeded byMeñli I Giray |
Preceded byHayder | Khan of Crimea 1475–1478 |
Succeeded byMeñli I Giray |
Khans of Crimea | ||
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15th century | ||
16th century | ||
17th century | ||
18th century | ||
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