Misplaced Pages

Şahin Giray: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 19:38, 22 February 2023 editBeshogur (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users33,160 edits Undid revision 1140979086 by 2A02:3100:70E1:F700:C151:3FF4:8A06:40B3 (talk)Tag: Undo← Previous edit Revision as of 19:32, 18 March 2023 edit undo2001:d08:1b88:c239:6ca8:44d0:b2bc:181 (talk)No edit summaryTags: Visual edit Mobile edit Mobile web editNext edit →
Line 33: Line 33:


== Life == == Life ==
He was born in 1745 in ]. He studied in ] and ]. He reputedly spoke the ] language as well as ], ] and ]. When he was 20, his uncle Crimean Khan ] called him back to the Crimea from his foreign school whereupon he was installed as the Commander of ]. In 1770, the ] won a great battle against the ] and sought an alliance with the ] against the Turks. ] declined the proposal, precipitating a surprise attack by Russia against the Khanate. The Khan sent envoys to ] to sue for peace. During this mission, ] met Şahin Giray and wrote of him: He was born in 1745 in ]. He was the son of Ahmed Giray and ] and he was the maternal great grandson of ] and Valide Sultan ].
studied in ] and ]. He reputedly spoke the ] language as well as ], ] and ]. When he was 20, his uncle Crimean Khan ] called him back to the Crimea from his foreign school whereupon he was installed as the Commander of ]. In 1770, the ] won a great battle against the ] and sought an alliance with the ] against the Turks. ] declined the proposal, precipitating a surprise attack by Russia against the Khanate. The Khan sent envoys to ] to sue for peace. During this mission, ] met Şahin Giray and wrote of him:


<blockquote>"The Crimean Prince is the most gentle Tatar, I have ever seen. He's very talented, bronze-colored, good-looking, circumcised and writes poetry. He wants to see and learn everything."</blockquote> <blockquote>"The Crimean Prince is the most gentle Tatar, I have ever seen. He's very talented, bronze-colored, good-looking, circumcised and writes poetry. He wants to see and learn everything."</blockquote>

Revision as of 19:32, 18 March 2023

Khan of Crimea For Crimean prince, see Şahin Giray (prince).
Şahin Giray
Khan of the Tatar Crimean Khanate
(1st reign)
Reign1777–1782
PredecessorDevlet IV Giray
SuccessorBahadır II Giray
Khan of the Tatar Crimean Khanate
(2nd reign)
Reign1782–1783
PredecessorBahadır II Giray
Successornone
Born1745
Edirne
Died1787
Rhodes
BurialRhodes
DynastyGiray dynasty
FatherAhmed Giray
MotherSaliha Sultan, a daughter of Ahmed III
ReligionIslam

Şahin Giray, Shahin Khan Girai (Template:Lang-crh, 1745–1787) was the last Khan of Crimea on two occasions (1777–1782, 1782–1783).

Life

He was born in 1745 in Edirne. He was the son of Ahmed Giray and Saliha Sultan (daughter of Ahmed III) and he was the maternal great grandson of Mehmed IV and Valide Sultan Gülnuş Sultan.

studied in Greece and Venice. He reputedly spoke the Crimean Tatar language as well as Ottoman Turkish, Italian and Greek. When he was 20, his uncle Crimean Khan Qırım Giray called him back to the Crimea from his foreign school whereupon he was installed as the Commander of Nogai Horde. In 1770, the Russian Empire won a great battle against the Ottoman Empire and sought an alliance with the Crimean Khanate against the Turks. Selim Giray declined the proposal, precipitating a surprise attack by Russia against the Khanate. The Khan sent envoys to Saint Petersburg to sue for peace. During this mission, Catherine II met Şahin Giray and wrote of him:

"The Crimean Prince is the most gentle Tatar, I have ever seen. He's very talented, bronze-colored, good-looking, circumcised and writes poetry. He wants to see and learn everything."

In 1776, Şahin Giray succeeded his uncle to become Khan of Crimea. During his brief reign, he embarked on a program to re-build and modernise the Crimean Khanate. These reforms centred on the economy and government infrastructure, but included opening factories and moving the capital from Bakhchisaray to the important trade city of Caffa.

Eventually, under enormous pressure from Russia and facing the inevitability of defeat, he agreed to a Russian offer to incorporate the Khanate into the Russian Empire. As a result, he was compelled to move to Saint Petersburg, where he lived under house arrest. He appealed to be allowed to move to Edirne, where he had spent much of his childhood. In 1787, Russia and the Ottoman Empire agreed to allow him to move to Edirne. This move was not the retirement he was expecting because the Ottoman authorities saw him as a possible challenger to the imperial Ottoman throne. He was moved under arrest to Constantinople and then Rhodes where he was executed later that year under the order of the Ottoman sultan Abdul Hamid I.

Şahin Giray's family lived in Burgazada, Istanbul after his execution.

See also

References

  1. "SHAHIN GIRAY". www.osmanli700.gen.tr.
  2. FERİDUN EMECEN, "ŞÂHİN GİRAY", TDV İslâm Ansiklopedisi, https://islamansiklopedisi.org.tr/sahin-giray (14.07.2020).
Khans of Crimea
15th century Map of the Crimean Khanate
16th century
17th century
18th century
Khan topics
Crimean Khanate
Giray dynasty
Categories: