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The Russian Horde (Altin Ordu) is Tartaria (real history)
The Golden Horde (Mongolian: Алтан Орд, Altan Ordu, Зүчийн у Züchii-in Uls; Russian: Золотая Орда, tr.Zolotaya Orda; Tatar: Алтын Урда Altın Urda) was a Mongol and later Turkicized khanate, established in the 13th century, which comprised the northwestern sector of the Mongol Empire. The khanate is also known as the Kipchak Khanate or as the Ulus of Jochi.
After the death of Batu Khan in 1255, the prosperity of his dynasty lasted for a full century, until 1359, though the intrigues of Nogai did instigate a partial civil war in the late 1290s. The Horde's military power peaked during the reign of Uzbeg (1312–41), who adopted Islam. The territory of the Golden Horde at its peak included most of Eastern Europe from the Urals to the bank of the Danube River, extending east deep into Siberia. In the south, the Golden Horde's lands bordered on the Black Sea, the Caucasus Mountains, and the territories of the Mongol dynasty known as the Ilkhanate.
The khanate experienced violent internal political disorder beginning in 1359, before it was briefly reunited under Tokhtamysh in 1381. However, soon after the 1396 invasion of Tamerlane, it broke into smaller Tatar khanates that declined steadily in power. At the start of the 15th century the Horde began to fall apart. By 1433 it was being referred to simply as the Great Horde. Within its territories there emerged numerous, predominantly Turkic-speaking, khanates. These internal struggles allowed the northern vassal state of Muscovy to rid itself of the “Tatar Yoke” at the Great stand on the Ugra river in 1480. The Crimean Khanate and the Kazakh Khanate, the last remnants of the Golden Horde, persisted until 1783 and 1847, respectively.[1]
Headquarters at Batu Sarai (= Palace of Batu), at first ca. 100 km N. of Astrachan and from the second half of the 13th century until 1395 on the eastern shore of the Wolga facing Tsaritsin (Volgograd, Stalingrad. Winkler p. 164)
http://www.hubert-herald.nl/RusGoldenHorde.htm
List of Khans of the Golden Horde and Hordes of the Jochid Ulus]
Batu Khan (1227–1255)
Sartaq (1255–56)
Ulaghchi (1257)
Berke (1257–1266)
Mengu-Timur (1266–1282)
Tuda Mengu (1282—1287)
Talabuga (1287—1291)
Toqta (1291—1312)
Uzbeg Khan (1312–1341)
Tini Beg (1341–1342)
Jani Beg (1342—1357)
Berdi Beg (1357—1361)
Qulpa (1359–1360)
Nawruz Beg (1360–1361)
Khidr (1361–1362)
Timur Khwaja (1362)
Abdallah (1362–1370), actual ruler was Mamai
Murad (1362–1367), actual ruler was Mamai
Aziz (1367–1369), actual ruler was Mamai
Jani Beg II (1369–1370), actual ruler was Mamai
Muhammad Bolak (1370–1379), actual ruler was Mamai
Tulun Beg Khanum (as regent) (1370–1373), actual ruler was Mamai
Aig Beg (1373–1376), actual ruler was Mamai
Arab Shaykh (1376–1379), actual ruler was Mamai
Kagan Beg (1375–1376), actual ruler was Mamai
Ilbani (1373–1376), actual ruler was Mamai
Hajji Cherkes (1375–1376), actual ruler was Mamai
Urus Khan (1376–1378), Urus was also Khan of the White Horde and uncle of Toqtamish, allowing the Hordes to unite.
Freky Aziz Reffelruz (1378–1380)
Tokhtamysh (1380–1395)
Temür Qutlugh (1396–1401), actual ruler was Edigu
Shadi Beg (1399–1407), actual ruler was Edigu
Pulad (1407–1410), actual ruler was Edigu
Temür (1410–1412)
Jalal ad-Din khan (1411–1412)
Feicüs al-Doste (1413-1414)
Karimberdi
Kebeg
Jabbar Berdi (1417–1419)
Olugh Mokhammad (1419–1421, 1428–1433)
Dawlat Berdi (1419–1421, 1427–1432)
Baraq (1422–1427)
Seyid Akhmed (1433–1435)
Küchük Muhammad (1435–1459)
Mahmud (1459–1465)
Ahmed (1465–1481)
Shayk Ahmad (1481–1498, 1499–1502)
Murtada (1498–1499)
Heraldry
Tamga
A tamga or tamgha “stamp, seal” (Mongolian: tamga, Turkish: damga) is an abstract seal or stamp used by Eurasian nomadic peoples and by cultures influenced by them. The tamga was normally the emblem of a particular tribe, clan or family. They were common among the Eurasian nomads throughout Classical Antiquity and the Middle Ages (including Alans, Mongols, Sarmatians, Scythians and Turkic peoples).
Similar “tamga-like” symbols were sometimes adopted by sedentary peoples adjacent to the Pontic-Caspian steppe both in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. Archaeologists prize tamgas as a first-rate source for the study of present and extinct cultures.
States using tamgas were Krim Khanate, medieval Lithuania, and also Kievan Rus (Ukraine)
Mongol Empire
Since the time when the ancient Mongol nations have developed into clans and banners, a system of various tamgas: drawings, and earmarks have been used as an identification sign for labor instruments and utilities as well as for of domesticated animals. Every time a clan branched off due to internal clashes, derivative tamghas gradually developed into personal, family, lineage, khans, and state tamghas. Those new tamghas were created by adding new markings on the original tamgha, in order to conserve the tradition.
"Tamga" or "tamag" literally means a seal in the Mongolian language. Tamgas are also on brandmarks for domesticated animals such as horses in present-day Mongolia and others to identify that the livestock grazing during the day on their own. In this regard, each family has its own tamga markings for easier identification. Tamga markings in that case are not very elaborate and are just curved irons differing from other families' tamgas. [2]
The Mongol Golden Horde Khans marked their coins with their personal tamgas from the beginning of their empire until its breaking up at the end of the 14th century
Jochi
*1182-†1227
Jochi (Mongolian: Зүчи, Zu'qi; Kazakh: Jos'y, جوشى; Chinese: 朮赤; pinyin: Zhú chì; Crimean Tatar: Cuçi, Джучи, جوچى; also spelled Djochi, Jöchi and Juchi; c. 1182– February 1227. Mongolian army commander who was the eldest son of Genghis Khan, and presumably one of the four sons by his principal wife Börte, though issues concerning his paternity followed him throughout his life. An accomplished military leader, he participated in his father's conquest of Central Asia, along with his brothers and uncles.
Jochi was entrusted with the westernmost part of the empire, then lying between Ural (Jaiq, Djaik, Iaik, Jaiakh) and Irtysh rivers.
During the invasion of Central Asia Genghis appointed Jochi to command the troops at the siege of the Khorazinm capital Urgench and promised Jochi the city as his prize. However, a dispute broke out with Chagatai who accused Jochi of trying to negotiate to keep the city intact for himself rather than completing the siege. Genghis intervened and gave command of the troops to Ogodei. This led to a final breach in relations with Genghis. Jochi withdrew to his lands in the West of the empire and never returned to Mongolia. He died in 1226. His sons Batu Khan and Orda Khan inherited his lands, which are known collectively as the Ulus of Jochi.
Jochi standing on a portrait of Ghinghiz Khan Æ
Batu
1217-1255
Batu Khan audience
Silver dinar of Batu [3]
The gallery of images of state symbols of Tatarstan in the Cabinet of Ministers of the republic presents clan tamgas of the Batu and Berke clans.
Sartaq
1256-1257
Berke
1257-1266
Berke
Mangu-Temür
1267-1280
Coins of Mangu Temür
On the ancient European geographical maps, the Golden Horde was marked with white flags with a red ideogram. For example, a 14th-century map (portolan) stored in the Barcelona Maritime Museum, which shows the "Khan of the Golden Horde" and several cities under white flags with a tamga, on some flags the tamga is accompanied by a crescent. Such a tamga (a tamga of the Batu genus - a two-pronged head with a round tooth and a crossbeam at the right tooth) was also depicted on the coins of Khan Mengu-Timur (1260s).
Used photo cards from the site "Red Lion" by Hubert de Vries (http://hubert-herald.nl/) Photo of coins from the forum of numismatists http://coins.ucoz.ru/
Tode-Mangu
1280-1287
GOLDEN HORDE: Toda Mangu, 1280-1287, AR yarmaq (1.67g), Qrim, ND, A-2021.1, ruler's name in square, al-'adil zuyyida 'adluhu around / tamgha in triangle, mint name outside, choice Extremely Fine to About Uncirculated, RRR.
Another Golden Horde coin with a tamga.
1 - silver yarmak of Tuda-Mengu-khan (ave. 1282-1287), 683 g., Crimea
Tule Buka (Talabuga)
1287-1290
Together with Nogai he accompanied the Mongol invasion of Lithuania under the command of Burundai in 1259.[1] Alongside Nogai Khan, he led the second Mongol invasion of Hungary in 1284-1285 and the third Mongol raid against Poland in 1287. Despite initial success most of the attacks were unsuccessful.
As a matter of rule, the Galician and Rus' dukes were ordered to accompany the Mongol raid on Hungary together with Tulabuga and Nogai in 1285. In 1286 he decided to organize the raid on Poland, again together with Khan Nogai. which he repeated for the last time in 1287.
In 1290, Khan Tulabuga and Nogai attacked the land of Zichia (probably Circassia).
2 – silver yarmak of Tula-Bug-khan (1287-1291), 686, Crimea.
Tamga within encircled hexagram
Coin of Talabuga
Tamga and quadruped (wolf, fox?)
Coin of Talabuga
Tamga and quadruped (leopard)
Toqtu
1291-1312
Uzbek
1313-1341
Sultan Mohammed Öz Beg, better known as Uzbeg or Ozbeg (*1282–†1341, reign 1313–1341), was the longest-reigning khan of the Golden Horde, under whose rule the state reached its zenith. He was succeeded by his son Jani Beg.
He was the son of Toghrilcha and grandson of Mengu-Timur, who had been khan of the Golden Horde from 1267–1280.
Dirham of Mohammad Uzbek
His adoption of Islam as a state religion led to a conspiracy of Shamanist and Buddhist princes, whom he subdued severely. Öz Beg determinedly spread Islam among the Golden Horde and allowed missionary activities to expand in the surrounding regions. Öz Beg found out that his competitor was backed by the envoys of the Great Khan Ayurbarwada Buyantu and this fact helped deteriorate his relationship with the Yuan Dynasty. The last of his rebellious relatives was shamanist Ilbasan of the eastern half of the Golden Horde, who was murdered in 1320. Öz Beg installed the Muslim Mubarak Khwaja as a replacement to the throne of the White Horde, but he discouraged their independence. In the long run, Islam enabled the Khan to eliminate inter-factional struggles in the Horde and to stabilize state institutions. Russian scholar Lev Gumilev wrote that in this manner was Öz Beg able to turn the khanate into a sultanate.
Khan Öz Beg urged the Mongol elite to convert to Islam, but at the same time, he preserved the lives of Christians and pagans such as Russians, Circassians, Alans, Finno-Ugric people, and Crimean Greeks as long as they continued to pay the jizyah in subjection to Islamic rule. From Öz Beg onwards, the khans of the Golden Horde were all Muslim.
Öz Beg was very tolerant of Christians as exemplified by a letter of thanks he received from Pope John XXII in which the Christian leader thanked Öz Beg for his kind treatment of Christians.[Öz Beg had sent a letter to the Metropolitan Peter which stated:
By the will and power, the greatness and most high! Let no man insult the metropolitan church of which Peter is head, or his service or his churchman; let no man seize their property, goods or people, let no man meddle in the affairs of the church...Their laws, their churches and monasteries and chapels shall be respected; whoever condemns or blames this religion, shall not be allowed to excuse himself under any pretext, but shall be punished with death.
Paiza of Öz beg (Uzbek) Khan
Eight-rayed sun or eight-pointed star
Silver, casting, forging, engraving, gilding. An Arabic script on the plate displays the text:
“By the command of the eternal sky, the decree of the khan of Uzbek. A person who does not submit to the Mongols is guilty, and must die”.
1320 Flag: White. a tamgha (Marino Sanudo)
1339 Flag: White, a crescent and a tamgha (Angelino Dulcerta)
1341 Flag: White, a crescent and a red tamgha (...The King of this Norgancio (= Choresm) has for his device a white flag with the sign of uxbeco Emperor of sara (= Sarai) red.
Libro de Conoscimiento n° 79 & p. 51)
Tinibeg
1341-1342
Djanibeg
1342-1357
Disk with leopard 14th cent
From the Azov Museum
Berdibeg
1357-1359
Kulpa
Newrus
Toktamish
1375-1395
1385 ca Flag: White, a black crescent and a tamgha (Guillelmus Soleri).
White flag and black tamgha
Greatest extend of the Tokhtamysh authority
Capital: Sarai
Breaking up in Khanates and kingdoms,
Unicorn / Единорог
Arms of Sarai in the Richental Chronicle 1417
1417 Arms: Sable, a unicorn Or.
Caption: Dominus Wildiboldus herzog zu Sarasie, zwüschent Kriechen und Littow.
(Ulrich Richental Konzil, fol 136a. Sarasie = Sara = Sarai i.e the Palace of the Khan of the Golden Horde)
A good candidate for the arms is Kebeq Khan albeit Wildiboldus does not like to be a plausible corruption of his name:
Kebek was the third son of Tokan Khan. In 1410, his eldest brother, Jalal ad-Din, obtained the throne from the “strong man” of the Golden Horde, the puppet ruler Emir Edögey. Jalal ad-Dín was also supported by the Grand Duke of Lithuania, Vytautas because he had been in his miitary service. In 1412 his other brother, Karim Berdi, murdered him and himself sat in his place. Vytautas was enraged by the death of his supporter and did not recognize the succession. He first sought a claimant to the throne outside of the Toktamis family, but this was captured and beheaded by Karim Berdi. He then turned to the brothers and, at his suggestion, one of Kebek's younger brothers, Jabbárberdi, killed Karim Berdi. The new khan became the third brother, Kebek, who was also a devotee of the Lithuanian prince.
Kebek could only rule for a short time because Emir Edögej found another khan candidate from the White Horde, Csokra. In battle they defeated Kebek's army and expelled him from the capital, New Sarai. Kebek retreated to the southwestern part of the Horde, which was in Lithuania’s zone of influence and for a few years even minted money like the Horde’s khan. His further fate is unknown.
The unicorn
In military symbolism a unicorn, derived from the persian ibex, is of very ancient origin. In fact it symbolizes the leader and defender of the herd and the great inseminator. The male ibex as such symbolizes supreme masculinity. In the far east he is known from the military hierarchies in the ancient Persian world. Derived from this persian ibex is the unicorn which is a fierce beast only to be tamed by a virgin. Such a unicorn often figures in muslim symbolism. An early example is known from Pamplona where a pair of ibexes occur on the so-called Pamplona Casket, together with a pair of griffins and other heraldic beasts. In China where he is called qilin, he was the symbol of the military commander of the first rank from the time of the Han (207 BC-220 AD) until the fall of the Chinese empire in 1910. An example from mediaeval Armenia is known from the clothes of Gagik I Abbas (1029-‘64) with large medallions enclosing ibexes. So, probably the unicorn in the case of the Golden Horde was the badge of rank of the commander of the first rank.
* In the case of Castile it had been the badge of the major domus and military leader during the reign of King Alfonso VII. See paragraph: Ibex
** In the case of Scotland it must be remarked that a stewart is a kind of major domo and that the ruling dynasty of Scotland in the time of the introduction of the Unicorn was the House of Steward (1371-1714).
Russian Tartary
Iwan III, the Great
Iwan the Young
1462-1505
1471-1490
About 1480 Conrad Grüneberg repeats the arms with the Unicorn,
copying the Richental Chronicle
Der Hertzog vo Sarasye zwisthen littau vñ kriecheñ [4]
According to Köhne, B. von: Das Kaiserlich Russische Reichs-Wappen. Reiter und Doppeladler. In: Vierteljahrschrift für Heraldik etc. Herold. 1882, pp. 397-418. Taf. I-II.
....Die ersten Bullen mit dem Doppel-Adler auf der Hauptseite und dem Einhorn auf der Rückseite, sind vom Grossfürsten Johann III Wassiljewitsch
(The first seals with of two-headed eagle on the obverse and the Unicorn on the reverse are of Grand Prince John III Wassiljewich.)
* This seal cannot be found
Wassily III
1505-1533
Vasili III continued the policies of his father Ivan III and spent most of his reign consolidating Ivan's gains. Vasili annexed the last surviving autonomous provinces: Pskov in 1510, appanage of Volokolamsk in 1513, principalities of Ryazan in 1521 and Novgorod-Seversky in 1522.
Also he took the heraldic consequences of the conquest of the remnants of the Golden Horde by supporting the unicorn of 1417 by the two-headed eagle of the Grand Prince (Megalou Primikuriou)
1505–1533 gold grivna of Vassili III Ivanovich
Arms: Unicorn (the arms of Kebek Khan)
Supporter: Two-headed crowned eagle
On the obverse St. George similar to Vassilii's seal by design.
Iwan IV, the Terrible
1533-1584
Tsar 16.01.1547
The use of the unicorn was continued by Iwan IV
Back of Ivan the Terribele’s Throne
The ivory panel carved with a two-headed royally crowned eagle with sceptre and orb for the rank of King / Tsar / Caesar
On the dexter a unicorn for the Khanate of the Golden Horde (Sarai) and on the sinister a lion rampant for the Grand Principality of Vladimir
1562
1569
Seal of Ivan IV, 1577
The obverse of the seal depicts a double-headed eagle under a single crown with an Orthodox cross and a rider on a shield killing a snake. (The rider symbolized the prince; later they began to identify him with George the Victorious).
On the reverse side of the seal on the shield of the eagle, a unicorn is depicted as the personal coat of arms of Ivan IV.
The circular inscriptions indicate the full title of the tsar: “B (o) ha in Tr (oi) tsy slavima m (i) l (os) tiyu great g (osu) d (a) rb c (a) rb and Grand Duke (s) Ivan Vasilyevi (h) of All Russia Vladimersky Moscow Nougorodtsky and c (a) rb Kazan and c (a) rb Astorohansk and g (osu) d (a) rb Pskov and Grand Duke (s) Smolensk Tver Yugorskiy Perm Vyattskiy Bulgarian and other g (osu) d (a) ry and Great Prince (I) s Novgorod Nizovskiy lands of Chernigov "
Ryazansky. Polotsky. Rostov. Yaroslavsky. Beloozersky. and the ruler of the motherland m (silt) r (adi) possessor of the land of Livonia, the German rank of Udora. Obdorsky. Kondinsky and all Siberian lands and northern countries are the sovereign and other many lands g (was) d (a) r and possessor ". (Fig. 6.7).
In the margin the seals of (clockwise): Polotsk; Belozersk; Ryazan; Kondinsk; Archbishop Riga; Kesi city; Lifland; Siberia; Obdorsk; Yaroslavl; Rostov; Ryazan
At the back, the same image, only with the unicorn on the breast of the double eagle and the indistinct inscription: ХРІСТОСЬ МОГУТНЫИ ХРІСТОСЬ ВАСІЛЕVЕІ (Christos the mighty, Christos is king, maybe from Latin Christus regnat, according to Christ Imperat). Then the coats of arms, according to the end of the title follow, likewise in heraldic order (alternating), from Riäsan, Polotzk (the Stibcy of the Jagellonen), Rostow, Jaroslaw, Bielosersk, Udorien, Obdorien, Kondinien, Siberia, the archbishop of Riga, the master of the livländischen order (Wilhelm von Fürstenberg) and the town Reval. All these coats of arms deviate from the ones that later became usual. [5]
Coin of Wilhelm von Fürstenberg
Arms: ¼ 1&4: Argent, a cross Sable; 2&3: Or two fesses Gules.
From: печатгрозного.рф/историа-государственного-герба/
Theodore I
1584-1598
Conquest of Siberia 1584-’88
Interruption of the use of the unicorn
Boris Godunow
1598-1605
Reverse of the Great seal of Boris Godunow: Crowned two-headed eagle with russian cross between its heads. Escutcheon: running unicorn. Caption (translated in 17th cent. english) Cheringoskee, Rezanskee, Rososkee, Yaroslavskee, Beloozerskee, Leeflandia, Udorskee, Obdorskee, Kondinskee, and Commander of all the Northern parts, and Lord of all the Iverskee Countries, and Granziskee Empires, and of the Caberniskee Countries, Cherkaskee, Igorskee, and of many other Kingdoms, Lord and Conqueror.” D.: 12.06.1602.
From: Ashmole, Elias The Institution, Laws and Ceremonies of the Most Noble Order of the Garter. London, 1671.p. 229
(besides the Soveraigns of the most Noble Order of the Garter) have assumed the bearing St. Georg encountring the Dragon and in like posture (though not so anciently, nor upon the same account) as they: probably having chosen him Patron of their Countries or Families, as namely the Emperors of Russia, the Dukes of Mantua in Italy, and the Counts Mansfield in Germany, which will bet∣ter appear by the exhibits of some of their Seals and Coyns here.
The first is the Great Seal of Borice-Feodorwiche Emperor of Russia, affixed to his Letters sent to Queen Elizabeth, dated at his Imperial Palace of Mosko the 12. of Iune 1602. and 39. year of his Reign: A Translation of which was most courteously afforded me by Mr. Ia. Frese (Interpretor to the Russian Ambassa∣dors, sent over hither to his now Majesty, an. Dom. 1660.) and is as followeth.
By Gods providence, We the great Lord, Emperor, and great Duke Boreece Feo∣dorwiche of all Russia Self-upholder, of Wolodeemer, Mosko, Novograde, Emperor of Kazan, Emperor of Astracane, and Emperor of Seebeeria, Lord of Psokosske, great Duke of Smolenskee, Twerskee, Ugarskee, Permskee, Va∣ticekee, Bolgarskee and other; Lord and great Duke of Novagradia, the lower Countries, Cheringoskee, Rezanskee, Rososkee, Yaroslaveskee, Beloozerskee, Leeflandia, Udorskee, Obdorskee, Kondinskee, and Com∣mander of all the Northern parts, and Lord of all the Iverskee Countries, and Granziskee Empires, and of the Caberniskee Countries, Cherkaskee, Igorskee, and of many other Kingdoms, Lord and Conqueror.
Dimitri the Pretender
1605-1606
Basil IV Shuiski
d. 1612
1606-1610
Michael Romanov
1613-1645
Arrow quiver and bow case - saadak
Belonged to Tsar Mikhail Fedorovich Romanov
Manufactured: Moscow, 1627-1628, the Armory.
Materials: Leather, gold, silver, precious stones, fabric.
The bow case shows a white crowned two-headed eagle surrounded by four heraldic devices (from left to right): 1. An eagle Argent with a crown (Poland); 2. A griffin proper with coloured wings with an orb; (Romanov) 3. A unicorn Argent with a sceptre (Golden Horde); 4 A lion proper with a sword (Vladimir)
Seals of central government agencies. Separate state and city institutions also had their own seals. Preserved several seals of the central government institutions of the Russian state - orders. The most known are the seals of the Order of the Great Palace, which is probably due to the originality of its competence. In addition to managing palace institutions and estates, the Order of the Great Palace was in charge for almost the entire 17th century. (with the exception of the 50-70s) by the economic activity of Russian monasteries. The monastic archives have been better preserved in comparison with the archives of state institutions and private individuals, therefore, many documents have survived to this day bearing the seal of the Order of the Great Palace.
Seal of the Order of the Great Palace. Kotoshikhin, characterizing the activities of the Order of the Big Palace, writes: "Yes, in the same order, the press is kept, and they collect printing duties on letters and other matters that are sent by petitions of all ranks of people to cities and palace volosts," that is, in those cities and townships that were under the jurisdiction of the Order of the Great Palace. "And it is carved on that seal," Kotoshikhin continues, "an inrog is a beast" * .
* ( G. K. Kotoshikhin. About Russia in the reign of Alexei Mikhailovich, p. 60. )
This testimony of Kotoshikhin is confirmed by the preserved imprints of the seal of the Order of the Great Palace. Moreover, during the 17th century. the matrices of this seal changed, since the prints differ from one another.
So, under the letter with a read ‘sent from the Order of the Big Palace on 30 August 1632 to Solikamsk voivode Ilya Ivanovich Zlobin’ on the controversial land case of the Pyskorsky monastery with the guest G.L. Nikitnikov, there is an applied seal to black wax. The seal depicts a unicorn and the inscription: "The Big Palace". (печат ъболъщя годвоця).
At the end of the 16th and the beginning of the 17th century the colonisation or conquest of Siberia took place. The territories were initially called Tartary and for that new territory was designed a new emblem of a basilisk, borrowed from Kazan (also sometimes called Tartary). This was documented until the arms of Siberia werd adopted for a kingdom which comprised the whole of East Asia. In the process the unicorn of the Gollden Horde (not belonging to Siberia) became obsolete.
Turkestan
The arms of Turkestan are perhaps an invention of the director of the section for arms in the heraldic department of the Russian senate, Freiherr B.K. von Köhne, who was of the opninion that the unicorn is the emblem of the prefecture of Asia because: apart from the double eagle, the Byzantine emperors bore the arms of the four great prefectures of the Empire, namely the eagle for Italy, a griffin for Gaul, a unicorn for Asia and a lion for Illyria. The unicorn coat of arms is said to have been first adopted by Ivan III. In 1882, the unicorn coat of arms became the warms for Turkestan. K. does not say on what his opinion on the prefecture's heraldic animals is based on. [6]
Turkestan arms [7]
Turkestan oblast was formed in 1865, subject to the Orenburg governorate-general, from territories recently conquered from the Kokand khanate. These included Tashkent, one of the two largest towns in the region (the other was Bukhara).
Turkestan coat of arms on the official badge of the mirab - responsible for the distribution of water. Photo - heraldicum.ru
Photo - heraldicum.ru
Turkestan (oblast) coat of arms on the official badge of the mirab - responsible for the distribution of water
Note that the pose of the unicorn is clearly defined in the description -"walking" .But on some official signs (village foreman, aul foreman) the coat of arms of Turkestan was not depicted in accordance with the description.The unicorn was shown rearing up
Nevertheless, it is still the coat of arms of Turkestan (albeit distorted), the same unicorn.
In 1867 the Turkestan government-general was established, consisting of two oblasts - Syr Darya and Semireche - responsible directly to the war minister, with Tashkent as its capital
Turkestan Government-General, 1887
In the second half of the 19th century.the coat of arms of Turkestan appeared.The figure shows "a badge on the caps of military and civilian officials holding police positions in the Turkestan Territory" (PSZ No. 4368, approved on April 21, 1887)
The coat of arms of Turkestan appeared in Russian heraldry in 1882 in order to reflect the line " Sovereign Turkestan" that appeared after the annexation of Central Asia in the full imperial title. The coat of arms became part of the large coat of arms of the empire: "the coat of arms of Turkestan: in a golden shield, a black walking unicorn with scarlet eyes, tongue and horn ."
Now it is difficult to say why the unicorn was chosen as the symbol of Turkestan. Why, for example, did not the coats of arms of the provinces and regions of Turkestan (Akmola, Fergana, Syr-Darya, Trans-Caspian, Semirechensk, Samarkand) become the coat of arms of Turkestan, united in one shield? After all, it was in this way that the coats of arms of the "Baltic regions", "the Belarusian and Lithuanian principalities and regions", etc. were arranged for the large emblem of the empire. But the gold and black state colors, apparently, indicated a special attitude of the state to the new province.
Gradually, the coat of arms penetrated into everyday life: the unicorn appeared on the badges of police officials of the Turkestan Territory, began to appear on commemorative medals, official signs of judges, officials of local self-government (mirabs, aul foremen, etc.).
Turkestan(G.G.) coat of arms on a medal in honor of the Central Asian Exhibition of 1891 [8]
Despite the heraldic design, Turkestan remained a semi-amorphous formation: as an administrative unit of Turkestan did not exist (there was only the Turkestan General Government), and the administrative units of the Turkestan Territory - regions - by the end of the 19th century had their own officially approved emblems (and the Turkestan unicorn had no place in them). These regional coats of arms were depicted in newspapers, yearbooks, and tokens.
But after the collapse of the empire, the Turkestan unicorn did not disappear without a trace, but was revived in the form of the supporting horned fabulous horses-tulpals in the state emblem of the Republic of Kazakhstan.
[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_Horde
[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tamga
[4] Grünenberg, Konrad: Das Wappenbuch Conrads von Grünenberg, Ritters und Bürgers zu Constanz - BSB Cgm 145, [S.l.], um 1480 [BSB-Hss Cgm 145], Fol. 00034952.00172 /
[5] Köhne 1882 p. 410-411 en dezelfde: Notice sur les sceaux et les armoiries de la Russie (Berlin, 1864) Taf. I & II, pp. 11-14. Afbeelding voorzijde in Winkler, 1899, p. VIII.
[6] Köhne, B. von: Das Kaiserlich Russische Reichs-Wappen. Reiter und Doppeladler. In: Vierteljahrschrift für Heraldik etc. Herold. 1882, pp. 397-418. Taf. I-II. p. 400
[7] Ströhl, Hugo Gerard Russisch-Asiatische Wappenrolle. Die Wappen der Gouvernements, Gebiete und vieler Orte in Kaukasien, Turkestan, der Kirgisensteppe und Siberien. In: Jahrbuch des Heraldisch-Genealogischen Vereins "Adler". 1901, pp. 80-102, IX Tafeln. p.84
[8] https://www.numisbids.com/n.php?p=lot&sid=3955&lot=73452
short official history of the Golden Horde.
The Golden Horde was a division of the great Mongol empire founded by Batu Khan and became functionally separate with the decline of the Mongols.
Ösbek Khan (1313-1341) adopted Islam and reached the largest extent of the empire from Eastern Europe and Crimea into Siberia.
Look how the empire includes the later „Moscow Rus“ / „Moscovite Rus“ (pre-Tsarist Russia).
The main population was „Rus tribes“, which as a topic is a rabbit hole itself. I plan to include a post whether the original Rus were Slavic, Caucasian (real Caucasian, not northern European) or Asian.
Golden_Horde.png
After that there came the division into White and the Blue horde. After it was temporarily reunited by Tokhtamysh, the empire was de facto destroyed by Timur (Timurid Empire) around 1396, after which it split into the Khanate of Sibir (Siberia), Uzbek Khanate (Usbekistan), Nogai Horde (Caspian Sea), Khanate of Kazan (Volga Bulgaria), Crimean Khanate, Qasim Khanate, Kazakh Khanate (Kazakhstan) and the Great Horde (Around the heartland of the the original Golden Horde).
What does Golden Horde mean?
Golden Horde isn't the true name of this empire.
The true name is "Altin Ordu“ (or in modern Turkish „Altin Ordusu“), meaning Golden Army instead of Golden Horde. An alternative name is the Kipchak Khanate.
The name ordu actually means headquarters or nomadic tribe/group (see Genghis Khan), but at the time around the 14th century the Ottomans build the first standing army in Europe and the meaning in Turkish changing from hq/tribe/horde to army.
In this sense the designation orda/ordu (if the writer is of turkish/turkic descent) is given usually to a standing army (meaning a professional army, not a horde).
The word „altin“ (golden) refers, as far as I researched, to something big/marvellous/good in the contemporary Turkish language. For example you can say it as a compliment to a child (altin cocuk, golden child) or to a person (altin yürekli, golden heart/soul). Such compliments are usually used by older people.
Let's look at the more recent history of the Golden Horde.
The Reign of Akhmat (Ahmed) Khan (1465-1481)
The Original Version (till the end of the 20th century):
Ahmed Khan ousted his brother Mahmud bin Küchük out of power in 1465 and aligned himself with the Polish King Casimir IV against Ivan III of Moscovite Russia. In the year 1476 Iwan III stopped paying the yearly tribute to the Golden Horde. Ahmed Khan himself was fighting the Crimean Khanate at that time, so the reaction to Iwans actions came in 1480.
The army of Ahmed Khan positioned themselves at the river of Ugra, but did not attack for weeks in a standoff with the pre-Tsarist forces and finally retreated. Russian historians identified the sheer power of Iwans army as the cause of the retreat and this event marks the end of „Mongol rule“ in Russia (and subsequently became a important part of Russian nationalist history). See wikipedia
Now let's come to the indiscrepancies in this story:
1. Catherine the Great
The Tsarina, who annexed the Crimean Khanate, rewrote Russia's medieval history, mostly to situate her own reign into a vastly glorified version of Russian history. This was, I think, already mentioned somewhere in the old forum.
In the PhD thesis of Erin McBurney „Art and Power in the Reign of Catherine the Great: The State Portraits“ states:
„Instead, she found herself at war on a number of fronts, both foreign and domestic—with Sweden, with the Ottomans, with Poland, with the Freemasons, and with authors such as Nikolai Novikov and Alexander Radishchev. In response, Catherine turned to Russia’s distant past as a means of understanding what was happening in Russia’s (and Europe’s) present, using her plays, operas and rewriting of Russia’s medieval history to situate her reign within a pantheon of historically significant figures and events. Lampi’s subtle reworking of the imperial image between 1792 and 1795 reveals how the Empress struggled to find a means to embody the myth of the state even in an age of regicide and revolution. In the final years of her reign, Catherine rededicated herself to the creation of a visual and textual legacy that would assure her—and Russia’s—eternal glory. Over the course of thirty-four years, Catherine constructed a representational scenario that transcended gender, asserted legitimacy and displayed her achievements.“ Source: Art and Power
2. Manfred Hildermeier
German historian Manfred Hildermeier, describe the Ugra event as untruthful and „hochstilisiert“ - meaning „over the top“ or „inflated“. Hildermeier comes to the conclusion that the retreat of „Golden Horde“ forces (described rather as „Tatar“) is more connected to the inter-khanate rivalries with the formally subordinate Crimean Khanate, which Ahmed Khan fought with pre-1480.
Another historian (Nesin, Russian document is avaliable on Wikipedia) says it was at that time the largest army in the fifteenth century. That means it was bigger than the only standing professional army in Europe, the Ottoman army.
Source: History of Russia: from the Middle Ages to the October Revolution (could not find a english version)
3. Golden Army, Great Army
Depending on which book you read, sometimes Ahmed Khan is described as the „Han/Xan“ (in plain english Khan) of the Golden Horde and sometimes the Han of the Great Horde (after the supposed division of the original Golden Horde). In „Russia and the Golden Horde: The Mongol Impact on Medieval Russian History“ (by Charles Halperin) the separated state of the Great Horde gets described as less powerful than Muscovite Russia. Source: Russia and the Golden Horde (Charles Halperin)
4. Disapperance of the Golden Army/Tartaria
All of the information up to this point is coming from Russian sources (Tsarist Intelligentsia). The last record of the Golden Horde finds itself in the works of Russian publisher Nikolay Novikov „Ancient Russian Hydrography“ (1773), around 46 years after the death of Catherine the First. Source: Ancient Russian Hydrography
But is Tsarist literature the only surviving documents of the Golden Horde?
From Ottoman documents we have a betik (a written letter/document) from Ahmed Khan to the Fatih Sultan Mehmet, the conqueror of Constantinople, stating the Russian danger to the Golden Army and the willingness to submit to central Ottoman rule against Moscovite Rus. Moreover the Crimean Khanate had a great amount of diplomatic relations to Fatih Sultan Mehmet and finally accepted the Ottoman rule after Menli I Giray (the ruling han at that time) was imprisoned by the Ottomans.
Letter.png
The original betik from Ahmed Khan to Faith Sultan Mehmet
Short explanation of the text
Russian and Turki Transcription
If relations between the Golden Horde and the Ottoman sultanate exist and the Crimean Khanate was suppressed by the Ottomans around 1475, why took the army against Iwan lll around 5 years to finally arrive at Moscowite Rus? And why is the alleged interfighting of Ahmed Khan with the Crimean Khanate not included in Ottoman documents? If the Crimean Khanate was already under Constantinople rule at that time, why do Tsarist sources and by extension for example Hildemann say that rivalries with the Crimeans exist and point that out as the reason for failed attempt to fight Muscovite Russia?
Keep in mind that the surviving Ottoman sources are extremely detailed, the Ottomans even had the exact numbers of Yörüks (meaning nomadic Turks) for every province of the sultanate since the 16th century.
In addition to Ottoman sources we have other surviving non-Tsarist documents.
Famous berber traveller Ibn Battuta described the capital of the Golden army Sarai (meaning the palace in ancient Turkish, today written as „saray“) as „one of the most beautiful cities ... full of people, with the beautiful bazaars and wide streets“ and as having „13 congregational mosques“ (for Friday prayers). For example the Ottoman sultanate had less for Istanbul around the time of Fatih Sultan Mehmet. In addition to that, the majority of the inhabitants of the Golden Army was described as being a large number of „pagans“ (probably similiar to the remnants of Russian paganism today) as opposed to the muslim minority (which in Tsarist papers is described as Tatar). The written literature was written in „Tyurki-Language“. I assume that means „Turki“ (see Chagatai language). Source: Islam in Russia
Rebuild city of Sarai (for a film set):
1a3f76e5bd2bee50ef22ac93c776e268.jpg
Source: Rebuild (possible disinfo by the PTB)
All supposed pictures of Sarai online are a film set which was turned into an open air museum.
More pictures of the fake Sarai city: in Russian
More pictures of the fake digging site (from the same film set):
450px-Раскопки._Горн_по_обжигу_кирпича.JPG
Source: Title says "Forge for firing bricks"
The only artifact picture online is a old mosaic from a real excavation of the 1980s:
Ghengisid's_palace_tile_decor_detail.jpg
Source: wikimedia
If you forget the "rebuild city" and only look at the mosaics, you can see two main "themes". The mosaic piece at the bottom is similiar to other Tatar/Turk/Muslim mosaics in Central Asia (google Usbekistan mosaics)
The artifact at the top right displays flower/plant like motives, similiar motives can be found throughout Eastern Europe:
tumblr_nrc6q6NCLb1uz7z3yo1_400.jpg
That leads me to Ibn Battuta's description of a city more developed than Constantinople and populated by pagan Rus and Turks. The fact that the mosaics were found at the same digging site would mean that the palace/building incorporated both motives and was probably build by Turks and Rus together. The rebuild city and ruins try to build a image of a small rural village, instead of complex mosaics.
The fields where Sarai was supposed to be:
73_big.jpg
Source: wikimapia
The language
Contemporary source Ibn Battuta calls the language (at least of the Tatar/Muslim part) as Tyurki, which can be identified as the now dead Turki (the root of Usbek and Uygur Turkish). The Uyghurs of today historically were never called Uyghurs, the name itself is a invention of the 20th century, they were called Turki. The Uyghurs of the past were called Huihu in Chinese documents, but this was related to the rulers of the Uyghur khanate, not the Turkic people of Xingjang.
Chagatai/Turki was the Lingua Franca in Central Asia, spoken well through into the 20th century. This language didn't die naturally, but after the Communist revolution under Lenin Central Asia was divided into the states we know today (SSRs). Lenin's plan for Central Asia was to build ethnostates (SSRs) and he started the division of Western Turkestan (today Turkmenistan and Usbekistan) through population exchange based on dialect, dialects which he later used to formalize Turki into different languages written in Kyrillic. It would make sense for written documents to be written in Turki/Chagatai during the time of Ibn Battuta, because the formalized (now estranged) dialects did not exist back then.
Source: Chagatai
The old forum had discussions about the official language of Tartaria and some members posted different Turkic scripts with arabo-persian letters. The differentiation of historic Turkic dialects is complicated therefore it is hard to pinpoint which dialect/style Ibn Battuta meant.
The language designation into for example Karluk branch, Oghuz branch, did not exist back then, this is a product of linguist studies into the 20th to 21th century. The words Karluk and Oghuz existed in their respective khanates and designed the tribe and the dialect rather than a different language or people. For example a Karluk tribe was part of the Oghuz khanate.
Conclusion:
I assume the history of – what we call Tartaria – was hidden inside the story of the Golden Army (some could say degraded into the Golden Horde) and it was more powerful than the Ottoman empire (which itself in the 14th / 15th century is described to have the most powerful army).
The muslim Turks were written into Tsarist history books as Tatars, the pagans as Rus tribes under the leadership of the Khan.
The decision to delete Golden Ordu of the Tatars (Tartaria) out of our history started with the destruction of Sarai (by the Tsarists) and ended with the killing of the Turki language 1921 and the disappearance of tons of Ottoman documents in the 1930s.
Ibn Battuta is probably the only not Tsarist / TPB tainted source which describes the Golden Army or Tartaria and is probably one of the only known historical figures who witnessed the empire and Sarai in its prime.
The film set and the open air museum don't give the picture of a capital city, but look like a rural village.
In another future post in the future I will explore the origins of the Rus, especially the hypothesis that Kievian Rus were slavic and the pagans of the Golden Army were called Rus by Moscovite Rus, but were rather asian or caucasian in heritage (see Scythians). That would explain that more than half of current Russia's population is rather a mix between asian DNA (west/central) and caucasian DNA (Transcaucasia, similiar to Armenia/Georgia/Dagestan/Karachay) than slavic (eastern european), which would make Napoleon's comment (post-Tartaria) about every Russian being a Tartar true.
Not meaning to be a downer or disrespect your post.So please do not take it as such.
I myself would like to pierce through the period of what I would call the “mad max” ( time of barbarism ) time period that we seem to be presented to when looking into old books mentioning Tartaria.
Brutes,uncivilized, tyrannical is some of the synonyms I have encountered when trying to find old descriptive or describing texts of Tartaria and that culture.Not saying that it might be a wrong perception for that time,as It might be the effects after the disintegration of a supposedly golden age (enlightened in the sense of the Hindu concept of yugas) civilization that probably was projected through a sort of global dominating (global as in influencing the whole world...cultural..political..philosophical and so on..) empire.I would like to pierce into that time, but it seems hard or almost impossible and one is left with so called legends and stuff hidden in religious arcanum.
I personally think that Tartaria as culture previously had a relation to the old language of Ar, supposedly spoken by the Gods. Coincidentally or not.....Aur..Or..Hor..(Resembling and sound like AR) they all emphasis or mean noble/golden..in their languages. Its a bit harder to find definition of Tat. In Turkish one of the definitions for Tat is taste..which in esoteric spiritual wisdom arcanum stands for judgement.So one would get Tatar meaning noble judgement.. (people or individuals with noble...golden as in Yuga Of enlightenment..aka righteousness judgement)
Tat in Sanskrit ( which in some circles are considered to be a constructed religious or spiritual language by “ancient”
priests or If one would like... hierophants..) having the definition of “the cause of universe”...and or “supreme spirit”...which is claimed to be mans true divine nature as per Tat Tvam Asi...you are that.. ( ARche as in first principle by the esoteric “Hellenistic” wisdom teachings)
Funny enough in contrast to many of the old historic books (1600-1700) describing Tartaria as basically a shithole inhabited by cruel and brute people. Individuals such as Swedenborg, speaks of esoteric knowledge that under his time could only be found there.
I personally find it also interesting that the Tati and their language was/is?..to be found in that region..the cradle of our civilization...ancient ARmenia which it has to be emphasized was much much larger then today..(Hayanstan as the Armenians call their country) which is the place where a commander (It is my understanding that Noian was the term used for commander of some sort) and his ark supposedly ended up after the deluge..(Sumerians describing the highlands and valleys of Armenia as the place where the Gods dwelled...the noble...the righteous ones...)
Heck I don’t know..probably fumbling in the dark.. but where there is smoke there usually is a fire..lol..and I smell smoke in this what I have tried to describe.
Not meaning to be a downer or disrespect your post.So please do not take it as such.
I myself would like to pierce through the period of what I would call the “mad max” ( time of barbarism ) time period that we seem to be presented to when looking into old books mentioning Tartaria.
Brutes,uncivilized, tyrannical is some of the synonyms I have encountered when trying to find old descriptive or describing texts of Tartaria and that culture.Not saying that it might be a wrong perception for that time,as It might be the effects after the disintegration of a supposedly golden age (enlightened in the sense of the Hindu concept of yugas) civilization that probably was projected through a sort of global dominating (global as in influencing the whole world...cultural..political..philosophical and so on..) empire.I would like to pierce into that time, but it seems hard or almost impossible and one is left with so called legends and stuff hidden in religious arcanum.
I personally think that Tartaria as culture previously had a relation to the old language of Ar, supposedly spoken by the Gods. Coincidentally or not.....Aur..Or..Hor..(Resembling and sound like AR) they all emphasis or mean noble/golden..in their languages. Its a bit harder to find definition of Tat. In Turkish one of the definitions for Tat is taste..which in esoteric spiritual wisdom arcanum stands for judgement.So one would get Tatar meaning noble judgement.. (people or individuals with noble...golden as in Yuga Of enlightenment..aka righteousness judgement)
Tat in Sanskrit ( which in some circles are considered to be a constructed religious or spiritual language by “ancient”
priests or If one would like... hierophants..) having the definition of “the cause of universe”...and or “supreme spirit”...which is claimed to be mans true divine nature as per Tat Tvam Asi...you are that.. ( ARche as in first principle by the esoteric “Hellenistic” wisdom teachings)
Funny enough in contrast to many of the old historic books (1600-1700) describing Tartaria as basically a shithole inhabited by cruel and brute people. Individuals such as Swedenborg, speaks of esoteric knowledge that under his time could only be found there.
I personally find it also interesting that the Tati and their language was/is?..to be found in that region..the cradle of our civilization...ancient ARmenia which it has to be emphasized was much much larger then today..(Hayanstan as the Armenians call their country) which is the place where a commander (It is my understanding that Noian was the term used for commander of some sort) and his ark supposedly ended up after the deluge..(Sumerians describing the highlands and valleys of Armenia as the place where the Gods dwelled...the noble...the righteous ones...)
Heck I don’t know..probably fumbling in the dark.. but where there is smoke there usually is a fire..lol..and I smell smoke in this what I have tried to describe.
Thank you for your post and for presenting your findings. Always interesting to read.
Do you have any sources on the language AR?
Perhaps I could include that in the next post about the origins of the pagan Rus.(y)
Post automatically merged: Sep 26, 2020
shase66 said:
From the knowledge I gather in the past threads I suggest a key for your analysis: backwards.
Examples:
Ion (most common male name in Romania) <=> Noi (Noe / Noah)
Britannia <=> AnniaTrib (we all know what trib(e) is)
Ianus (Janus) <=> Sunai (very common tartar/turkish male name)
... and so on
The problem is that backwards analysis doesn't quit fit scientific criteria because - I try to keep it short - the etiology (source) of most names and designations is historically known. For example Sunai (a female name by the way) has arabic roots and means "the one who prays", in Tamil Sunai means "mountain pool" or "spring" (sometimes transcribed as cunai, source: Tamil Dict).
The roots of both names have complete different linguistic roots (if you want to learn about the most complicated roots look up the world apple in Arabic, there are research papers who are several pages long connecting hunderts of years of language development).
The emergency of words who sound similiar (even backwards) happens because of 2 factors:
(1) The transcription into the modern day latin alphabet is quite complicated (resulting in even uncorrect transcriptions of English or German texts written 200 years ago), more so in Turkic/Arabic/more "exotic" languages.
(2) Humans usually are similiar in understanding of nature and have a common (neuro-)physiological basis to work with. This can be seen especially in babies, almost all languages have two-part words like ba-ba / da-da / ma-ma, so children in language developement (1-4 years) can articulate themselves better. That would explain why human beings from different places and times came up with similiar words for wastly different things.
That's why I'd say that in most cases of similiar/backwards words the connection between those words is almost always false, that's called confirmation bias (the researcher sees what he/she/div. wants to see). Not to discredit your post, but I wanted to clarify this for new lurkers/members of SH.(y)
Hello, I was a long-time lurker in SH.org and decided to get myself an account on SH.net.
This is my first post, I hope it is of the same quality this forum is used to have.
The official story
First the short official history of the Golden Horde. The Golden Horde was a division of the great Mongol empire founded by Batu Khan and became functionally separate with the decline of the Mongols. Ösbek Khan (1313-1341) adopted Islam and reached the largest extent of the empire from Eastern Europe and Crimea into Siberia. Look how the empire includes the later „Moscow Rus“ / „Moscovite Rus“ (pre-Tsarist Russia). The main population was „Rus tribes“, which as a topic is a rabbit hole itself. I plan to include a post whether the original Rus were Slavic, Caucasian (real Caucasian, not northern European) or Asian.
View attachment 345
After that there came the division into White and the Blue horde. After it was temporarily reunited by Tokhtamysh, the empire was de facto destroyed by Timur (Timurid Empire) around 1396, after which it split into the Khanate of Sibir (Siberia), Uzbek Khanate (Usbekistan), Nogai Horde (Caspian Sea), Khanate of Kazan (Volga Bulgaria), Crimean Khanate, Qasim Khanate, Kazakh Khanate (Kazakhstan) and the Great Horde (Around the heartland of the the original Golden Horde).
What does Golden Horde mean?
Golden Horde isn't the true name of this empire. The true name is „Altin Ordu“ (or in modern Turkish „Altin Ordusu“), meaning Golden Army instead of Golden Horde. An alternative name is the Kipchak Khanate. The name ordu actually means headquarters or nomadic tribe/group (see Genghis Khan), but at the time around the 14th century the Ottomans build the first standing army in Europe and the meaning in Turkish changing from hq/tribe/horde to army. In this sense the designation orda/ordu (if the writer is of turkish/turkic descent) is given usually to a standing army (meaning a professional army, not a horde).
The word „altin“ (golden) refers, as far as I researched, to something big/marvellous/good in the contemporary Turkish language. For example you can say it as a compliment to a child (altin cocuk, golden child) or to a person (altin yürekli, golden heart/soul). Such compliments are usually used by older people.
Let's look at the more recent history of the Golden Horde.
The Reign of Akhmat (Ahmed) Khan (1465-1481)
The Original Version (till the end of the 20th century):
Ahmed Khan ousted his brother Mahmud bin Küchük out of power in 1465 and aligned himself with the Polish King Casimir IV against Ivan III of Moscovite Russia. In the year 1476 Iwan III stopped paying the yearly tribute to the Golden Horde. Ahmed Khan himself was fighting the Crimean Khanate at that time, so the reaction to Iwans actions came in 1480. The army of Ahmed Khan positioned themselves at the river of Ugra, but did not attack for weeks in a standoff with the pre-Tsarist forces and finally retreated. Russian historians identified the sheer power of Iwans army as the cause of the retreat and this event marks the end of „Mongol rule“ in Russia (and subsequently became a important part of Russian nationalist history). See wikipedia
Now let's come to the indiscrepancies in this story:
1. Catherine the Great
The Tsarina, who annexed the Crimean Khanate, rewrote Russia's medieval history, mostly to situate her own reign into a vastly glorified version of Russian history. This was, I think, already mentioned somewhere in the old forum.
In the PhD thesis of Erin McBurney „Art and Power in the Reign of Catherine the Great: The State Portraits“ states:
„Instead, she found herself at war on a number of fronts, both foreign and domestic—with Sweden, with the Ottomans, with Poland, with the Freemasons, and with authors such as Nikolai Novikov and Alexander Radishchev. In response, Catherine turned to Russia’s distant past as a means of understanding what was happening in Russia’s (and Europe’s) present, using her plays, operas and rewriting of Russia’s medieval history to situate her reign within a pantheon of historically significant figures and events. Lampi’s subtle reworking of the imperial image between 1792 and 1795 reveals how the Empress struggled to find a means to embody the myth of the state even in an age of regicide and revolution. In the final years of her reign, Catherine rededicated herself to the creation of a visual and textual legacy that would assure her—and Russia’s—eternal glory.
Over the course of thirty-four years, Catherine constructed a representational scenario that transcended gender, asserted legitimacy and displayed her achievements.“ Source: Art and Power
2. Manfred Hildermeier
German historian Manfred Hildermeier, describe the Ugra event as untruthful and „hochstilisiert“ - meaning „over the top“ or „inflated“. Hildermeier comes to the conclusion that the retreat of „Golden Horde“ forces (described rather as „Tatar“) is more connected to the inter-khanate rivalries with the formally subordinate Crimean Khanate, which Ahmed Khan fought with pre-1480. Another historian (Nesin, Russian document is avaliable on Wikipedia) says it was at that time the largest army in the fifteenth century. That means it was bigger than the only standing professional army in Europe, the Ottoman army.
Source: History of Russia: from the Middle Ages to the October Revolution (could not find a english version)
3. Golden Army, Great Army
Depending on which book you read, sometimes Ahmed Khan is described as the „Han/Xan“ (in plain english Khan) of the Golden Horde and sometimes the Han of the Great Horde (after the supposed division of the original Golden Horde). In Russia and the Golden Horde:
The Mongol Impact on Medieval Russian History“ (by Charles Halperin) the separated state of the Great Horde gets described as less powerful than Muscovite Russia. Source: Russia and the Golden Horde (Charles Halperin)
4. Disapperance of the Golden Army/Tartaria
All of the information up to this point is coming from Russian sources (Tsarist Intelligentsia). The last record of the Golden Horde finds itself in the works of Russian publisher Nikolay Novikov „Ancient Russian Hydrography“ (1773), around 46 years after the death of Catherine the First. Source: Ancient Russian Hydrography
But is Tsarist literature the only surviving documents of the Golden Horde?
From Ottoman documents we have a betik (a written letter/document) from Ahmed Khan to the Fatih Sultan Mehmet, the conqueror of Constantinople, stating the Russian danger to the Golden Army and the willingness to submit to central Ottoman rule against Moscovite Rus. Moreover the Crimean Khanate had a great amount of diplomatic relations to Fatih Sultan Mehmet and finally accepted the Ottoman rule after Menli I Giray (the ruling han at that time) was imprisoned by the Ottomans.
The original betik from Ahmed Khan to Faith Sultan Mehmet
If relations between the Golden Horde and the Ottoman sultanate exist and the Crimean Khanate was suppressed by the Ottomans around 1475, why took the army against Iwan lll around 5 years to finally arrive at Moscowite Rus? And why is the alleged interfighting of Ahmed Khan with the Crimean Khanate not included in Ottoman documents? If the Crimean Khanate was already under Constantinople rule at that time, why do Tsarist sources and by extension for example Hildemann say that rivalries with the Crimeans exist and point that out as the reason for failed attempt to fight Muscovite Russia?
Keep in mind that the surviving Ottoman sources are extremely detailed, the Ottomans even had the exact numbers of Yörüks (meaning nomadic Turks) for every province of the sultanate since the 16th century.
In addition to Ottoman sources we have other surviving non-Tsarist documents.
Famous berber traveller Ibn Battuta described the capital of the Golden army Sarai (meaning the palace in ancient Turkish, today written as „saray“) as „one of the most beautiful cities ... full of people, with the beautiful bazaars and wide streets“ and as having „13 congregational mosques“ (for Friday prayers).
For example the Ottoman sultanate had less for Istanbul around the time of Fatih Sultan Mehmet. In addition to that, the majority of the inhabitants of the Golden Army was described as being a large number of „pagans“ (probably similiar to the remnants of Russian paganism today) as opposed to the muslim minority (which in Tsarist papers is described as Tatar). The written literature was written in „Tyurki-Language“. I assume that means „Turki“ (see Chagatai language). Source: Islam in Russia
Rebuild city of Sarai (for a film set):
All supposed pictures of Sarai online are a film set which was turned into an open air museum.
The only artifact picture online is a old mosaic from a real excavation of the 1980s:
If you forget the "rebuild city" and only look at the mosaics, you can see two main "themes". The mosaic piece at the bottom is similiar to other Tatar/Turk/Muslim mosaics in Central Asia (google Usbekistan mosaics).
The artifact at the top right displays flower/plant like motives, similiar motives can be found throughout Eastern Europe:
View attachment 348
Picture
That leads me to Ibn Battuta's description of a city more developed than Constantinople and populated by pagan Rus and Turks. The fact that the mosaics were found at the same digging site would mean that the palace/building incorporated both motives and was probably build by Turks and Rus together. The rebuild city and ruins try to build a image of a small rural village, instead of complex mosaics.
The fields where Sarai was supposed to be:
View attachment 349
Source: wikimapia
The language
Contemporary source Ibn Battuta calls the language (at least of the Tatar/Muslim part) as Tyurki, which can be identified as the now dead Turki (the root of Usbek and Uygur Turkish). The Uyghurs of today historically were never called Uyghurs, the name itself is a invention of the 20th century, they were called Turki. The Uyghurs of the past were called Huihu in Chinese documents, but this was related to the rulers of the Uyghur khanate, not the Turkic people of Xingjang.
Chagatai/Turki was the Lingua Franca in Central Asia, spoken well through into the 20th century. This language didn't die naturally, but after the Communist revolution under Lenin Central Asia was divided into the states we know today (SSRs). Lenin's plan for Central Asia was to build ethnostates (SSRs) and he started the division of Western Turkestan (today Turkmenistan and Usbekistan) through population exchange based on dialect, dialects which he later used to formalize Turki into different languages written in Kyrillic. It would make sense for written documents to be written in Turki/Chagatai during the time of Ibn Battuta, because the formalized (now estranged) dialects did not exist back then.
Source: Chagatai
The old forum had discussions about the official language of Tartaria and some members posted different Turkic scripts with arabo-persian letters.
The differentiation of historic Turkic dialects is complicated therefore it is hard to pinpoint which dialect/style Ibn Battuta meant.
The language designation into for example Karluk branch, Oghuz branch, did not exist back then, this is a product of linguist studies into the 20th to 21th century. The words Karluk and Oghuz existed in their respective khanates and designed the tribe and the dialect rather than a different language or people. For example a Karluk tribe was part of the Oghuz khanate.
Conclusion:
I assume the history of – what we call Tartaria – was hidden inside the story of the Golden Army (some could say degraded into the Golden Horde) and it was more powerful than the Ottoman empire (which itself in the 14th / 15th century is described to have the most powerful army). The muslim Turks were written into Tsarist history books as Tatars, the pagans as Rus tribes under the leadership of the Khan.
The decision to delete Golden Ordu of the Tatars (Tartaria) out of our history started with the destruction of Sarai (by the Tsarists) and ended with the killin
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