Meñli I Giray

(Redirected from Menli I Giray)

Meñli I Giray (also spelled Mengli I Giray; Crimean Tatar: I Meñli Geray, ۱منكلى كراى‎; 1445–1515) was the khan of the Crimean Khanate (1466, 1469–1475, 1478–1515) and the sixth son of Hacı I Giray.[1]

Meñli I Giray
Turkish miniature of Meñli I Giray
Khan of the Tatar Crimean Khanate
(1st reign)
Reign1467
PredecessorNur Devlet
SuccessorNur Devlet
Khan of the Tatar Crimean Khanate
(2nd reign)
Reign1469–1475
PredecessorNur Devlet
SuccessorHayder Giray
Khan of the Tatar Crimean Khanate
(3rd reign)
Reign1478–1515
PredecessorNur Devlet
SuccessorMehmed I Giray
Born1445
Died17 April 1515(1515-04-17) (aged 69–70)
Burial
SpouseNur Sultan
Zayan Sultan
Fülane Sultan
Issue
Among others
DynastyGiray dynasty
ReligionIslam

Biography

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Crimea at the time of Mengli Girai

Struggle for power (1466–1478)

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It took Mengli twelve years to establish himself as khan. When Haji Girai died power went to his eldest son Nur Devlet. Mengli revolted. He was supported by the Crimean nobility while Nur Devlet was supported by the Great Horde. In 1467 Mengli occupied the capital of Kyrk-Er (Chufut-Kale) but was soon driven out by Nur Devlet and fled to the Genoese at Kaffa. In June 1468 a delegation of nobles elected him khan at Kaffa. He, the nobles and a Genoese detachment marched on the capital. After six months Nur Devlet was expelled and fled to the North Caucasus, but was captured and imprisoned in the Genoese fortress at Sudak.

Second reign 1469–1475

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He made an anti-Turkish alliance with Principality of Theodoro. In the summer of 1469 a Turkish fleet burned some villages near Kaffa. From late 1473 Eminek made himself head of the Shirin clan which held the eastern peninsula of Crimea. He became the second most powerful man in the country and was often hostile to Mengli.

In March 1475 the nobles replaced Mengli with his elder brother Hayder of Crimea. Mengli fled to Kaffa. In May 1475 a large Turkish fleet arrived at Kaffa seeking to subordinate the Genoese. They took Kaffa and other Genoese forts and the Principality of Theodoro. Mengli, who had supported the Genoese, was captured and taken to Constantinople. Nur Devlet was released from prison and restored as a Turkish vassal. Nur Devlet's third reign (1475–78) was unsuccessful. In the winter of 1477–78 Crimea was briefly conquered by Janibeg, a nephew of Akhmed Khan of the Great Horde. Eminek wrote to the sultan asking that Mengli be restored. In the spring of 1478 Mengli was released and arrived at Crimea with a Turkish fleet and Turkish soldiers. He was joined by Eminek's troops, Nur Devlet was driven out and Mengli became khan as a Turkish vassal.

Third reign (1478–1515)

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He made a great contribution to the development of Crimean Tatar statehood. He founded the fortress of Özü.[2]

In 1480, Meñli entered into a treaty of alliance with Ivan III, the grand prince of Moscow. The alliance was directed against Poland-Lithuania, the Great Horde and the Khanate of Astrakhan. This was an important factor in the Great stand on the Ugra River which led to Russian independence from the Great Horde.

In September 1482, Meñli managed to ravage Kiev, in which Ivan Chodkiewicz and his family were taken hostage.[3] From 1489 to 1500, Crimean Tatars repeatedly devastated Podolia and Volyn.

In 1502, Meñli defeated the last khan of the Golden Horde and took control over its capital, Saray. He proclaimed himself Khagan (Emperor), claiming legitimacy as the successor of the Golden Horde's authority over the Tatar khaganates in the Caspian-Volga region.

Meñli was buried in the Dürbe (or türbe) of Salaçıq in Bakhchysarai. In that city, he commissioned Zıncırlı Medrese (medrese with chains) in Salaçıq (1500), Dürbe in Salaçıq (1501), and "Demir Qapı" (Iron Gate) portal in the Bakhchisaray Palace by Aloisio the New (1503).

Meñli often depended on troops from the Crimea's numerous Italian trading cities, and Genoese mercenaries formed a significant part of his army.

For his raids on Lithuania see Crimean-Nogai Raids for 1480–1511.

Family

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Meñli was a father of Mehmed I Giray and Sahib I Giray.[4] One of his wives was Nur Sultan, who are one of only three women known to have played a political role in the Crimean Khanate.[5]

Consorts

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Meñli's known consorts were:

  • Nur Sultan, daughter of Prince Timur ibn Mansur, bey of the Manghits;[6]
  • Zayan Sultan, probably a daughter of Giray Seyid, a Sayyid;[6]
  • Fülane Sultan, a daughter of Yadigar, bey of Sedjiuts;[6]

Sons

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Meñli's sons were:

  • Fetih Giray, married to Djalal Sultana, daughter of Musake ibn Hadjike, bey of Manghits;[6]
  • Mehmed I Giray, married to a daughter of Hasan ibn Timur of Manghits;[6]
  • Saadet I Giray, probably married to a daughter of Shaman of Manghits in 1526;[6]
  • Sahib I Giray, married to Fatima Sultan and Khanbike Sultan, sister of the Circassian Prince Mashuk Kanukov.
  • Mubarek Giray also spelled Mubarak. His son was Devlet I Giray (1551–1577).
  • Ahmed Giray, married to a daughter of Barash, brother of Devletek, head of Shirin clan;[6]

Daughters

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Meñli's daughters were:

  • A daughter, married to Tinish bin Yankuvat of Manghits;[6]
  • Makhdum Shah, married to head of Shirin clan, Devletek bin Eminek;[6]
  • A daughter, married to Suleyman, bey of Kungrats in 1492 or 1493;[6]
  • Ayşe Hatun, married firstly Şehzade Mehmed, son of Sultan Bayezid II, and after his half-brother Sultan Selim I.[6]

Meñli I Giray was once thought to be the maternal grandfather of Suleiman the Magnificent through his putative daughter Hafsa Sultan (mistakenly confused with Ayşe Hatun), but this has been disproved.[7][8]

References

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  1. ^ The Crimea: Its Ancient and Modern History: the Khans, the Sultans, and the czars by Thomas Milner.
  2. ^ René Grousset, L’Empire des steppes, Attila, Gengis-Khan, Tamerlan, Payot, Paris
  3. ^ V. P. Gulevich (2013). "«Київська трагедія» 1482 р.: міфи й факти" ["Kyiv Tragedy" 1482: myths and facts] (PDF) (in Ukrainian). Ukrainian Historical Journal.
  4. ^ Anthony Stokvis, Manuel d'histoire, de généalogie et de chronologie de tous les États du globe, depuis les temps les plus reculés jusqu'à nos jours
  5. ^ Królikowska-Jedlińska, Natalia (????-????). Law and Division of Power in the Crimean Khanate (1532–1774) : With Special Reference to the Reign of Murad Giray (1678–1683)
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Ilya V. Zaytsev, The Structure of the Giray Dynasty (15th-16th centuries): Matrimonial and Kinship Relations of the Crimean Khans in Elena Vladimirovna Boĭkova, R. B. Rybakov (ed.), Kinship in the Altaic World: Proceedings of the 48th Permanent International Altaistic Conference, Moscow 10–15 July 2005, p.341-2
  7. ^ Alan Fisher (1993). "The Life and Family of Suleyman I". In İnalcık, Halil; Kafadar, Cemal (eds.). Süleymân The Second [i.e. the First] and his time. Isis Press. That she was a Tatar, a daughter of the Crimean Khan Mengli Giray, was a story apparently begun by Jovius, repeated by other western sources, and taken up by Merriman in his biography of Suleyman
  8. ^ Encyclopedia of Islam vol. IX (1997), s.v. Suleyman p.833
Preceded by Khan of Crimea
1467
Succeeded by
Preceded by Khan of Crimea
1469–1475
Succeeded by
Preceded by Khan of Crimea
1478–1515
Succeeded by