Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-q99xh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-27T10:01:26.708Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The First Mongol Invasion of Europe: Goals and Results

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 June 2021

ALEXANDER V. MAIOROV*
Affiliation:
Saint Petersburg State Universitya.v.maiorov@gmail.com

Abstract

This article establishes that the tümens which took part in Jebe and Sübedei's Raid to Europe were not merely conducting a reconnaissance mission, as it is usually described. The campaign was part of Chinggis Khan's conquering strategy aimed at the complete subjugation of the Kipchak and the conquest of the steppe territories not only in Asia but also in Europe. The task of implementing this strategic plan was given to Prince Jochi as the ruler of the western ulus of the Mongol Empire. Jochi was to bring his main military force to Europe while Sübedei, together with Jebe, advanced with their corps to defeat the Kipchak. The Grand Prince of Kiev and other princes of Southern Rus’, being allies and relatives of the Kipchak rulers, gave them military support. Therefore, the Mongols retaliated against the Rus’. After defeating the allied Rus’ and Kipchak forces at the Kalka River, the Mongols succeeded in crossing the Dnieper and went as far as Kiev. However, the refusal of Jochi to bring his main forces to assist the Mongol vanguard forces nullified the achievements and victories of Jebe and Sübedei. Jochi's reluctance to participate in the Western Campaign of 1221–23 was related to his conflicts with his younger brothers and Chinggis Khan himself, which, in its turn, brought about Jochi's loss of his former status in the empire, a severe illness and untimely death. As a result, Chinggis Khan had to reconsider his general conquest strategy; the conquest of Kipchak and Rus’ was postponed for one and a half decades.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Royal Asiatic Society

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

I would like to express my sincere thanks to Stephen Pow (Central European University) for his help in preparing this article for publication. This study was carried out with the financial support of the Russian Science Foundation (Российский Научный Фонд), project no. 21-18-00166.

References

2 In this article, Rus’ is regarded as a constituent part of Europe, even though these concepts are often, and sometimes unjustifiably, separated and even contrasted in the historiography of the Mongol conquests.

3 Jackson, P., ‘World-conquest and local accommodation: Threat and blandishment in Mongol diplomacy’, in History and Historiography of post Mongol Central Asia and the Middle East: Studies in Honor of John E. Woods, (eds.) Pfeiffer, J. and Quinn, S. Alysia (Wiesbaden, 2006), pp. 810Google Scholar.

4 Gibbon, E., The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, vol. VII (ed.) Bury, J. B. (London, 1900), p. 10Google Scholar.

5 For example, Davis, P. K., Masters of the battlefield: great commanders from the classical age to the Napoleonic era (New York, 2013), p. 192 fGoogle Scholar.

6 Lane, G. E., ‘The Mongols in Iran’, in The Oxford Handbook of Iranian History, (ed.) Daryaee, T. (Oxford and New York, 2012), p. 248Google Scholar.

7 For characteristics of the source, see Morgan, D. O., “Persian historians and the Mongols”, in Medieval Historical Writing in the Christian and Islamic Worlds, (ed.) Morgan, D. O. (London, 1982), pp. 113118Google Scholar; Jackson, P., Mongols & the Islamic World: from Conquest to Conversion (New Haven and London, 2017), pp. 2224CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

8 Mīrzā Muhammad Qazwīnī (ed.), Juwaynī, Ta'rīkh-i jahān-gushā, vols. I–III (Leiden and London, 1912–37) (Gibb Memorial Series, vol. 16), pp. 209–210, translated by J. A. Boyle, The History of the World-Conqueror by Juvaini, vols. I–II (Manchester, 1958), p. 149.

9 For characteristics of the source, see D. S. Richards, ‘Ibn al-Athīr and the Later Parts of the Kāmil: A Study of Aims and Methods’, in Medieval Historical Writing, (ed.) Morgan, pp. 76–108; Jackson, Mongols & the Islamic World, pp. 17–18.

10 C. J. Tornberg (ed.), Ibn al-Athīr, al-Kāmil fī’l-ta'rīkh (Leiden, 1861), vol. XII, p. 375, translated by D. S. Richards, The Chronicle of Ibn al-Athīr for the Crusading Period from al-Kāmil fī’l-ta'rīkh, vol. III: The Years 589–629/1193–1231: The Ayyūbids after Saladin and the Mongol Menace (Aldershot and Burlington, 2008) (Crusade Texts in Translation, vol. 17), p. 215.

11 For characteristics of the source, see Jackson, Mongols & the Islamic World, pp. 18–19.

12 Z. M. Buniiatov's Russian translation with edits, al-Nasawī, Sīrat al-Sultān Jalāl al-Dīn [A Biography of Sultan Jalāl al-Dīn] (Moscow, 1996) (Pamuatniki Pis'mennosti Vostoka, vol. 107), pp. 53–54 (text), 84 (translstion); French translated by Houdas, O., Histoire du Sultan Djelal ed-Din Mankobirti prince du Kharezm (Paris, 1895), pp. 7576Google Scholar.

13 Kipchak/Qipchaq is the term used in Muslim and Eastern sources, whereas Cuman was the term used in Western sources and Polovtsy in Rus’ sources.

14 A. Önnerfors (ed.), Hystoria Tartarorum C. de Bridia monachi (Berlin, 1967) (Kleine Texte für Vorlesungen und Übungen, vol. 186), p. 15; translated by R. A. Skelton, T. E. Marston and G. D. Painter, The Vinland Map and the Tartar Relation (New Haven and London, 1965), p. 72.

15 C. A. Garufi (ed.), ‘Ryccardi de Sancto Germano notarii Chronica’, in Rerum Italicarum Scriptores, vol. VII (Bologna, 1938), pp. 110–111.

16 L. Arbusow and A. Bauer (eds.), ‘Heinrici Chronicon Livoniae = Heinrichs Livländische Chronik’, in Monumenta Germaniae Historica. Scriptores Rerum Germanicarum, vol. XXXI (Hannover, 1955), pp. 186–187.

17 E. F. Karsky (ed.), ‘Lavrent'evskaia Letopis’ [Laurentian Chronicle], in Polnoe Sobranie Russkikh Letopisei, vol. I (Moscow, 1997), col. 447.

18 Sverdrup, C. F., ‘Sübe'etei Ba'atur, Anonymous Strategist’, Journal of Asian History 47 (2013), p. 39Google Scholar.

19 For characteristics of the source, see F. W. Mote, ‘A note on traditional sources for Yuan history’, in The Cambridge History of China, vol. VI: Alien regimes and border states, 907–1368, (eds.) H. Franke and D. Twitchett (Cambridge, 1994), pp. 689–693.

20 Bretschneider, E., Medieval Researches from Eastern Asiatic Sources, vol. I (London, 1888), p. 297Google Scholar; Pow, S. and Liao, J., ‘Subutai: Sorting Fact from Fiction Surrounding the Mongol Empire's Greatest General (With Translations of Subutai's Two Biographies in the Yuan Shi)’, Journal of Chinese Military History 7 (2018), p. 56CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

21 For characteristics of the source, see Morgan, ‘Persian historians and the Mongols’, pp. 118–121; Jackson, Mongols & the Islamic World, pp. 26–28.

22 M. Rawshan and M. Mūsawī (eds.), Rasīd al-Dīn Faḍl-Allāh, Jāmiʻ at-tawārīkh I: Ta'rīkh-i mubārak-i Ghāzānī [A History of the Mongols] (Tihrān, 1994 = 1373 h.š.), p. 517, translated by W. M. Thackston, Jami‘u't-tawarikh: Compendium of Chronicles by Rashiduddin Fazlullah, vols. I–III (Cambridge, MA, 1998–9), p. 249.

23 Rawshan and Mūsawī (eds.), Jāmiʻ at-tawārīkh, p. 531, translated by Thackston, Jami'u’t-tawarikh, p. 258.

24 Spuler, B., Die Goldene Horde: die Mongolen in Russland, 1223–1502 (Wiesbaden, 1965), p. 12Google Scholar.

25 I. P. Petrushevskii, ‘Pokhod mongol'skikh voisk v Sredniuiu Aziiu v 1219–1224 gg. і ego posledstviia’ [The Campaign of the Mongol Troops in Central Asia in 1219–1224 and its Consequences], in Tataro-Mongoly v Azii і Evrope [Tatar-Mongols in Asia and Europe], (ed.) S. L. Tikhvinskii (2nd edition, Moscow, 1977), p. 117.

26 R. Grousset, Le Conquérant du monde: vie de Gengis-Khan (Paris, 1944), pp. 340 f.; G. Vernadsky, The Mongols and Russia (New Haven and London, 1953), p. 40.

27 Berezin, I. N., ‘Pervoe nashestvie mongolov na Rossiiu’ [The first Mongol invasion of Russia], Zhurnal Ministerstva Narodnogo Prosveshcheniia 79 (1853), p. 245Google Scholar.

28 Buniiatov (edition with Russian translation), al-Nasawī, Sīrat al-Sultān Jalāl al-Dīn, pp. 208 (text), 213, French translation by Houdas, Histoire du Sultan Djelal ed-Din, p. 286.

29 J. A. Boyle, ‘Dynastic and Political History of the Īl-Khāns’, in The Cambridge History of Iran, vol. 5: The Saljuq and Mongol Periods, (ed.) John Andrew Boyle (Cambridge, 1968), p. 311; L. Hambis, Gengis-khan (Paris, 1973) (Que sais-je? vol. 1524), pp. 122–123; Chambers, J., The Devil's Horsemen. The Mongol Invasion of Europe (London and Edinburg, 1979), p. 19f.Google Scholar; Allsęn, T. T., ‘Mongols and North Caucasia’, Archivum Eurasiae Medii Aevi 7 (1987–91), pp. 1117Google Scholar; P. D. Buell, ‘Sübötei Ba'atur (1176–1248)’, in In the Service of the Khan: Eminent Personalities of the Early Mongol-Yüan Period, (ed.) I. de Rachewiltz (Wiesbaden, 1993) (Asiatische Forschungen, vol. 121), pp. 17–18; R. A. Gabriel, Subotai the Valiant: Genghis Khan's Greatest General (Norman, 2004), p. 89 f.; T. May, The Mongol Art of War: Chinggis Khan and the Mongol Military System (Yardley, PA, 2007), p. 128; C. J. Halperin, The Tatar Yoke: the image of the Mongols in medieval Russia (Bloomington, 2009), p. 23f.; D. G. Khrustaliev, Rus’ i mongol'skoe nashestvie (20–50 gg. XIII v.) [Rus’ and the Mongol invasion (20–50s of the 13th century)] (St Petersburg, 2015), p. 58; I. Izmaylov, ‘The Eastern European Campaigns of 1223–1240’, in The History of the Tatars since Ancient Times III: The Ulus of Jochi (Golden Horde). 13th – mid-15th Centuries, (eds.) M. Usmanov and R. Khakimov (Kazan, 2017), p. 144; C. Peers, Genghis Khan and the Mongol War Machine (Barnsley, 2015), p. 219f.

30 A. G. Yurchenko, ‘Russkie i polovtsy pered litsom mongol'skogo vyzova (1223 g.)’ [Russians and Polovtsy in the face of the Mongol challenge (1223)], Tiurkologicheskii Sbornik. 2002 (Moscow, 2003), pp. 385–400.

31 Pow, S., ‘The Last Campaign and Death of Jebe Noyan’, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 27, 1 (2017), pp. 3738Google Scholar; Pow and Liao, ‘Subutai: Sorting Fact from Fiction’, p. 46; see also A. B. Golovko, ‘Reid tumenov Dzhebe i Subedeia v Vostochnuiu Evropu (1222–1223 gg.) v protsesse formirovaniia Mongol'skoi imperii i Pax Mongolica’ [Invasion of Jebe and Subutai to Eastern Europe (1222–1223) during the Formation of the Mongol Empire and Pax Mongolica], Vestnik Udmurtskogo Universiteta. Istoriia i filologiia 26 (2016), pp. 46–58.

32 S.A. Kozin (Russian translation with edits), Sokrovennoe Skazanie [The Secret History] (Moscow and Leningrad, 1941), pp. 309, 396, 506 (text), 188–189 (translation), translated with commentary by I. de Rachewiltz, The Secret History of the Mongols I–II (Leiden and Boston, 2004) (Brill's Inner Asian Library, vol. 7), pp. 194, 959–960.

33 Kozin (Russian translation with edits), Sokrovennoe Skazanie, pp. 312, 511 (text), 191–192 (translation), translation and commentary by Rachewiltz, The Secret History of the Mongols, pp. 201, 989–991.

34 Pelliot, P., Notes sur l'histoire de la Horde d'Or (Paris, 1949), p. 128, n. 5Google Scholar; I. Zimonyi, ‘The First Mongol Raids against the Volga-Bulgars’, in Altaistic Studies. Papers at the 25th Meeting of the Permanent International Altaistic Conference at Uppsala June 7–11 1982, (eds.) G. Jarring and S. Rosén, (Stockholm, 1985), pp. 200–201; R. P. Khrapachevskii, ‘K voprosu o tak nazyvaemom ‘spiske pokoriennykh narodov’ Vostochnoi Evropy v ‘Sokrovennom Skazanii mongolov’ (1240 g.)’. On the question of so-called “list of conquered peoples” of East Europe in ‘The Secret History of the Mongols’ (1240), Studia Historica Europae Orientalis 6 (2013), pp. 92–94, 101.

35 Rachewiltz, The Secret History of the Mongols, pp. xcvi-xcvii (n. 187), 989–991.

36 Atwood, C. P., ‘The Date of the Secret History of the Mongols Reconsidered’, Journal of Song-Yuan Studies 37 (2007), pp. 148Google Scholar; cf. Rachewiltz “The dating of the Secret History of the Mongols – A reinterpretation”, Ural-Altaische Jahrbücher 22 (2008), pp. 150–184.

37 Rawshan and Mūsawī (eds.), Jāmiʻ at-tawārīkh, pp. 1033–1034, (transl.) Thackston, Jami'u’t-tawarikh, p. 359.

38 Boyle, J. A., The Successors of Genghis Khan (New York and London, 1971), p. 118Google Scholar.

39 Rawshan and Mūsawī (eds.), Jāmiʻ at-tawārīkh, pp. 1011–1012, (transl.) Thackston, Jami'u’t-tawarikh, p. 352; cf. Boyle, The Successors of Genghis Khan, pp. 107–108.

40 Jackson, P., ‘The Dissolution of the Mongol Empire’, Central Asiatic Journal 22 (1978), pp. 186244Google Scholar.

41 C. P. Atwood, ‘Jochi and Early Western Campaigns’, in How Mongolia Matters: War, Law, and Society, (ed.) Morris Rossabi (Leiden and Boston, 2017) (Brill's Inner Asian Library, vol. 36), pp. 35–56.

42 For characteristics of the source, see Morgan, ‘Persian historians and the Mongols’, pp. 111–113; Jackson, Mongols & the Islamic World, p. 19.

43 ‘Abd al-Hayy Habībī (ed.), Jūzjānī, Tabaqāt-i Nāstrī, vol. II, 2nd edn (Kābul, 1964 ce 1343 h.š.), p. 212, translated by Henry George Raverty, [Jūzjānī], Tabakāt-i Nāstrī: A General History of the Muhammadan Dynasties of Asia (Calcutta, 1881), p. 1283; see T. T. Allsen, ‘Prelude to the Western Campaigns: Mongol military operations in the Volga-Ural region, 1217–1237’, Archivum Eurasiae Medii Aevi 3 (1983), p. 12.

44 Habībī (ed.), Jūzjānī, Tabaqāt-i Nāstrī, vol. II, p. 150, (transl.) Raverty, [Jūzjānī], Tabakāt-i Nāstrī, p. 1101; see Barthold, V. V., Turkestan down to the Mongol Invasion (London, 1968), p. 457Google Scholar; I. Mirgaleyev, ‘Jochi – the first Ruler of the Ulus’, in The Golden Horde in World History, (eds.) I. Mirgaleyev and R. Hautala (Kazan, 2017), p. 73.

45 Ratchnevsky, P., Genghis Khan. His Life and Legacy (Oxford and Cambridge, 1993), p. 137Google Scholar; M. Biran, ‘Joči’, in Encyclopaedia Iranica, vol. XV, (ed.) Ehsan Yarshater (New York, 2009), pp. 1–2 (http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/joci).

46 E. Menestò et al. (eds.), Giovanni di Plan di Carpine, Storia dei Mongoli (Spoleto, 1989), p. 258, (transl.) Erik Hildinger, The Story of the Mongols whom we call the Tartars by Friar Giovanni DiPlano Carpini (Boston, 1996), p. 60.

47 M. Plezia, ‘L'apport de la Pologne à l'exploration de l'Asie centrale au milieu du XIIIe siècle’, Acta Poloniae Historica 22 (1970), pp. 20–21.

48 Önnerfors (ed.), Hystoria Tartarorum C. de Bridia monachi, p. 15, (transl.) Skelton, Marston and Painter, The Vinland Map and the Tartar Relation, p. 72.

49 Halperin, C. J., ‘The Missing Golden Horde Chronicles and Historiography in the Mongol Empire’, Mongolian Studies 23 (2000), pp. 115Google Scholar.

50 The original version of the Tale reached us as part of the senior summary of the Novgorod First Chronicle, where it was probably incorporated as early as in the mid-1220s, see A. A. Gippius, ‘K istorii slozheniia teksta Novgorodskoi pervoi letopisi’ [To the formation history of the text of the Novgorod First Chronicle], Novgorodskii istoricheskii sbornik 16 (St Petersburg, 1997), pp. 14, 34–35.

51 A. N. Nasonov (ed.), ‘Novgorodskaia Pervaia letopis’ [Novgorodian First Chronicle], in Polnoe Sobranie Russkikh Letopisei, vol. III (Moscow, 2000), p. 63, translated by Michell, R. and Forbes, N., The Chronicle of Novgorod, 1016–1471 (London, 1914)Google Scholar (Camden Society, 3rd series, vol. 25), p. 66.

52 Nicolle, D. and Shpakovsky, V., Kalka River 1223. Genghiz Khan's Mongols Invade Russia (Oxford, 2001)Google Scholar (Campaign, vol. 98), pp. 66–67; Khrustaliev, Rus’ i mongol'skoe nashestvie, p. 74.

53 Pow, ‘The Last Campaign and Death of Jebe Noyan’, pp. 44–45; Golden, P., ‘Tushi: The Turkic Name of Jochi’, Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 55 (2002), pp. 143151CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

54 For more, see V. K. Romanov, ‘Stat'ia 1224 g. o bitve pri Kalke Ipat'evskoi letopisi’ [1224 annual article of the Hypatian Chronicle about the Battle of Kalka], in Letopisi i khroniki. 1980, (ed.) B. A. Rybakov (Moscow, 1981), pp. 79–103; cf. J. L. I. Fennell, ‘The Tatar Invasion of 1223: Source Problems’, Forschungen zur osteuropäischen Geschichte 27 (1980), pp. 18–31.

55 A. A. Shakhmatov (ed.), ‘Ipat'evskaia Letopis’’ [Hypatian Chronicle], in Polnoe Sobranie Russkikh Letopisei, vol. II (Moscow, 1998), col. 745, translated by G. A. Perfecky, The Galician-Volynian Chronicle (Munich, 1973) (Harvard Series in Ukrainian Studies 16, 2), p. 30.

56 Pow and Liao, ‘Subutai: Sorting Fact from Fiction’, pp. 45–46, n. 30.

57 Bretschneider, Medieval Researches from Eastern Asiatic Sources, vol. I, p. 299; E. I. Kychanov, ‘Svedeniia iz ‘Istorii dinastii Iuan’ (‘Iuan’ shi’) o Zolotoi Orde’ [Evidence from the “History of Yuan Dinasty” on the Golden Horde], in Istochnikovedenie istorii Ulusa Dzhuchi (Zolotoi Ordy). Ot Kalki do Astrakhani. 1223–1556 [A Study of Sources of the History of Ulus Jochi (the Golden Horde): From Kalka to Astrakhan. 1223–1556], (ed.) M. A. Usmanov (Kazan, 2001), p. 35.

58 Nasonov (ed.), Novgorodskaia Pervaia letopis’, p. 63, (transl.) Michell and Forbes, The Chronicle of Novgorod, p. 66.

59 Bretschneider, Medieval Researches from Eastern Asiatic Sources, vol. I, p. 297; Pow and Liao, ‘Subutai: Sorting Fact from Fiction’, p. 56.

60 Rawshan and Mūsawī (eds.), Jāmiʻ at-tawārīkh, p. 531, translated by Thackston, Jami'u’t-tawarikh, p. 258.

61 Tornberg (ed.), Ibn al-Athīr, al-Kāmil fī’l-ta'rīkh, vol. XII, p. 379, (transl.) Richards, The Chronicle of Ibn al-Athīr, vol. III, p. 218; Pow, ‘The Last Campaign and Death of Jebe Noyan’, pp. 37–38.

62 Qazwīnī (ed.), Juwaynī, Ta'rīkh-i jahān-gushā, vol. I, p. 114, translated Boyle, The History of the World-Conqueror, p. 145.

63 Dörrie, H., ‘Drei Texte zur Geschichte der Ungarn und Mongolen: Die Missionsreisen des fr. Julianus О. P. ins Uralgehiet (1234/5) und nach Rußland (1237) und der Bericht des Erzbischofs Peter über die Tartaren’, Nachrichten der Akademie der Wissenschaften in Göttingen. I. Philologisch-Historische Klasse 6 (1956), p. 172Google Scholar.

64 Morgan, D. O., Medieval Persia, 1040–1797 (London and New York, 2016), p. 61Google Scholar; M. Biran, Chinggis Khan (Oxford, 2007) (Makers of the Muslim World), p. 73; Jackson, Mongols & the Islamic World, p. 75.

65 Buell, ‘Sübötei Ba'atur’, p. 19; I. Zimonyi, Medieval Nomads in Eastern Europe (Bucharest, 2014), pp. 327–328.

66 Kozin, pp. 307, 394, 506 (text), 187 (translation), translated with commentary by Rachewiltz, The Secret History of the Mongols, pp. 189–190, 939–946.

67 Jackson, Mongols & the Islamic World, pp. 80–81.

68 Allsen, ‘Prelude to the Western Campaigns’, p. 13; also see Biran, ‘Joči’, p. 2.

69 Barthold, Turkestan down to the Mongol Invasion, pp. 455–456; Jackson, Mongols & the Islamic World, p. 81.

70 A. Waley, The travels of an alchemist: the journey of the Taoist Ch'ang-Ch'un from China to the Hindukush at the summons of Chingiz Khan (London, 1931), p. 119.

71 Qazwīnī (ed.), Juwaynī, Ta'rīkh-i jahān-gushā, pp. 110–111, translated by Boyle, The History of the World-Conqueror by Juvaini, pp. 139–140.

72 Yuan Shi (Beijing, 1976), p. 2969; translated by Bretschneider, Medieval Researches from Eastern Asiatic Sources, vol. I, pp. 298–299.

73 Rawshan and Mūsawī (eds.), Jāmiʻ at-tawārīkh, p. 531, (transl.) Thackston, Jami'u’t-tawarikh, p. 258, cf. Russian translation by O. I. Smirnova, Rashid-ad-Din, Sbornik letopisei, vol. I/2 (Moscow and Leningrad, 1952), pp. 226–227.

74 Qazwīnī (ed.), Juwaynī, Ta'rīkh-i jahān-gushā, p. 111, translated by Boyle, The History of the World-Conqueror by Juvaini, p. 140.

75 Rawshan and Mūsawī (eds.), Jāmiʻ at-tawārīkh, p. 208, translated by Thackston, Jami'u’t-tawarikh, p. 110.

76 Pow, ‘The Last Campaign and Death of Jebe Noyan’, p. 36.

77 Khrustaliev, Rus’ i mongol'skoe nashestvie, pp. 69–71 (this contains a review of primary sources and secondary literature on this subject).

78 For the progress of the battle on Kalka, see Fennell, J. L. I., The Crisis of Medieval Russia, 1200–1304 (London and New York, 1983), pp. 6368Google Scholar; Leo de Hartog, Russia and the Mongol Yoke. The History of the Russian Principalities and the Golden Horde 1221–1502 (London and New York, 1996), pp. 22–26; M. Dimnik, The Dynasty of Chernigov, 1146–1246 (Cambridge, 2003), pp. 292–298; Halperin, The Tatar Yoke, pp. 23–30; Izmaylov, ‘The Eastern European Campaigns of 1223–1240’, pp. 141–144; Khrustaliev, Rus’ i mongol'skoe nashestvie, pp. 59–90.

79 Pow, ‘The Last Campaign and Death of Jebe Noyan’, pp. 31–51; for objections, see D. M. Timokhin and V. V. Tishin, ‘O novykh tendentsiiakh v izuchenii istorii mongol'skikh zavoevanii: na primere stat'i Stivena Pou ‘Posledniaia kampaniia i smert’ Dzhebe-noiona’’[On New Trends in the Studies of the History of the Mongol Conquests: Based on the Example of Stephen Pow's Article “The Last Campaign and Death of Jebe Noyan”], Golden Horde Review 6 (2018), pp. 596–617.

80 Qazwīnī (ed.), Juwaynī, Ta'rīkh-i jahān-gushā, p. 111, translated by Boyle, The History of the World-Conqueror by Juvaini, p. 140; Barthold, Turkestan down to the Mongol Invasion, p. 455.

81 On the identity of the geographical names Kiwa and Kiev, see Rachewiltz, The Secret History of the Mongols, pp. 960–961.

82 Tornberg (ed.), Ibn al-Athīr, al-Kāmil fī’l-ta'rīkh, vol. XII, pp. 387–388, translated Richards, The Chronicle of Ibn al-Athīr, vol. III, p. 224.

83 Rawshan and Mūsawī (eds.), Jāmiʻ at-tawārīkh, p. 753, translated by Thackston, Jami'u’t-tawarikh, p. 260.

84 Shakhmatov (ed.), Ipat'evskaia Letopis’, col. 745.

85 Perfecky, The Galician-Volynian Chronicle, p. 30.

86 See, for example, Pow, ‘The Last Campaign and Death of Jebe Noyan’, p. 45.

87 P. P. Tolochko, Kiev i Kievskaia zemlia v epokhu feodal'noi razdroblennosti XII–XIII vekov [Kiev and Kiev land in the era of feudal fragmentation of the XII–XIII centuries] (Kiev, 1980), p. 142; see also Fennell, The Crisis of Medieval Russia, p. 66; Dimnik, The Dynasty of Chernigov, p. 298.

88 Shakhmatov (ed.), Ipat'evskaia Letopis’, col. 745, transl. Perfecky, The Galician-Volynian Chronicle, p. 30.

89 Jackson, P., The Mongols and the West, 1221–1410 (Harlow, 2005), p. 49Google Scholar; P. Jackson, ‘Mongols and the Faith of the Conquered’, in Mongols, Turks, and Others. Eurasian Nomads and the Sedentary World, (eds.) R. Amitai and M. Biran (Leiden and Boston, 2005) (Brill's Inner Asian Library, vol. 11), pp. 249–251.

90 J. Richard, ‘The Relatio de Davide as a source for Mongol history and the legend of Prester John’, in Prester John, the Mongols and the Ten Lost Tribes, (eds.) C. F. Beckingham and B. Hamilton (Aldershot, 1996), pp. 139–158; Aigle, D., The Mongol Empire between Myth and Reality: Studies in Anthropological History (Leiden, 2014)Google Scholar (Iran Studies, vol. 11), pp. 41–65.

91 C. Rodenberg (ed.), ‘Epistolae saeculi XIII e Regestis Pontificum Romanorum selectae per G. H. Pertz I’, in Monumenta Germaniae Historica. Epistolae saeculi XIII e Regestis Pontificum Romanorum, vol. I (Berlin, 1883), no. 252, p. 179.

92 Ibid., no. 251, p. 179.

93 R. Bedrosian (translator), Kirakos Ganjakets'i's History of the Armenians (New York, 1986), p. 166; B. Dashdondog, ‘The Mongol Conquerors in Armenia’, in Caucasus during the Mongol Period – Der Kaukasus in der Mongolenzeit, (eds.) J. Tubach, S. G. Vashalomidze, and M. Zimmer (Wiesbaden, 2012), pp. 57–58.

94 Nasonov (ed.), Novgorodskaia Pervaia letopis’, p. 62, (transl.) Michell and Forbes, The Chronicle of Novgorod, p. 65.

95 Tornberg (ed.), Ibn al-Athīr, al-Kāmil fī’l-ta'rīkh, vol. XII, pp. 385–386, translated by Richards, The Chronicle of Ibn al-Athīr, vol. III, pp. 222–223; see also Allsęn, ‘Mongols and North Caucasia’, pp. 12–15.

96 Dörrie, ‘Drei Texte zur Geschichte der Ungarn und Mongolen’, p. 154, unpublished, translated by S. Pow.

97 S. A. Pletneva and T. I. Makarova, ‘Iuzhnoe gorodishche u sela Vitacheva’ [Southern settlement near the village of Vitachev], in Kratkie Soobshcheniia Instituta Arkheologii Akademii Nauk SSSR, vol. 104 (Moscow, 1965), pp. 54–61.

98 Tolochko, Kiev i Kievskaia zemlia, p. 142.

99 Shakhmatov (ed.), Ipat'evskaia Letopis’, col. 782, translated by Perfecky, The Galician-Volynian Chronicle, p. 47.

100 Maiorov, A. V., ‘The Mongolian Capture of Kiev: The Two Dates’, Slavonic and East European Review 94 (2016), pp. 702714CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

101 Maiorov, A. V., ‘The Mongol Invasion of South Rus’ in 1239–1240: Controversial and Unresolved Questions’, Journal of Slavic Military Studies 29 (2016), pp. 473499CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

102 Tornberg (ed.), Ibn al-Athīr, al-Kāmil fī’l-ta'rīkh, vol. XII, p. 388, translated by Richards, The Chronicle of Ibn al-Athīr, vol. III, p. 224.

103 Rawshan and Mūsawī (eds.), Jāmiʻ at-tawārīẖ, p. 208, translated by Thackston, Jami'u’t-tawarikh, p. 110.

104 A. C. M. D'Ohsson, Histoire des Mongols, depuis Tchinguiz-Khan jusqu'à Timour Bey ou Tamerlan, vol. I (Hague and Amsterdam, 1834), pp. 353–354; Berezin, ‘Pervoe nashestvie mongolov na Rossiiu’, p. 246.

105 Jackson, ‘The Dissolution of the Mongol Empire’, p. 196; see also Ratchnevsky, Genghis Khan, p. 137; I. Togan, ‘Dzhuchi khan i znachenie osady Khorezma kak simvola zakonnosti’ [Jochi Khan and the siege of Khwārazm as symbol of legitimacy], in Istochnikovedenie istorii Ulusa Dzhuchi, (ed.) Usmanov, pp. 164–169.

106 Qazwīnī (ed.), Juwaynī, Ta'rīkh-i jahān-gushā, pp. 110–111, translated by Boyle, The History of the World-Conqueror, pp. 139–140.

107 Atwood, ‘Jochi and Early Western Campaigns’, pp. 36, 54; see also Mirgaleyev, ‘Jochi – the first Ruler of the Ulus’, pp. 73–74.

108 Habībī (ed.), Jūzjānī, Tabaqāt-i Nāstrī, vol. II, pp. 150, 212, (transl.) Raverty, [Jūzjānī], Tabakāt-i Nāstrī, pp. 1101, 1283.

109 Allsen, ‘Prelude to the Western Campaigns’, pp. 12–13.

110 Qazwīnī (ed.), Juwaynī, Ta'rīkh-i jahān-gushā, p. 117, translated Boyle, The History of the World-Conqueror by Juvaini, p. 149; see also Allsen, ‘Prelude to the Western Campaigns’, p. 11.

111 Pow and Liao, ‘Subutai: Sorting Fact from Fiction’, p. 56.

112 Togan, ‘Dzhuchi khan i znachenie osady Khorezma’, pp. 157–159, 164–165.

113 Dafeng, Q. and Jianyi, L., ‘On Some Problems Concerning Jochi's Lifetime’, Central Asiatic Journal 42 (1998), p. 288Google Scholar.

114 Rawshan and Mūsawī (eds.), Jāmiʻ at-tawārīkh, pp. 1033–1035, translated by Thackston, Jami'u’t-tawarikh, pp. 359–360.

115 Dafeng and Jianyi, ‘On Some Problems Concerning Jochi's Lifetime’, pp. 289–290.

116 Jackson, Mongols & the Islamic World, p. 458, n. 17.

117 Tornberg (ed.), Ibn al-Athīr, al-Kāmil fī’l-ta'rīkh, vol. XII, p. 388, translated Richards, The Chronicle of Ibn al-Athīr, vol. III, p. 224.

118 Ibid., p. 389, (transl.) Richards, p. 224.

119 Dörrie, ‘Drei Texte zur Geschichte der Ungarn und Mongolen’, pp. 157–158.

120 Zimonyi, ‘The First Mongol Raids against the Volga-Bulgars’, pp. 197–204.

121 Olbricht, P. and Pinks, E. (eds.), Meng-Та pei-lu und Hei-Та shih-lüeh. Chinesische Gesandtenberichte über die frühen Mongolen 1221 und 1237 (Wiesbaden, 1980)Google Scholar (=Asiatische Forschungen, vol. 56), p. 209.