The Mongols and the Black Sea Trade in the 13th and 14th Centuries

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the golden horde and the black sea 165

longer ago than 1303:85 we can clearly rule out the idea that the caffans

would have been able to resist the Mongol siege for eight months without

such defences.

the Genoese merchants’ effrontery met with similar rebuffs wherever

they pushed their demands: while emperor andronikos II palaiologos

gave way unconditionally, since Byzantium was at the end of its strength,86

alexios II comnenos resisted the brazen Genoese demands at trebizond

and won the dispute.87

If we ask whether toqta’s action in 1307 was in the same category as the

emperor of trebizond’s actions against the Genoese in 1304, or Janibek’s

actions four decades later,88 the answer can only be conjectural given the

scarcity of sources. Whatever disagreements there may have been over

caffa’s status cannot have been the only cause of the rupture.

the Mamluk sources are less detailed and descriptive than the Genoese

chronicler quoted, but they do give a precise cause for the reprisals: the

khan “took his revenge on the Genoese franks” because they stole Mongol

children and sold them in egypt.89 from this account we realise that

toqta’s actions were not just punitive, but preventative as well: all sources,

including the arabic, agree that the Genoese were expelled, which put an

end to the slave trade on the cuman steppe.

export of slaves was certainly a major source of income and other mate-

rial benefit for the Mongol khans,90 but it was also a source of concern.

Notarial documents clearly show that younger, more able slaves fetched

a premium price, so that the constant haemorrhaging of valuable human

capital from the Golden horde’s lands deprived it of soldiers as well as

85 continuazione da Varagine/promis, p. 500, Brătianu, Recherches, pp. 250 ff., Dölger,
Regesten, IV, pp. 40–41, ostrogorsky, Geschichte, p. 404.
86 ostrogorsky, Geschichte, p. 404.
87 See above, p. 125.
88 papacostea, “tana,” passim, and below, pp. 204 ff.
89 tiesenhausen, Sbornik, I, pp. 95 (Baybars), 140 (al-Nuwayrī); the author of the Soldaia
synaxarion notes only that the Mongols laid waste to caffa on 21st May 1308 (Nystazopou-
los, Sougdaia, p. 129).
90 the khan’s agents had two sources of profit from this trade, through customs duty
and—indirectly—through tax. a Muslim merchant records that “the whole population
pays tribute to the lord of the country; this is demanded even in poor years, when plague
has killed the animals or when much snow has fallen and there are heavy frosts; in order to
be able to pay the tax, people sell their children” (‛umarī/Lech, p. 140). Since the Mamluk
sultanate depended on the import of slaves (cf. especially Labib, Handelsgeschichte), the
Mongol khans benefitted in another, very important, way when we consider the interna-
tional context of the trade, which gave them a further weapon against the Ilkhanate.

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