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

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the golden horde and the black sea 229

of caffan autonomy341 but also conceded to Genoa full rule over a number

of settlements which had hitherto been Golden horde territory. the pres-

ence of a tudun and customs officers does not even begin to make up for

the immense advantages the Genoese had won. the suspicion that this

unequal treaty was matched by some compensating arrangement is an

obvious one. certain events in the horde in the run-up to the negotiations

of autumn 1380 supply the clarification we need.

a russian chronicler reports that after the defeat at Kulikovo, “a tsar

of the east,” named toqtamïsh deposed Mamai. the source records that

toqtamïsh triumphed and Mamai fled, betrayed by his emirs and hunted

by his enemies’ men, and sought refuge in caffa. the city authorities

granted him shelter, but then seeing that he had arrived “with uncounted

wealth, with much gold and silver, gems and pearls” they killed him and

took his riches. the chronicler concludes that “this is how tsar toqtamïsh

took Mamai’s horde and all its dependencies.”342

these are the only events that the chronicler records between 8th Sep-

tember 1380, the date of the battle of Kulikovo, and 27th November the

same year, when the first Genoese-tartar treaty was signed. It is obvious

that the author knows nothing of any agreement between toqtamïsh and

the caffan authorities. Working only with what information he had, he

concluded that Mamai was killed for strictly material motives. once we

add other information, however, we may reach different conclusions.

however tempting Mamai’s treasure may have been for the Genoese,

under the circumstances his head was worth even more: the colonists

relieved toqtamïsh of a political rival by assassination, which was their

service in exchange for the unprecedented concession.343 When we read

the treaty text alongside the chronicler’s account, we realise that this was

a mutually advantageous bargain: in return for recognising caffan auton-

omy and transferring Gothia to Genoese possession, toqtamïsh was rid

of a threatening enemy and was left sole lord of the lands this side of

the Volga, including the crimea. the unity of the Golden horde was thus

restored, at the cost of important Genoese gains at the khan’s expense.

there was a surprisingly short interval between the first treaty of 27th

November 1380 and the second, of 24th february the following year. Some

341 that caffa did not issue its own coin does not contradict this finding (cf. Schlum-
berger, Numismatique, pp. 463–464, and more detailed in Iliescu, “contribution,”
pp. 31–38).
342 Nikonovskaya Letopis’, XI, p. 69.
343 cf. here Lopez, Storia, p. 356.

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