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

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mongol expansion & eurasian commercial axes 53

side with Batu’s tax-gatherers under the direction of the seasoned admin-

istrator arghun aga.70 a chinese source says that Möngke gave georgia

as a reward to Batu’s brother Berke, who had supported his election as

great Khan at the qurultai of 1251.71 the agreement also confirmed the

ulus of Jochi’s long-established rights in the far east of iran, in Khorasan

and in central asia, where it seems that the original appanages were even

increased, for there are some indications that a share of the transoxiana

resources originally held by the chagadaids was reassigned to the cuman

steppe horde.72

however impressive these gains, they did not justify Batu’s boast to the

magnates of his entourage that although he had put Möngke on the throne,

he himself was “the true ruler.”73 the actual situation was clearly one of

power-sharing,74 so that the sarai khan’s words are baseless: judged by his

ambitions, they nevertheless ring true and reveal his grand political project

to become uncontested master of western asia—with Möngke’s help!

the privileges which Batu granted to the seljuks, the cilician armenians

and the syrians shortly after he occupied the cuman steppe show just how

far-reaching was the commercial policy of the golden horde under his

leadership.75 From the beginning, this policy was entirely congruent with

an energetic Machtpolitik. his hegemonic aspirations are unequivocally

shown in the obligation imposed on all vassals to stop at sarai on their

way to Qara Qorum.76 even more conclusive is his policy in asia Minor,

where the obvious goal was to make the seljuks strictly subordinate to

the ulus of Jochi. although the sultan had already submitted to the Mongols

70 he was restored to office after a period of disgrace which nearly cost him his head at
the beginning of Möngke’s reign (Juwaynī in spuler, History, p. 160); rubruck shows that
he was in office in 1256, alongside the military commander of the transcaucasia general
Baachu [= Baiju] and arghun: Alius est apud Taurinum [= tabriz] in Perside, qui est super
tributa, nomine Argon (wyngaert, Sinica Franciscana, i, p. 320); cf. Kirakos in dulaurier,
“Mongols,” 11, 1858, pp. 460–461, Jackson, “dissolution,” p. 220.
71 allsen, Imperialism, p. 59.
72 Jackson, “dissolution,” pp. 212–215.
73 Jūzjānī/raverty, ii, p. 1181.
74 even if, as rubruck (wyngaert, Sinica Franciscana, i, p. 253) observes, Batu’s subjects
were treated with more deference in Möngke’s territories than the great Khan’s men met
with in the Jochid horde.
75 see above, pp. 45–46 notes 34–36.
76 spuler, Horde, p. 28, comments on this abuse: “dass Batu die meisten ergebenheits-
besuche selbst entgegennahm, entsprach eigentlich nicht dem aufbau des mongolischen
reiches, der solche akte dem obersten herr, dem groß-Khan, vorbehielt.”

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