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

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the golden horde and the black sea 157

caffa are documented in 1289–1290, and are a sign of good relations and

cooperation.56

It is well known that in the following century, the Genoese tried hard

to concentrate all of the Northern Black Sea trade in their port,57 and they

can hardly have made fewer efforts in this direction in the early stages;

nevertheless, comparative data from 1281 show that the new trade cen-

tre was not yet able to meet the needs even of the Genoese merchants

themselves. In the contracts notarised by Gabriele di predono at pera,

the volume of trade transacted at caffa amounts to only 1,476 hyperpyra,

compared to 3,453 in the other crimean ports and 3.421 at Vicina.58

however haphazard such evidence may be, it demonstrates the relative

insignificance of caffa (in volumetric terms) and the extent of Genoese

commercial activity on the peninsula—clear indications that the town

was still at an early stage, though later it would become the Northern

Black Sea’s main depot and entrepôt. the process of becoming such an

important commercial centre was closely bound up with the achievement

of independence.

Both processes were much accelerated from 1285, when the Genoese

took a much greater interest in the Black Sea in the wake of one of the

largest shifts in the history of eurasian trade.

4.2.2 Noghai and Toqta, the Genoese and Venetians: The Battle for the

Black Sea Trade

Increased Genoese mercantile activity after 1285 is well-attested and has

been remarked in the scholarship.59 the brothers Benedetto and Manuele

Zaccaria, major traders in their own right, extended their interests to

caffa in 1286, and within a few months the number of contracts notarised

in Genoa concerning the caffa trade had risen remarkably. as well as

these scattered documents, chance has preserved a more complete set of

sources, the registers of the notary Lamberto di Sambuceto, who worked

in the town in 1289–1290.60 even if we restrict our reading to the contracts

56 Ibid., I, p. 459 note 11.
57 cf. papacostea, “tana,” and below, chapters 4.2.3, 4.2.7.
58 cf. Brătianu, Mer Noire, p. 233, Balard, Romanie, II, p. 850.
59 Balard, Romanie, I, p. 118: “après 1285, les mentions de caffa dans les actes notariés
génois se multiplient.”
60 Brătianu, Actes, pp. 173–299, Sambuceto/Balard, passim.

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