The Mongols and the Black Sea Trade in the 13th and 14th Centuries
lu
(lu)
#1
preliminary remarks 35
long-distance trade. his characterisation has long been adopted into the
historiography hereabouts, and is particularly appropriate for the situa-
tion after the wholesale transfer of Western merchants into the Black Sea
region, caused by catastrophes suffered in the eastern Mediterranean. at
this point the Black Sea picked up the slack created with the loss of these
positions, and became Western europe’s outpost in eastern europe, as a
gateway to asian trade.111
the gateway opened wide to allow merchants and missionaries unhin-
dered access to limitless horizons because the Black Sea basin was part
of the chinggisid hegemony. Unlike the Byzantine empire or the Muslim
rulers of the east, who worked to protect their own merchants’ interests
against outside competition, the Mongol khans had no commercial class
of their own and did everything they could to encourage foreign mer-
chants to traverse the territories they controlled: the chinggisids offered
merchants from other lands safety in which to travel, and various transit
facilities, in order to draw the greatest possible profit via customs levies
and the exchange of goods. this income provided an important remedy
for the chronic budgetary short-comings, though it could not save a situ-
ation in which expenditures always exceeded revenue.
around 1261 the Mongol empire fractured into several successor states:
in the West of the empire’s territory, these were the Golden horde on the
eurasian steppe, and the Ilkhanate in persia. this grand reorganisation of
power relations generated a series of rivalries within the Mongol world
and at its edges, largely commercial in nature. clashes over the control
of the trade routes led to major changes in the eurasian network, which
came out very favourably for the Black Sea region.
When the Ilkhanate and the Golden horde clashed over control of the
Silk road, part of the traffic which travelled that route was diverted from
the region of the aral Sea, through the steppe, to the ports on the north-
ern Black Sea coast, tana, caffa or Soldaia.
the Ilkhanate’s conflict with the Mamluk sultanate, and consolidation
of the Muslim barrier in the eastern Mediterranean, led to blockade on
both the Silk road itself and the Iraqi end of the spice route from the
Indian ocean via the tigris and euphrates to Syria and cilician arme-
nia. the Ilkhan arghun worked closely with the Genoese merchants
to shift trade from the Iraqi river routes to the overland route through
111 Ibid.