Читаем История Ногайской Орды полностью

These developments were a terrible shock to the Noghay Horde. The argument of the mirzas over economic and political orientation resulted in a protracted internal war that was aggravated by the great famine of the late 1550s. The biy Isma'il (1554–63) emerged victorious from that war. His victory was, however, a Pyrrhic one indeed: many subjects of the preceding biys (his brothers) left the Horde for the adjacent Yurts, enormous numbers of Noghays fell in battle, starved to death or were killed by the plague. Though internal conflict somewhat abated by the end of Isma'il's rule, it was a mere reduced likeness of the former strong Noghay empire — the Horde of the so-called Great Noghays — that he was able to hand down to his successors. The descendants of Shaykh Mamay behaved more and more independently. Another Noghay state — the Little Noghay Horde, or the Qazi Ulus — was shaping in the North-West Caucasus. Bands of the Noghay "qazaqs" roamed the steppes; they had no wish to join any of the Yurts. Some of them eventually settled in Russia and in Polish lands.

The relative stability under the biy Din Ahmad (1563–78) continued into the beginning years of the rule of Urns (1578–90), rekindling hope for the return of the Horde's erstwhile power and influence. The biys mustered many mirzas around them, trying to pursue a policy of independence. However, they overestimated their forces. Unlike the period of the late 15th — early 16th cc., when the Manghit Yurt had been surrounded by enemies engaged in mortal combat with the Noghays, now the Yurt's inhabitants had a real opportunity to emigrate in search of a better, safer life. They first moved to the Little Noghay Horde and the Uzbek Khanates, spreading then in Russia and the Crimea. The people started to leave the trans-Volga steppes. At the close of the century, successors of several biys started fighting for power over their depleting subjects. That was the third and the last Noghay Unrest.

As a result of internal conflict, Kalmyk invasions and other events, the Great Noghay Horde disintegrated during the first decades of the 17th c. The Noghays did not vanish off the face of the earth, though. On the contrary, they settled far and wide, spreading all over Eastern Europe and Central Asia, becoming integrated into various peoples and countries. Having lost their single political center, the nomads started forming Hordes, power structures of the ulus type. Yedisan, Yedishkul and thé union at Bujak turned out to be the largest and most long-lived of those states. The nomads of the Noghay Horde also formed the people of Qaraqalpaqs. All of them preserve historical memories of their former life in the nomadic empire beyond the Volga.

The second part of the book ("Nogaica") is a series of essays concerning the most important subjects: "Territory", "Population", "Economy", "The State", "Culture", "Contacts with Russia".

A number of peoples came into contact with the Noghay Horde and the Noghays originating from it, partly assimilating them. Those were the ancestors of Kazakhs and Kirghizes, of the Kazan, Crimean, Siberian and Astrakhan Tartars, of Bashkirs, Qaraqalpaqs, Turkmenians, Kalmyks, the Don and the Ural Cossacks, as well as of many peoples of the North Caucasus.

Analysis of the influence, in all its forms and varieties, exerted by the Noghays on the peoples of Eurasia shows that its earliest form was political impact. It reached its peak in the 16th — 17thcc., in the epoch of the Noghay Horde. Cultural influence comes next, as regards its significance in that time. After the disintegration of the Noghay state, when the Noghays scattered in all directions, leaving their original Manghi't Yurt, their political role dramatically lost its significance. On the other hand, their wide scattering resulted in a substantial strengthening of their ethnic and cultural influence on the neighbors. Historical and ethnological evidence shows that, over the last five centuries, the Noghay people made an important contribution into the history and civilization of Eurasia.

The Appendix contains the genealogical trees of the Noghay nobility of the 15th — 17th centuries.


Vorsatz




Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

10 гениев, изменивших мир
10 гениев, изменивших мир

Эта книга посвящена людям, не только опередившим время, но и сумевшим своими достижениями в науке или общественной мысли оказать влияние на жизнь и мировоззрение целых поколений. Невозможно рассказать обо всех тех, благодаря кому радикально изменился мир (или наше представление о нем), речь пойдет о десяти гениальных ученых и философах, заставивших цивилизацию развиваться по новому, порой неожиданному пути. Их имена – Декарт, Дарвин, Маркс, Ницше, Фрейд, Циолковский, Морган, Склодовская-Кюри, Винер, Ферми. Их объединяли безграничная преданность своему делу, нестандартный взгляд на вещи, огромная трудоспособность. О том, как сложилась жизнь этих удивительных людей, как формировались их идеи, вы узнаете из книги, которую держите в руках, и наверняка согласитесь с утверждением Вольтера: «Почти никогда не делалось ничего великого в мире без участия гениев».

Александр Владимирович Фомин , Александр Фомин , Елена Алексеевна Кочемировская , Елена Кочемировская

Биографии и Мемуары / История / Образование и наука / Документальное