1 and 2 Crimean campaigns. Golitsin campaigns in the Crimea
Military campaigns of the Russian army under the command of V.V. Golitsyn against the Crimean Khanate in the framework of the Great Turkish War of 1683-1699.
Russia and the anti-Ottoman coalition
In the early 1680s in the system international relations important changes have taken place. A coalition of states formed against the Ottoman Empire. In 1683, near Vienna, the united troops inflicted a serious defeat on the Turks, but the latter put up strong resistance, not wanting to give up their conquered positions. The Polish-Lithuanian state, in which the processes of political decentralization intensified in the second half of the 17th century, became more and more unable to conduct long-term military campaigns. Under these conditions, the Habsburgs - the main organizers of the coalition - began to seek the entry of the Russian state into it. Russian politicians used the current situation to achieve recognition by the Commonwealth of the results of the Russian-Polish war of 1654-1667. Under pressure from the allies, she agreed to replace the truce agreement with Russia in 1686 with an agreement on "Perpetual Peace" and a military alliance against the Ottoman Empire and the Crimea. The question of Kyiv, acquired by Russia for 146,000 gold rubles, was also resolved. As a result, in 1686 the Russian state joined the Holy League.
In deciding to go to war, the Russians worked out a program to strengthen Russia's position on the Black Sea coast. The conditions prepared in 1689 for future peace negotiations provided for the inclusion of Crimea, Azov, Turkish forts at the mouth of the Dnieper, Ochakov into the Russian state. But the entire next 18th century was spent on the implementation of this program.
Crimean campaign of 1687
In fulfillment of obligations to the allies, Russian troops twice, in 1687 and 1689, undertook large campaigns against the Crimea. The army was headed by the closest associate of Princess Sophia V.V. Golitsyn. Very large military forces were mobilized for campaigns - over 100 thousand people. 50 thousand Little Russian Cossacks of Hetman I.S. were also supposed to join the army. Samoilovich.
By the beginning of March 1687, the troops were to gather on the southern borders. On May 26, Golitsyn held a general review of the army, and in early June he met with Samoilovich's detachment, after which he continued to advance south. The Crimean Khan Selim Giray, realizing that he was inferior to the Russian army in numbers and weapons, ordered to burn the steppe and poison or fill up the water sources. In the face of a lack of water, food, fodder, Golitsyn was forced to decide to return to his borders. The retreat began at the end of June and ended in August. All his time, the Tatars did not stop attacking Russian troops.
As a result, the Russian army did not reach the Crimea, however, as a result of this campaign, the khan could not provide military assistance to Turkey, which was engaged in a war with Austria and the Commonwealth.
Crimean campaign of 1689
In 1689, the army under the command of Golitsyn made a second campaign against the Crimea. On May 20, the army reached Perekop, but the commander did not dare to enter the Crimea, as he was afraid of a shortage fresh water. Moscow clearly underestimated all the obstacles that a huge army must face in the dry, waterless steppe, and the difficulties associated with the assault on Perekop, the only narrow isthmus along which it was possible to pass to the Crimea. For the second time the army was forced to return.
Results
Crimean campaigns showed that Russia did not yet have sufficient forces to defeat a strong enemy. At the same time, the Crimean campaigns were the first purposeful action of Russia against the Crimean Khanate, which indicated a change in the balance of power in this region. Also, the campaigns diverted the forces of the Tatars and Turks for a while and contributed to the success of the allies in Europe. Russia's entry into the Holy League confused the plans of the Turkish command and forced him to abandon the offensive against Poland and Hungary.
About the secret mission to the Crimea (under Peter I) about the transition of the Crimea to Russian citizenship
NEGOTIATIONS ON THE TRANSITION OF THE CRIMEAN KHANATE INTO RUSSIAN ALLIANCE UNDER PETER THE GREAT
The topic of negotiations on the transfer of Crimea to Russian citizenship in the first half of the Northern War of 1700-1721 was not touched upon by anyone except the Polish historian Yu. Feldman, who in his book cited two lengthy extracts from the report of the Saxon ambassador in St. Locc reported that the tsar was preparing a secret mission to the Crimea in 1712. 1 And although the negotiations ended in vain, nevertheless, in the Crimean direction, as well as in the Balkan, Caucasian and Far Eastern, Peter I paved the way for his descendants.
At the end of the XVII - early XVIII in. The Crimean Khanate remained a large military-feudal state formation, which, under the threat of devastating raids, kept the population of vast territories of Europe at bay, up to Voronezh, Lvov and Vienna.
In the system of the Ottoman Empire, of all the vassal principalities, Crimea enjoyed the widest autonomy - it had an army, a monetary system, an administrative apparatus and the right to external relations with its neighbors. But, being a powerful military shoulder for the Tatars, the Port greatly limited their autonomy. The feudal lords of the Crimea were afraid that "they would be completely destroyed by the Turks"
Turkish cities and fortresses scattered throughout the khanate - Bendery, Kaffa, Kerch, Ochakov, Azov - fettered the nomads, and the income from trade in these cities bypassed the treasury of the khans. Irritated by the appointment of Turkish judges and officials in the areas under the jurisdiction of Bakhchisarai, for example, in Budzhak, as well as the Turks inciting enmity between the Murzas.
The goals were also different. foreign policy Istanbul and Bakhchisarai.
From the end of the 17th century Crimea sought to maintain peaceful relations with the clearly weakening Commonwealth and, if possible, drive a wedge between it and Russia, completely subjugate the Adygs North Caucasus, to push back Russia's military potential from its borders and achieve the resumption of the payment of Russian "wake" - tribute. The Khans of Crimea, as "experts" on Polish and Russian issues, "took over" in the 17th century. mediation in matters with the Commonwealth and the Russian state.
Crimean, and not Ottoman, troops were the main enemy of Russia in the south until the 18th century. The claims of the Crimea to the Middle Volga region were not forgotten either. Under Khan Muhammad Giray (1654-1666), an agreement was concluded with the Polish king Jan II Casimir on the annexation of the former territories of the Astrakhan and Kazan khanates to the Crimea. In their relations with the tsars, the rulers of Crimea were guided by the outdated concept that they were (at least formally) tributaries of the khanate. The claims of the khans to the steppe Zaporozhye were quite real.
Unlike the Khanate of Port, for tactical reasons, at the end of the 17th - in the first decade of the 18th century. sought to maintain peaceful relations both with the Commonwealth and with Peter's Russia, because the greatest threat to it came at that time from the Habsburg monarchy.
The obligation to supply Tatar soldiers to the Balkan and Hungarian fronts, labor for the construction of new Turkish fortresses - Yenikale and Temryuk in 1702-1707, as well as prohibitions to raid Ukraine (up to orders to give full and booty) aroused strong discontent. The historical self-awareness of the Gireys - the descendants of Genghis Khan - allowed them not to consider themselves inferior to European kings, kings, and sultans.
The khans painfully experienced the infringement of their liberties. (First of all, the Turkish arbitrariness in their replacement.) They sought to ensure that the "kings of the kings of the universe" - the Turkish sultans - gave them at least a lifetime confirmation for the position.
Perhaps a complex of such political differences was the reason for the negotiations on the transfer of the "Great Horde of the Right and Left Hands" to Russian citizenship in 1701-1712.
In the XV-XVI centuries. Kasimov, Volga and Siberian Tatars lived in Russia. Moscow's protectorate over the Kazan Khanate was first established in 1487. Ivan the Terrible completely subjugated the Tatar "kingdoms" in Kazan and Astrakhan.
The Siberian "kingdom" from 1555 to 1571 recognized vassal dependence on Russia on the terms of paying an annual tribute in furs, and in 1582 it was conquered. But Russian campaigns along the Dnieper, Don and from Taman in 1555, 1556, 1558, 1560. did not lead to the conquest of the fourth Tatar "kingdom" - in the Black Sea region. Nevertheless, in 1586, Tsarevich Murat-Girey (son of Khan Devlet-Girey I), who went over to the side of Moscow, was sent to serve in Astrakhan, and the Russian government was going to put him in Bakhchisarai.
In 1593, the government of Tsar Fyodor Ioannovich agreed to send an "army with a fiery battle" to help Khan Gazi-Girey, who was going to "transfer all Crimean uluses to the Dnieper and directly lag behind the Turian one" and be with Russia "in brotherhood, friendship and peace and Yurt Krymskaya with the Moscow state ... to unite." The traditions of allegiance can be called centuries-old Nogai hordes Russian tsars. They depended on Moscow in 1557-1563, 1590-1607, 1616-1634, 1640.
From the end of the 17th century Vlachs and Moldavians, Serbs and Montenegrins, Ukrainians from the Right-Bank Ukraine, Greeks, Hungarians, peoples of the North Caucasus and Central Asia(Khivans). Russian-Crimean relations have never been exclusively hostile, and the theme of Russian-Crimean mutual assistance and alliances in the XV-XVII centuries. still waiting for its researchers.
After the Azov campaigns, the situation on the border became unfavorable for the Crimean Yurt. Peter I, having strengthened the fortress-outposts in the south - Azov, Taganrog, Kamenny Zaton, Samara, tried to block the northern limits of the nomad camps of the khanate. On a small segment of the Russian-Turkish border near Azov and Taganrog, the Ottoman authorities tried to prevent the Tatars from violating it and insisted on the speedy surveying of the Nogai steppes. However, in the Dnieper region, on the Azov coast and on the Don, the "small war" never stopped. Neither the Turkish, nor the Moscow, nor the Hetman's administration could keep the Nogais, Donets, Crimeans, Cossacks, Kalmyks, Circassians and Kabardians from mutual raids. At the beginning of the XVIII century. the Nogais literally rushed about in search of a new protector. Among them, revolts "against the Khan and the Turk" periodically flared up. Hetman Mazepa wrote to Peter I that "a voice is circulating throughout the Crimea that the Belogorod horde intends to beat you, the great sovereign, with its forehead, asking that they be accepted under the sovereign hand of your royal majesty."
In 1699, 20 thousand Budzhak Nogais really rebelled against Bakhchisaray, "expecting help and mercy" either from the sultan or from the king, and "if they were completely refused by the Turks, they want to bow down to the Poles, which is already sent there."
The rebels were led by the brother of the Crimean Khan Devlet-Girey II Nuraddin Gazi-Girey, who went with the Nogais to Bessarabia, to the Polish borders. In addition to contacts with the Polish king, in 1701, Gazi-Girey, through Mazepa, asked the "white king" to accept him "from the Belogorod horde into citizenship" 9. (In the same year, the Armenian meliks of Karabakh asked Peter I to liberate Armenia, at the same time the Georgian kings of Imereti , Kakheti and Kartli turned to Russia with the same request 10.)
In 1702, Kubek-Murza came to Azov with a request for Russian patronage over the Kuban Nogais. However, the Russian government, not risking breaking peace with the Porte, informed the Sultan of its refusal to the Nogais.
Under military pressure from the Janissaries and the Crimean troops, Gazi-Girey fled to Chigirin, then went to the world and was sent to about. Rhodes.
The freedom of maneuver of the Crimean diplomacy was expanded by the attractiveness of the "Threshold of the Highest Happiness" - Bakhchisaray for the Muslims of Eastern Europe and Central Asia as an outpost of Islam.
Partial relief for the khans was the fact that the Russian outskirts, where the traditions of freedom were not destroyed by the autocracy - the Astrakhan Territory, the region of the Don and Zaporozhye Hosts, Bashkiria - did not immediately submit to Russian absolutism. Just in the first decade of the XVIII century. the population of the outskirts tried to get rid of the burden that tsarism had piled on it. But all the uprisings that broke out almost simultaneously - on the Don, in Zaporozhye (1707-1708), in Astrakhan (1705-1706), in Bashkiria (1705-1711), mass desertion from the army, increased robbery and unrest in Central Russia (1708 and 1715) took place in isolation. The rebels could not use each other's support and tried to rely on external forces - Turkey, Crimea, Sweden.
With such instability in Baturin, and then in Moscow, information spread about the intention of the Crimean Khan to transfer to Russian citizenship. On December 26, 1702, the Ottoman government, dissatisfied with Devlet-Girey II's insufficient information about the strengthening of Russian fortresses and the Azov fleet, appointed his father, the 70-year-old elder Hadji-Selim-Girey I, to Bakhchisaray for the fourth (and last) time (December 1702 - December 1704). By that time, Devlet-Giray proved to be a brave and skillful ruler (he fought in Austria in 1683) and enjoyed authority among the Tatar murzas. The deposed khan did not obey the order, again raised the Nogais and sent troops under the command of his Kalga brother Saadet Giray to Budzhak, to Akkerman and Izmail. On the way, the rebels burned down several Ukrainian villages. The rebels spread the rumor that they were marching on Istanbul.
Apparently, in late 1702 - early 1703, Devlet-Giray, in search of additional support, sent two envoys to Mazepa in Baturin - Akbir and Absuut, according to Mazepa, to incite him and the Cossacks "to revolt" against the king 13.
The Ottoman government at the beginning of 1703 equipped a fleet from Sinop in order to "pacify the pride of the Crimean Tatars", and ordered Hadji-Selim-Girey to lead the Black Sea and Kuban Nogais against the rebels 14.
The Ottoman government admonished the Zaporozhians not to enter into contractual (allied) relations with the Crimeans, because "the Tatars, whom they invite and accept friendship with them, then they trample on the same with their horses" 15. The Belgorod rebellion was suppressed 16. Devlet Giray, who left the Crimea , had to stop at Ochakov, then he moved to Ukraine, finally retreated to Kabarda, and later turned himself in to his father. The Zaporozhian Cossacks had to ask for the Sultan and Crimean protectorate from Selim-Girey I. But the Ottoman government, as well as the Russian government in relation to the Budzhak Nogais, through the ambassador P. A. Tolstoy, verbally promised not to accept them into Turkish citizenship.
In January 1703 (or, possibly, in December 1702), a former captain, Moldavian Alexander Davydenko, came to Mazepa, who left "his land for the wrath of the ruler" and intended to enter the Russian service.
Judging by the surviving autograph letters in poor Russian and Polish, Davydenko earlier, during the third reign of Hadji-Selim-Giray I (1692-1699), served in the Crimea and heard that most of the murzas and beys asked the sultan to restore the deposed Devlet- Girey, with whom the Moldavian had a chance to talk. Devlet-Giray allegedly informed him that he was ready, together with the beys, "to bow to the almighty tsarist state and fight against the Turks far away." There is nothing unusual in the fact that in 1702, losing ground under his feet, the khan found out the positions of Mazepa and Moscow. The motives of the behavior of Davydenko, who energetically set about establishing contacts between the rebellious khan and the tsar, are easily explained. He, like many of the Balkan Christians, offered a far from new project for the liberation of his homeland from the Turks by the forces of the Orthodox Tsar. The original in it was only an indication of the possibility of using the separatism of the Crimean feudal lords 19. In the Polish version of Davydenko's letter, it is more definitely said that he persuaded the khan with the whole army to seek support from Peter I and would like to convey advice to the tsar himself about the conduct of the Turkish and "Swedish" wars twenty.
A skillful and cautious diplomat, Mazepa, whose authority and experience was highly valued by the Moscow government, characterized Davydenko as "a person who obviously does not know the secret, or who cannot keep it with him" ", because of which not only the Wallachian ruler K In the summer of 1703, Mazepa was about to send Davydenko to Wallachia and wrote to Brankovyanu "to take him away from that language". But on July 30, Davydenko sent Mazepa from Fastov a new project for organizing a common front against the Turks. The capital became interested in this project, and Davydenko was in Moscow for a year and three months from 1704. Not only the Posolsky and Little Russian orders were involved in it, but also the head of the government, Admiral F. A. Golovin, and even the tsar himself, judging by the notes in the notebook of Peter I for 1704: “Oh David ... the man that the Danish envoy has, should he let him go? About the Voloshenin that the Datsky brought, and what does the Multyanskaya say about him?" 23
The topic was a secret, they wrote about it dully, not all documents are known so far. But we know the decision of the Russian government on the issue of accepting the khanate into Russian citizenship: as in 1701, in the case of Gazi-Girey, it was negative. In the conditions of the Northern War, aggravate relations with Ottoman Empire on the Crimean issue was risky. In addition, the rebellion of Devlet-Girey was suppressed, and the new Khan Gazi-Girey III (1704-1707) did not want or could not "show", as in 1701, the former "goodwill" towards Russia. Moscow had information that a Tatar raid was being prepared on Kyiv and Sloboda Ukraine in order to prevent the strengthening of Russian-Polish relations after the Narva Treaty of 1704, which formalized the entry of the Commonwealth into the Northern War 24. The new Crimean administration detained the envoy from Mazepa to Gazi-Giray with congratulations and a gift from the convoy Troshchinsky, under the pretext that he was a spy, and demanded the return of her former envoys Akbir and Absuut, exiled to Solovki. Although the envoy Gazi-Girey in May-June 1705 promised Mazepa "the khan's affection in private", the Crimean feudal lords demanded compensation for the Cossacks' raids on the Tatars. the fate of Crimea, was expelled from new edition letters of Admiral I.S. Mazepa dated February 5, 1705 and replaced by a wish to live in peace and friendship.
By refusing to start new relations with the Sultan's vassals, the Russian government thus sought to neutralize the ties of its Turkic peoples and Kalmyks with Istanbul and the Crimea. Moscow was well aware of Khan Ayuka's secret contacts with Bakhchisaray, the governors from the Volga reported on the possible departure of part of the Kalmyks to the Crimean Khanate 27, and Ambassador P. A. Tolstoy from Istanbul - about Khan Ayuka's connections with the Sultan. At the end of 1703 or at the beginning of 1704, Khan Ayuka, through the Nogai envoy Ish Mehmel-aga, sent Sultan Ahmed III an act of an oath of loyalty and submission with a reminder that the Kalmyk khans had already twice appealed to his predecessors since 1648 with a request to transfer to the Ottoman Empire. citizenship 28.
Starting a serious deal with the Crimea through such an untested channel of communication as Davydenko was considered risky, and Ambassador P. A. Tolstoy was instructed to assure Ahmed III that the Tsar would not accept anyone into Russian citizenship and expected the same from the Porte in relation to the nomadic peoples of Russia.
In Moscow, Davydenko was given forty sables worth 50 rubles. and by decree of the tsar they were sent to Kyiv, where they “politically” detained him for a year and two months, although he himself continued to hope that he would be transported under the guise of a merchant across the Sich to Bakhchisarai 30. All this time Mazepa kept him “under a strong guard”, not allowing even church visits, and then exiled to Moldova in shackles 31. From F. A. Golovin, the Moldavian received a not very flattering description 32.
The next Khan Kaplan Giray I (August 1707 - December 1709), who ruled in the Crimea three times ( last time in 1730-1736), was an implacable opponent of Moscow. 1708 was a crisis stage for Russia in the Northern War. Charles XII was advancing on Moscow, the south and east of the country were engulfed in uprisings. Against a possible connection of the Don rebels with the Tatars and Cossacks in Moscow, they were going to use the Hetman's troops, but in October 1708 Mazepa changed. In order to drag the Crimea into the war, he promised to pay Kaplan-Giray the tribute that Moscow had thrown off from itself in 1685-1700, and promised to convince the Polish king Stanislav I to give back all the unpaid "grub" of Poland for the past years. Kaplan-Giray sought permission from Istanbul to link up with the Swedes in the Ukraine. G. I. Golovkin sent a request to P. A. Tolstoy: did the Port really allow the Crimea to demand from Russia the previous “commemoration”-tribute?
The Ottomans were again reminded of Russia's refusal to accept the Nogais, hoping for reciprocity from Istanbul regarding the rebellious Don 3
The situation was unexpectedly relieved by the deposition of Kaplan-Giray in December 1709 due to the defeat of his troops by the Kabardians near Mount Kanzhal 35.
On January 3, 1709, P. A. Tolstoy from Istanbul sent an envoy, Vasily Ivanovich Blekly, through Azov, to congratulate an old acquaintance, Devlet-Girey II, on the second elevation to the throne of Bakhchisaray and thank him for the "frankly friendly announcement" that the khan handed over to the Russian embassy in Istanbul on his departure for the Crimea on December 14, 1708, the Russian ambassador asked for the extradition of the Nekrasovites, who had gone to the Nogais in the Kuban, but in reality Blekly was supposed to prevent the Tatar-Swedish rapprochement in Ukraine 36. There is nothing incredible in the fact that Devlet Giray II was sent 10 thousand ducats as "the amount due to him before the war, in order to propitiate him with this and get him into his party" 37. Khan, taking care of restoring the former prestige of the Crimea and the traditional forms of Russian-Crimean relations with a full-fledged state), during conversations on June 10-13, 1709, he reproached Blekloma for the fact that the tsar stopped writing from himself to the Crimea that correspondence with Istanbul is conducted over the head of the khan, that the Russians complain to the padishah about petty border incidents. According to A. Davydenko, recorded later, in 1712, the khan was allegedly interested in why the Russian government was slow to respond to his proposal to transfer the khanate to the side of Russia 38. Judging by Blekly's reports, on June 13, 1709, the khan said vaguely: . The Turks don't like you... Both Crimea and I so want Moscow and Crimea to be one land... If the country of Tsarist Majesty were completely in alliance with me, then there would be no Swede in your land. And the Poles did not rebel against you, nor the Cossacks. They all look at me" 39.
Devlet-Girey II avoided talking about the extradition of the Nekrasovites together with their chieftain I. Nekrasov and about the specific details of the union, but he accepted the gifts and, well aware of the plight of Charles XII in Ukraine, promised to “keep his Tatars and other peoples in fear in order to did not cause any offense to the Russian people, about which decrees were sent out from him. 40. The khan did not raise the issue of resuming the "commemoration". At that time, there was a rumor in the Crimea that the tsar, having offered Devlet-Girey II gold, treasures and the rank of steward in the Kazan land, nevertheless received a refusal: “I don’t want any stings or honey from the tsar * 41.
In general, Bakhchisaray, like Istanbul, satisfied the position of Russia, which fought on the front from Finland to Ukraine, and Russian diplomacy established quite satisfactory relations with the Crimea and the Port in the pre-Poltava period. Neither Swedish, nor Polish, nor Mazepa's, nor Nekrasov's embassies in the Crimea produced any results. The port did not allow the Tatar cavalry to appear near Poltava.
The Poltava victory over the Swedes on June 27, 1709 led to the confirmation of the Russian-Turkish truce of 1700 on January 3, 1710. Sultan Ahmed III was swayed to war with Peter I only after a powerful diplomatic onslaught of a surging wave of emigrants - Charles XII, supporters of Stanislav Leshchinsky, Mazepas and Cossacks After the Turks declared war on Russia in November 1710, the Russian government, recalling secret contacts with the Crimeans and Nogais, called not only Christians, but also Muslims of the Ottoman Empire to come under the protectorate of the tsar, promising the latter the expansion of their autonomy. In his manifestos to the Nogais of all hordes and the Crimeans, Peter I referred to the appeal of the Budzhaks and Gazi-Girey to Russia in 1701. 42 Montenegrins, Serbs, and Moldavians rose from the Orthodox to fight the Turks, and Kabardians from the Muslims. In mid-June 1711, information was received from defectors that the Budzhak horde would not fight and was ready to become Russian citizenship on the condition of paying a certain tribute in cattle 43.
The Crimean troops fought successfully in 1711. In winter, Devlet Giray II sent his cavalry to Kyiv and the Voronezh shipyards and captured several thousand full. In the summer, the Tatars successfully prevented the expedition of I.I. Buturlin from Kamenny Zaton to Perekop. But most importantly, they cut off all the rear communications of the Russian army in Moldova and the Black Sea region and, together with the Turks, tightly blocked it at Stanileshti.
These military merits allowed Devlet-Giray to believe that the Prut Treaty would include the main demand of the khanate - the restoration of Russian "commemoration" - tribute. This was promised on the Prut, although not in writing, but in words.
After the second declaration of war in 1711, Devlet Giray insisted on ceding Zaporozhye and Right-bank Ukraine to the Crimean Khanate 44. However, the Turkish side, having achieved its main goal - Azov, wanted to end the matter peacefully as soon as possible and did not insist on Tatar demands. The stubborn defense of the interests of the Crimea by Devlet-Giray II caused dissatisfaction with the highest dignitaries of the Porte, who intended to remove the overly zealous khan 45.
On February 20, 1712, at the height of another aggravation of the conflict with Turkey, General K. E. Renne sent an old acquaintance Davydenko to the headquarters of Field Marshal B. P. Sheremetev in Priluki, who by that time had served both the Polish king and the Russian Tsar (in the division General Janus von Eberstedty). On February 24, a Moldavian reported something very incredible: Devlet-Girey and the Crimean murzas asked the field marshal and the tsar for "a secret rebuke... whether they want to take him to the side of the royal majesty or not," as well as "points on which to take him into citizenship" 46. Davydenko did not have supporting documents, except for the road trip to Moscow, issued by the khan. The khan explained the reason for his appeal to the tsar by the Turkish arbitrariness over him 47 and conveyed that his anti-Russian position was only "for the face, so that the Turk would show goodwill ... And the king of Sweden seemed to be more in virtue for money" 48.
Davydenko proposed the following plan: with the help of the khan, capture Charles XII and the Mazepinians in Moldavia. 49 agree to secret negotiations with Devlet Giray II.
On March 22, G. I. Golovkin informed Sheremetev that Peter I had given an audience to Davydenko and “he accepted the offer and gave him an oral answer and released packs to where he came from, just so that he was believed to be here at the court of the Tsar’s Majesty , given a passport with the seal of the state. Given the secrecy of the operation, the chancellor wrote that the field marshal would be informed of Peter I's response after his arrival in St. Petersburg. You can judge the king's answer from the document at the end of the article. It cannot be dated, as indicated in the entry under the text, 1714, when the Ottoman Empire and Russia were no longer at war, about which the tsar wrote. It is also impossible to date it to the period between November 1712 - June 1713, the time of the third state of war with the Sultan, since Peter I was outside Russia from July 1, 1712 to March 14, 1713, and Devlet Giray on April 3, 1713 was already deprived of the Khan's throne. Considering that the recording of Davydenko's "interrogation" was made on March 20, 1712, that Golovkin wrote to Sheremetev on March 22 that the tsar had received the Moldavian, that the draft version of the "pass" for Davydenko was written on the 13th, and the white "for state seal"(which Peter I mentioned) - March 23, 1712 50, then the document can be dated March 13-23, 1712 - most likely, this is nothing more than a variant of the instructions for Davydenko.
In it, Peter I expressed his readiness to conclude a Russian-Crimean treaty through Sheremetev with Devlet-Girey II, accepting all its conditions, and the khanate into Russian citizenship. For the head of Charles XII, Khan was promised 12,000 sacks of levkoy (1 million = 450,000 rubles). In order to obtain a free hand in the north in this way, it was promised that all Russian forces would be sent to help the Crimea. With the impossibility of capturing the Swedish king, Peter I asked to burn the Turkish military and food depots in Moldova.
On April 4, the captain received riding horses, 100 red ones, and, together with the three Moldavians who accompanied him, was sent from St. Petersburg. But as soon as he managed to get to Kyiv, the first information about the conclusion of a 25-year truce in Istanbul (April 5, 1712) was received there.
The Kyiv governor D. M. Golitsyn detained Davydenko, informing St. Petersburg that if the khan handed him over to the Turks, the war would begin again.
On May 29, the chancellor approved the "detention" of the secret agent, ordered that all documents be taken away from him, but allowed him to write his wife out of Moldova. On the advice of P. P. Shafirov, instead of the Moldavian, in response to the "Khan's request", Lieutenant Colonel Fyodor Klimontovich was secretly sent with a formal goal - to exchange prisoners and with a real one - to find out the true intentions of the Khan. Chikhachev was ordered to hand over to Devlet-Girey II lamellar furs worth 5,000 rubles "for goodwill," i.e. in the amount of the former traditional "salary" to the khan, but only secretly, face to face, so that this offering was not perceived as a past tribute, it was forbidden to give furs if they were required to be presented openly. According to the instructions, Chikhachev was allowed to promise to send letters personally from the tsar to Bakhchisarai and even to make episodic "" awards "if the khan raised the issue of resuming the tribute, but the main thing was to find out" all sorts of ways through whom it is possible to scout. And don’t mention the weather (tribute)” 53. The Russian government, perhaps, judged the future nature of the subject relations of the Crimea by analogy with the Russian-Moldovan treaty of 1711.
The Turkish-Tatar victory on the Prut, Russia's frank unwillingness to fight in the south, the compliant position of the Russian ambassadors in Istanbul - all this raised the Khan's prestige in his own eyes. For 10 days, Devlet Giray II did not receive Chikhachev in Bendery under the pretext that he arrived without a letter from the king. Only on August 23, 1712, the lieutenant colonel was honored with a brief and cold reception, at which the khan announced that he would not allow the prisoners to be exchanged, henceforth he would not allow anyone to visit him without letters from Peter I, after which he rejected the secret offering. When asked what he could tell the tsar about the Davydenko case, the khan replied, “I have nothing to say now and I didn’t say more.” This ended the audience. One of the Tatar officials then explained to Chikhachev that the khan would like to have "cordial love" with Russia, but that he was unhappy that Russia twice, in 1711 and 1712, ignored the Crimea, concluding agreements with the Turks, that Russian-Crimean relations are characterized by a state of "neither peace nor war", and if they entered into negotiations with the Tatars, then the Russians would receive peace in the south in a week. Only in the event that, in addition to the agreement with Ahmed III, a separate Russian-Crimean agreement is drawn up, the khan de "with joy" will accept any gift, even one sable 54.
Defiantly emphasizing his equal rank with the tsar, the khan, following the example of Peter I, ordered his vizier Dervish-Mohammed-aga to write to B.P. Sheremetev that there would be no "offenses" from Russia from Crimea, that prisoners would be allowed to redeem, but not exchange so that the Russians let Charles XII through Poland to Pomerania and that after the departure of the Swedish king, the khan would accept any offering "for a great gift" for its good", and reproached the Cossacks for robbing the royal convoys 56.
Evidently, Devlet-Giray avoided discussing the issue of changing vassalage in 1712. But Davydenko's proposals were not his, Davydenko's, fantasy. Five times - in 1699, 1703, 1708 or 1709, 1711, 1712. - he turned to the Russian government on the same occasion. He could learn some information only from the khan, for example, the content of his conversations with V.I. Faded in the Crimea in 1709. Only ignorance of political realities in Eastern Europe forced Davydenko to exaggerate the significance of the diplomatic game of the Crimeans, however, without any intent. The contradictions between the hostile actions of Devlet Giray II and his promises to submit to the "white king" should not surprise us, just as they did not surprise contemporaries. With the help of the "bait" that the khan "threw" through Davydenko, he apparently tried to draw Russia into negotiations and return Russian-Crimean relations to the state of 1681. The connection between the khan's proposal and his desire to start negotiations with the Russians is most obvious from his conversations that same summer with Lieutenant Colonel Pitz of the Dragoon Grenadier Regiment of the Russian Service, who was looking for his wife and children captured by the Crimeans in Bendery. Devlet-Giray, being sure that his words would be passed on as intended, "reprimanded" Pitz for the tsar's refusal to negotiate with the Crimea and pointed out that Russia should first of all conclude a peace treaty with him as with a sovereign sovereign, "who can convert wherever he wants" , and that the Tatars are "wavey people, wherever they want, there are werewolves" 57.
Russian-Crimean secret contacts produced one positive result: they worsened relations between the Swedes and the Tatars. From September 1712 the Russian ambassadors in Istanbul warned the sovereign of the inevitability of a new war if he did not withdraw his troops from Poland. Indeed, on November 3, 1712, Ahmed III declared war for the third time in order to achieve the maximum possible concessions from the Russian ambassadors. The Turkish plan pursued the same goal - to "throw" the Swedish king with Poles and Cossacks into Poland, if possible without Turkish escort. By that time, the Swedes had intercepted part of Devlet Giray II's dispatches to Sheremetev and the Saxon minister Ya.G. Flemming, from which Charles XII learned that his head was a bet in the game not only for the khan. Former great Lithuanian hetman Ya.K. Sapieha agreed with the Crimean ruler to extradite the "northern lion" to the great crown hetman A.N. Senyavsky during the passage of Charles XII through Poland and receive an amnesty for this from the Polish king. Khan, if successful, could conclude an alliance with Augustus II, which would have an anti-Russian orientation 58. Charles XII refused to go on a winter campaign in 1712/13 to Poland and, after a fight with the soldiers of Devlet Giray II and the Janissaries, was exiled to Thrace. In March 1713 Ahmed III sent 30,000 Tatar cavalry to Ukraine, which reached Kyiv. In the Left-Bank Ukraine, the son of Devlet-Girey II with 5 thousand Nogais of the Kuban Horde, Nekrasovites and 8 thousand Cossacks ravaged villages and churches in several districts of the Voronezh province.
It is understandable, therefore, for the irritation of the Russian government against Davydenko; On January 26, 1714, he was arrested in Moscow, in Embassy order, and exiled for two years to the Prilutsky monastery in Vologda. On December 8, 1715, Golovkin ordered the Kyiv governor D. M. Golitsyn to send Davydenko abroad through Kyiv, giving him 50 rubles, "not listening to any of his lies, and henceforth, if he comes to Kyiv, and therefore expel him, because Your excellency knows about him, what a most stray person he is" 59.
Increased potential new Russia, on the one hand, and the infringement of the autonomous rights of the Crimea by the Ottomans, on the other, forced the khans, who more than once found themselves in a critical situation, to consider the possibility of transferring to Russian citizenship. Requests of Nureddin Gazi-Girey in 1701 and Devlet-Girey in 1702-1703. can be compared with similar appeals of Moldavian and Wallachian rulers, Georgian kings, Balkan and Caucasian peoples to sovereigns in the XVII-XVIII centuries. But the real possibility of a Russian protectorate over the Crimea under Peter the Great was small. Under him, Russia had not yet accumulated that great power experience that allowed Catherine II to annex the "independent" Crimea (and Eastern Georgia) in 1783 with relative ease.
The most difficult Northern War made it necessary to take care of maintaining peace with the Ottoman Empire, and in Russian politics the topic of changing the khan's vassalage, as a rule, if discussed, then dully. Crimea had to be abandoned, as well as Azov in 1637. In addition, the events on the Russian borders - the uprising on the Don, the betrayal of Mazepa, the separation of the Zaporozhian Sich in 1709, the registration of the transfer of Mazepa's heir (Ukrainian hetman F. Orlyk) under the protectorate of Crimea in 1710, the Ottoman-Crimean victory on the Prut showed the Tatars that the Russian-Turkish confrontation was not yet over. Therefore, the Crimean proposals regarding the submission to Peter the Great in 1711-1712. were rather a sounding of Russian politics. In addition, the rulers of Bakhchisaray foresaw that after the transition to Russia, enrichment by robbery and the sale of Ukrainian slaves would become impossible. Therefore, it can hardly be assumed that the diplomatic game of the khans with Russia had wide support in the Crimea. The policy of the feudal elites of the Crimea remained mainly anti-Russian, and in 1711-1713 Russian diplomacy barely managed to "fight off" the resumption of the annual "tribute to security", which was terminated in 1685. Nevertheless, the Nogai and Crimean feudal lords began talking about switching sides northern neighbor at the moments of the "tide" of Russian power to the south. So it was after the Azov campaigns in 1701-1702, during the Prut campaign and during the campaigns of Munnich against Khotyn and Iasi in 1739. From the second half of the 18th century. the Crimeans realized that rounding up East Slavic slaves was not only risky, but also almost impossible. The semi-nomadic population of Crimea began to settle on the ground when the military superiority Russian Empire over Turkey became apparent. In 1771, 60 years after the manifesto of Peter the Great to the Nogais and Tatars, when the second Russian army of Major General V. M. Dolgorukov-Krymsky firmly occupied the most important settlements Crimea, the feudal lords of the khanate swore an oath of entry "into an inseparable alliance under the highest patronage" of Catherine I. Following ten years of "independence" (1774-1783), on April 9, 1783, the last of the "Tatar kingdoms" was included in Russia. The Romanov Empire finally acquired the legacy of Genghis Khan in Northern Eurasia.
The Russian State Archive of Ancient Acts (RGADA) contains a handwritten undated note-instruction of Peter I, indicating his consent to accept the Crimean Khan Devlet-Girey II (ruled in 1699-1702, 1708-1713) under the Russian protectorate.
That he (Captain Moldavian Alexander Davydenko) before this proposed about the case of the Crimean Khan and then they did not accept for the fact that there was peace, and did not want to give reasons for war.
And now, when the Turks do not want to be satisfied with anything, but immediately declared war on one malice, then we, in our truth, hoping for God in this war, and for this we are glad to accept the khan and fulfill his wishes,
Why would he, without wasting time, send a man of his own with full power to Field Marshal Sheremetev, who also sends a full power from the Tsar's Majesty for interpretation, without describing himself to the Tsar's Majesty, so as not to lose time in those slips.
On the letter it was not given to him so that he would not fall into enemy hands. And in order for the khan to believe that he was with the royal majesty, a pass was given to him behind the state seal.
There is nothing the khan can show loyalty to (Further crossed out: and friendship) and pleasantness to the royal majesty, as by taking away the Swedish guard, which will also benefit him, for when the king is in his hands, then we will be free from the Swedish side and We will help Khan with all our might. And in addition, for this we promise the khan (Further crossed out: you. Perhaps it was supposed to be written: a thousand) two thousand sacks (A bag (kes) is a unit of monetary measurement equal to 500 levkas. 1 levok was then 45 kopecks).
If the Karol cannot bring, then at least they would burn the stores, which from the Danube to Bendery and in other places find a worker.
Under the text: These points are taken out of the case of the Volosha resident Alexander Davydenka, who was sent from Moscow under arrest to Vologda to keep the evo tamo in a decent monastery, 1714.
RGADA, Genuine royal letters Op. 2. T. 9. L. 112-113. Handwritten copy. There. L. 114-115
The text is reproduced from the publication: Negotiations on the transfer of the Crimean Khanate to Russian citizenship under Peter the Great // Slavs and their neighbors, Vol. 10. M. Science. 2001
** There is evidence that Peter I visited the Crimean land, in Kerch.
*Vyacheslav Zarubin, Deputy Chairman of the Republican Committee for Protection of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea cultural heritage. 2013
Golitsin campaigns In 1683, the Turkish Sultan Mehmed IV undertook a major campaign against Austria. In July 1683, his troops laid siege to Vienna. The city was on the verge of destruction, but it was saved by the appearance of the army of the Polish king Jan Sobieski. On September 1, 1683, the Turks were utterly defeated near Vienna.
In 1684, Venice entered the war with Turkey. In the same year, Austrian troops occupied most Croatia, which soon became an Austrian province. In 1686, after a century and a half of Turkish domination, the city of Buda was taken by the Austrians and again became a Hungarian city. The Venetians, with the help of the Knights of Malta, captured the island of Chios.
The Muscovite state could not miss such an opportunity to punish the Crimean Khan. By order of Princess Sophia (formally - on behalf of the young Peter and his brother, the feeble-minded Ivan), in the fall of 1686, preparations began for a campaign in the Crimea.
Back in 1682, the royal envoy Tarakanov let know from the Crimea that Khan Murad Giray, in order to receive gifts, ordered to seize him, bring him to his stable, “beat him with a butt, lead to fire and frighten with all sorts of torments.” Tarakanov said that he would not give anything extra in excess of the previous tribute. They let him go to the camp on the Alma River, having previously robbed him completely. Therefore, the ruler Sophia ordered to announce to the khan that he would no longer see the Moscow envoys in the Crimea, that negotiations were needed, and the gifts would now be accepted abroad.
In the autumn of 1686, the Moscow government addressed the troops with a letter stating that the campaign was being undertaken to rid the Russian land of unbearable insults and humiliation. From nowhere the Tatars do not take away so many prisoners as from it; they sell Christians like cattle; swear at the Orthodox faith. But even this is not enough. The Russian kingdom pays an annual tribute to the Tatars, for which it suffers shame and reproach from neighboring states, but still does not protect its borders with this tribute. Khan takes money and dishonors Russian messengers, ruins Russian cities. From the Turkish sultan there is no justice for him.
At the head of the 100,000th army, the Governor of Novgorod, Prince Vasily Vasilyevich Golitsyn, set out on a campaign of "a large regiment of the yard governor, the royal great press and the state's great embassy affairs."
Princess Sophia attached great importance to the Crimean campaign. Vasily Vasilyevich Golitsyn was her lover, and his success in the Crimea significantly increased Sophia's potential in the struggle for power with Peter's supporters. Together with the Russian troops, the Ukrainian Cossacks under the command of Hetman Ivan Samoylovich were to take part in the campaign.
Only at the beginning of 1687, the Golitsyn army moved south past Poltava, through Kolomak, the Orel and Samara rivers to Horse Waters. The army moved extremely slowly, with great precautions, although there was not even a rumor about the Tatars.
During the campaign, all the troops were concentrated in one huge mass, which had the shape of a quadrangle, more than a verst along the front and 2 versts in depth. In the middle there was infantry, on the sides - a convoy (20 thousand wagons), next to the convoy - artillery, covered by cavalry, which was responsible for reconnaissance and security. The vanguard of five streltsy and two soldier (Gordon and Shepelev) regiments was advanced forward.
On the Samara River, 50,000 Little Russian Cossacks of Hetman Samoylovich joined the army.
Only five weeks later, the army reached the Horse Waters River, having covered 300 versts during this time. But Golitsyn reported to Moscow that he was going "to the Crimea with great haste."
On June 13, the army crossed the Horse Waters, beyond which the steppe had already begun, and camped in the Bolshoy Lug tract, not far from the Dnieper. Here it suddenly became clear that the steppe was burning on a huge area - clouds of black smoke were rushing from the south, poisoning the air with an unbearable stench. Then Golitsyn gathered senior military leaders for advice. After much deliberation, the campaign was decided to continue.
On June 14, the army set out from Bolshoy Lug, but in two days they covered no more than 12 miles: the steppe was smoking, there was no grass and no water. People and horses barely moved. There were many sick people in the army. In this state, the troops reached the dry river Yanchokrak.
Fortunately, on June 16, heavy rain began, Yanchokrak filled with water and overflowed its banks. The governors, having ordered to build bridges, transferred the army to the other side in the hope that the downpour revived the steppe. But these expectations were not justified; instead of grass, the steppe was covered with heaps of ash.
Having made another transition, Golitsyn again, on June 17, gathered a council. There were at least 200 versts of the way to the Crimea. The army, however, has not yet met a single Tatar, but the horses, exhausted by starvation, could not drag cannons, and people risked dying of hunger. At the council, it was decided to return to the borders of Russia and wait there for the royal decree, and to cover the retreat from the attack of the Tatars, to detach 20 thousand Moscow troops and the same number of Little Russian Cossacks to the lower reaches of the Dnieper.
On June 18, the main forces hastily moved back along the same road, leaving the carts far behind them. On June 19, Golitsyn sent a report to Moscow, where he named the fire in the steppe and the lack of horse food as the main reason for the failure.
The Tatars had previously constantly set fire to the steppe at the approach of the enemy. But then the Little Russian enemies of Samoilovich filed a denunciation to Golitsyn that the arson of the steppe was committed by the Cossacks on the orders of Samoilovich. The prince and his governors also had to find someone to blame. The prince tipped off Sophia, and two weeks later Samoylovich was deprived of the hetman's mace.
On July 25, 1687, a Rada was held on the Kolomak River, at which hetman Ivan Stepanovich Mazepa was elected “with the free votes of the Little Russian Cossacks and the general foreman.” His election as hetman was greatly facilitated by Prince V.V. Golitsyn.
Prince Golitsyn began his second campaign in Crimea in February 1689. Golitsyn planned to come to the Crimea in early spring in order to avoid steppe fires and summer heat. Troops gathered in Sumy, Rylsk, on Oboyan, in Mezherechy and in Chuguev. In total, 112 thousand people gathered, not counting the Little Russian Cossacks, who, as in the first campaign, were supposed to join on the Samara River. The army included 80 thousand troops of the "German system" (reiter and soldiers) and 32 thousand "Russian system", with 350 guns. Almost all regiments were commanded by foreigners, among them Gordon and Lefort.
In early March, V.V. arrived at the Big Regiment in Sumy. Golitsyn. Gordon suggested that the commander-in-chief move closer to the Dnieper and build small fortifications every 4 crossings, which was supposed to instill fear in the Tatars and provide rear. Gordon also recommended taking wall-beating guns and assault ladders with you, as well as building boats on the Dnieper to capture Kizikermen and other Tatar fortifications.
But Golitsyn ignored Gordon's proposals and hurried to go on a campaign in order to have time to avoid the steppe fires. The troops set out on 17 March. The first days there was a terrible cold, and then a thaw suddenly came. All this hampered the movement of the army. The rivers flooded, and the troops crossed the Vorskla, Merlo and Drel rivers with great difficulty.
On the Orel River, the rest of the army joined the Bolshoi Regiment, and on Samara, Mazepa and his Cossacks. On April 24, the army with a two-month supply of food stretched along the left bank of the Dnieper through Horse Waters, Yanchok-rak, Moskovka and Belozerka to Koirka.
The troops marched from Samara with great caution, sending cavalry detachments forward for reconnaissance. The order of movement, in general, was the same as in 1687, that is, extremely cumbersome and conducive to extreme slowness.
Having reached the Koirka River, Golitsyn sent a detachment of two thousand men to Aslan-Kirmen, and he himself moved east into the steppe, towards Perekop. On May 14, the detachment sent to Aslan-Kirmen returned without reaching the fortress.
On May 15, during the transition of the army to the Black Valley along the Ki-zikermen road, significant forces of the Tatars appeared. It was the army of Nureddin-Kalga, the son of the Khan. A skirmish ensued in the vanguard, during which both sides suffered minor losses. After that, the Tatars withdrew, and Russian army entered the Black Valley.
The next day, the Tatars attacked again, rapidly attacking the rear of the army. The rear regiments hesitated, horsemen and footmen rushed into the Wagenburg, but the strong artillery fire stopped the Tatars. Having suffered heavy losses here, the Tatars rushed to the left flank and badly battered the Sumy and Akhtyrsky regiments of the Ukrainian Cossacks. But even here the artillery stopped the Tatars. Seeing the impotence of their cavalry against the Tatars, the governors placed it behind the infantry and artillery, inside the Wagenburg.
On the morning of May 17, the Tatars appeared again, but seeing everywhere infantry regiments, did not dare to attack them and fled. The total number of casualties in the Russian army during these days amounted to about 1220 people. Golitsyn's report on the three-day battle, on the brutal attacks of the enemy and on the brilliant victories was hastily sent to Moscow.
The army made two more crossings and on May 20 approached Perekop, a weakly fortified town. Ahead of Perekop stood the khan himself with a 50,000-strong army. Connecting with his son, he surrounded and attacked Golitsyn from all sides. Having driven off the Tatars with artillery fire, Golitsyn approached Perekop for a cannon shot and wanted to attack him at night.
But it was then that the indecision of the incapable Golitsyn was revealed. Had he decided at once, as he himself had planned, to attack, the victory might still have gone to him. The army had been without water for two days already, there was a lack of bread in the units, the horses were dead; a few more days, and the guns and the convoy would have to be abandoned. Preparing for the assault, all the governors, when asked what to do, answered: “We are ready to serve and shed our blood. Only from lack of water and lack of bread we were exhausted, it was impossible to trade near Perekop, and we would have to retreat away.
As a result, the weak-willed Golitsyn did not dare to storm the Perekop fortifications, but instead entered into negotiations with the Tatars. He flattered himself with the hope that the khan, fearing an invasion of the Crimea, would agree to favorable conditions for Russia: not to go to war with Ukrainian cities and Poland; do not take tribute and release all Russian captives without exchange. Khan deliberately dragged out the negotiations, knowing that the Russian army would not be able to stand near Perekop for a long time. Finally, on May 21, an answer came from the khan. He agreed to peace only on the same grounds and demanded 200,000 rubles of lost tribute. Golitsyn had no choice but to start a retreat. The Russian army retreated in very difficult conditions, fires raged throughout the steppe. Gordon, who commanded the rear guard, later wrote: “Our army was in great danger. Her position would have been even more difficult if the khan had taken it into his head to pursue with all his might. Fortunately, he had fewer troops than we imagined." However, this did not stop the Tatars from pursuing the Russians for 8 whole days, giving no rest day or night. On June 29, the devious Narbekov arrived at the bank of the Merlo River with the king’s gracious word and with the order to disband the people at home. “For such a glorious victory in the whole world, we favor you graciously and mercifully, and we graciously praise you again,” Sophia ended her handwritten letter to Golitsyn. Upon her return from the campaign, she showered rich awards on her favorite, governor, officers and lower ranks. Azov campaigns
1695 and 1696 - Russian military campaigns against the Ottoman Empire; were undertaken by Peter I at the beginning of his reign and ended with the capture of the Turkish fortress of Azov. They can be considered the first significant accomplishment of the young king. These military companies were the first step towards solving one of the main tasks facing Russia at that time - obtaining access to the sea.
The choice of the southern direction as the first goal is due to several main reasons:
the war with the Ottoman Empire seemed an easier task than the conflict with Sweden, which closes access to the Baltic Sea.
the capture of Azov would have made it possible to secure the southern regions of the country from the raids of the Crimean Tatars.
Russia's allies in the anti-Turkish coalition (the Commonwealth, Austria and Venice) demanded that Peter I begin military operations against Turkey.
The first Azov campaign of 1695
It was decided to strike not at the Crimean Tatars, as in the campaigns of Golitsyn, but at the Turkish fortress of Azov. The route has also been changed: not through the desert steppes, but along the Volga and Don regions.
In the winter and spring of 1695, transport ships were built on the Don: plows, sea boats and rafts to deliver troops, ammunition, artillery and food from the deployment to Azov. This can be considered the beginning, albeit imperfect for solving military problems at sea, but - the first Russian fleet.
In the spring of 1695, the 3rd army groups under the command of Golovin, Gordon and Lefort moved south. During the campaign, Peter combined the duties of the first scorer and the actual leader of the entire campaign.
The Russian army conquered two fortresses from the Turks, and at the end of June laid siege to Azov (a fortress at the mouth of the Don). Gordon stood against the south side, Lefort to his left, Golovin, with whose detachment the tsar was also located, to the right. On July 2, troops under the command of Gordon began siege work. On July 5, the corps of Golovin and Lefort joined them. On July 14 and 16, the Russians managed to occupy the towers - two stone towers on both banks of the Don, above Azov, with iron chains stretched between them, which blocked river vessels from entering the sea. This was in fact the highest success of the campaign. Two attempts were made to storm (August 5 and September 25), but the fortress could not be taken. On October 20, the siege was lifted.
Second Azov campaign of 1696
Throughout the winter of 1696, the Russian army was preparing for the second campaign. In January, large-scale shipbuilding was launched at the shipyards of Voronezh and Preobrazhensky. The disassembled galleys built in Preobrazhensky were delivered to Voronezh, where they were assembled and launched into the water. In addition, engineering specialists were invited from Austria. Over 25 thousand peasants and townspeople were mobilized from the nearest district for the construction of the fleet. 2 large ships, 23 galleys and more than 1300 plows, barges and small ships were built.
The command of the troops was also reorganized. Lefort was placed at the head of the fleet, the ground forces were entrusted to the boyar Shein.
The highest decree was issued, according to which the serfs who joined the army received freedom. The land army doubled in size, reaching 70,000 men. It also included Ukrainian and Don Cossacks and Kalmyk cavalry.
On May 20, Cossacks in galleys at the mouth of the Don attacked a caravan of Turkish cargo ships. As a result, 2 galleys and 9 small ships were destroyed, and one small ship was captured. On May 27, the fleet entered the Sea of Azov and cut off the fortress from sources of supply by sea. The approaching Turkish military flotilla did not dare to join the battle.
On June 10 and June 24, attacks by the Turkish garrison were repulsed, reinforced by 60,000 Tatars camped south of Azov, across the Kagalnik River.
On July 16, the preparatory siege work was completed. On July 17, 1,500 Don Cossacks and part of the Ukrainian Cossacks broke into the fortress without permission and settled in two bastions. On July 19, after prolonged artillery shelling, the Azov garrison surrendered. On July 20, the Lyutikh fortress, located at the mouth of the northernmost branch of the Don, also surrendered.
Already by July 23, Peter approved a plan for new fortifications in the fortress, which by this time had been badly damaged as a result of artillery shelling. Azov did not have a convenient harbor for basing the navy. For this purpose, more than good place- On July 27, 1696, Taganrog was founded. Voivode Shein became the first Russian generalissimo for his services in the second Azov campaign.
The value of the Azov campaigns
The Azov campaign demonstrated in practice the importance of artillery and navy for warfare. It is a notable example of the successful interaction of the fleet and ground forces during the siege of a seaside fortress, which stands out especially brightly against the background of the failures of the British in the storming of Quebec (1691) and St. Pierre (1693) close in time.
The preparation of campaigns clearly showed Peter's organizational and strategic abilities. For the first time, such important qualities as his ability to draw conclusions from failures and gather strength for a second strike appeared.
Despite the success, at the end of the campaign, the incompleteness of the results achieved became obvious: without the capture of the Crimea, or at least Kerch, access to the Black Sea was still impossible. To hold Azov, it was necessary to strengthen the fleet. It was necessary to continue the construction of the fleet and provide the country with specialists capable of building modern sea vessels.
On October 20, 1696, the Boyar Duma proclaims "Sea ships will be ..." This date can be considered the birthday of the Russian regular navy. An extensive shipbuilding program is approved - 52 (later 77) ships; new duties are introduced to finance it.
The war with Turkey is not over yet, and therefore, in order to better understand the balance of power, find allies in the war against Turkey and confirm the existing alliance - the Holy League, finally, to strengthen the position of Russia, the "Great Embassy" was organized.
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Books
- The Regency of Princess Sofya Alekseevna, Lavrov Alexander Sergeevich, The book by A. S. Lavrov (Paris-Sorbonne University) tells about the turning point in Russian history - the reign of Princess Sofya Alekseevna (1682-1689), who pushed her younger ones out of power ... Category: History of Russia before 1917 Series: World History Library Publisher: Science,
- Regency of Princess Sophia Alekseevna, Lavrov Alexander Sergeevich, In the book of A.S. Lavrova (University of Paris-Sorbonne) tells about the turning point in Russian history - the reign of Princess Sofya Alekseevna (1682-1689), who pushed her younger ones out of power ... Category: Russia in the era of the Romanovs. 17th century Series: Publisher:
| AT period XVII century. Russian-Turkish war (1686-1700)
Russian-Turkish war (1686-1700)
In 1686, Russia joined the coalition of Austria, Poland and Venice, which fought against the Ottoman Empire, and in 1687 and 1689 the Russian army under the command of Prince Vasily Golitsyn made two unsuccessful campaigns in the Crimea, which failed due to the impossibility of supplying a large army in a deserted and waterless steppe.
More successful were the campaigns of Tsar Peter I near Azov in 1695-1696. As a result of the second campaign, with the help of a fleet specially built for this purpose, it was possible to take this strong Turkish fortress, capturing its garrison. According to the Treaty of Constantinople, concluded in July 1700, Azov with the adjacent lands, on which the Taganrog fortress was built by order of Peter, passed to Russia.
The next military clash between Russia and Turkey took place already in 1710, when, under the influence of the Swedish king Charles XII, who ended up in Turkish Bendery after the defeat near Poltava, the sultan began a war with Russia. Peter I overestimated his strength and, having concluded an alliance with the Moldavian ruler Dmitry Cantemir in April 1711, he headed for the Prut at the head of an army of 40,000. The Russian tsar counted on the uprising of all the Christian subjects of the Ottoman Empire and the help of the ruler of Moldavia, Cantemir, and the ruler of Wallachia, Brynkovyan. However, when on July 5, 1711, the Russian army reached the Prut, here it was met by Kantemir, expelled from his principality, with a small army. The Wallachian ruler did not render any help to the Russians at all.
Crimean campaigns of 1687 and 1689
As part of the coalition, Russia was entrusted with the fight against the Crimean Khanate. The first campaign against the Crimea took place in May 1687. It was attended by Russian-Ukrainian troops under the command of Prince Vasily Golitsyn and Hetman Ivan Samoylovich. The total number of troops that marched reached 100 thousand people. The Russian army more than half consisted of regiments of the new order. However military power allies, sufficient to defeat the khanate, was powerless before nature. The troops had to march tens of kilometers through the deserted steppe, scorched by the sun, malarial swamps and salt marshes, where there was not a drop of fresh water. In such conditions, the issues of supplying the army and a detailed study of the specifics of a given theater of operations came to the fore. Golitsyn's insufficient study of these problems ultimately predetermined the failure of his campaigns.
As they deepened into the steppe, people and horses began to feel a lack of food and fodder. Having reached the Big Log tract on July 13, the Allied troops faced a new disaster - steppe fires. Unable to fight the heat and the soot covering the sun, the weakened troops literally fell off their feet. Finally, Golitsyn, seeing that his army could die before meeting the enemy, ordered to return back. The result of the first campaign was a series of raids of the Crimean troops on Ukraine, as well as the displacement of Hetman Samoylovich. According to some participants in the campaign (for example, General P. Gordon), the hetman himself initiated the burning of the steppe, because he did not want the defeat of the Crimean Khan, who served as a counterweight to Moscow in the south. The Cossacks elected Mazepa as the new hetman.
The second campaign began in February 1689. This time, Golitsyn, taught by bitter experience, set out for the steppe on the eve of spring, so as not to have a shortage of water and grass and not be afraid of steppe fires. An army of 112 thousand people was assembled for the campaign. Such a huge mass of people reduced the speed of movement. As a result, the campaign to Perekop lasted almost three months, and the troops approached the Crimea on the eve of a hot summer.
In mid-May, Golitsyn met with the Crimean troops. After volleys of Russian artillery, the swift attack of the Crimean cavalry bogged down and never resumed. Having beaten off the onslaught of the Khan, on May 20 Golitsyn approached the Perekop fortifications. But the governor did not dare to storm them. He was frightened not so much by the power of the fortifications as by the same sun-scorched steppe lying behind Perekop. It turned out that, having crossed the narrow isthmus to the Crimea, a huge army could find itself in an even more terrible waterless trap.
Hoping to intimidate the Khan, Golitsyn began negotiations. But the owner of the Crimea began to drag them out, waiting for hunger and thirst to force the Russians to go home. After standing unsuccessfully for several days at the Perekop walls and left without fresh water, Golitsyn was forced to hastily turn back. Further standing could end in disaster for his army. The Russian army was saved from a larger failure by the fact that the Crimean cavalry did not particularly pursue the retreating.
The results of both campaigns were negligible in comparison with the costs of their implementation. Of course, they made a certain contribution to the common cause, since they diverted the Crimean cavalry from other theaters of military operations. But these campaigns could not decide the outcome of the Russian-Crimean struggle. At the same time, they testified to a fundamental change in forces in the southern direction. If a hundred years ago the Crimean detachments reached Moscow, now the Russian troops have already come close to the walls of the Crimea. Much more Crimean campaigns influenced the situation inside the country. Their unsuccessful outcome contributed to the fall of the government of Princess Sophia.
Azov campaigns of 1695-1696
After the Crimean campaigns and the overthrow of Sophia in Russian-Turkish war a six-year lull ensued, during which Russia was actually ruled by the mother of Peter I, Natalya Kirillovna Naryshkina. After her death in 1694, Peter, who led the country, resumes active fighting. The aim of the new campaign is the Turkish fortress of Azov at the mouth of the Don. The change in the direction of the main blow was due to a number of reasons.
The unsuccessful experience of Golitsyn's campaigns predetermined the choice of a more modest goal. The object of the onslaught was now not the center of the khanate, but its eastern flank, the starting point of the Crimean-Turkish aggression towards the Volga region and Moscow. With the capture of Azov, the land connection between the possessions of the Crimean Khanate in the Northern Black Sea region and the North Caucasus was broken. Owning this fortress, the tsar strengthened control not only over the khanate, but also over the Don Cossacks. In addition, Azov opened Russia's access to the Sea of Azov. The relative convenience of communication also played an important role in the choice of the object of the campaign. Unlike the path to Perekop, the path to Azov ran along the rivers - the Don and the Volga - and through a fairly populated area. This freed the troops from unnecessary carts and long marches across the sultry steppe.
The first Azov campaign began in March 1695. Main blow Azov was attacked by an army commanded by Generals Avton Golovin, Franz Lefort and Patrick Gordon (31 thousand people). In this army, the tsar himself was in the position of commander of the bombardment company. Another less significant grouping, led by Boris Sheremetev, operated in the lower reaches of the Dnieper to divert the troops of the Crimean Khan.
Azov was a strong Turkish fortress, surrounded by stone walls, in front of which an earthen rampart towered. Then followed a moat with a wooden palisade. Upstream of the river there were two stone towers on different banks, between which three iron chains were stretched. They blocked the way along the river. The fortress was defended by a 7,000-strong Turkish garrison.
In July 1695, all Russian detachments finally gathered under the walls of Azov and on the 8th began shelling the fortress. On one of the batteries, scorer Pyotr Alekseev himself filled the fans and fired around the city for two weeks. This is how it started military service tsar, about which he reported with a note: "He began to serve as a bombardier from the first Azov campaign."
It was not possible to achieve a complete blockade of the fortress. The lack of a Russian fleet allowed the besieged to receive support from the sea. The delivery of food to the Russian camp along the river was hindered by watchtowers with chains. They were taken by storm. But this was, perhaps, the only success of the first Azov campaign. Both assaults on Azov (August 5 and September 25) ended in failure. Artillery was not able to punch holes in the fortress wall. The stormers acted inconsistently, which allowed the Turks to regroup their forces in time to repulse. In October the siege was lifted and the troops returned to Moscow. The only trophy of the campaign was a captured Turk, who was led through the streets of the capital and shown to the curious. Sheremetev acted more successfully in the lower reaches of the Dnieper, who captured a number of Turkish towns (Islam-Ker-men, Tagan and others).
After the failure of the first Azov campaign, the king did not lose heart. Peter discovered in himself remarkable strength to overcome obstacles. Returning from the campaign, he began to prepare for a new campaign. It was supposed to use the fleet. The place of its creation was Voronezh. The king himself worked here with an ax in his hands. By the spring of 1696, 2 ships, 23 galleys, 4 firewalls, as well as a significant number of plows were built, on which Peter set out on a new campaign in the spring of 1696.
In the second Azov campaign, the number of Russian forces, led by the governor Alexei Shein, was brought to 75 thousand people. To divert the troops of the Crimean Khan, the Sheremetev group was again sent to the lower reaches of the Dnieper. As a result of joint actions of the army and navy, Azov was completely blocked. The attacks of the Crimean troops, who tried to prevent the siege, were repulsed. The onslaught from the sea was also reflected. On June 14, 1696, the Cossack planes attacked the Turkish squadron with a 4,000-strong landing force that entered the mouth of the Don. Having lost two ships, the squadron went to sea. Behind her, the Russian squadron entered the sea for the first time.
The attempt of the Turks to break through to Azov was unsuccessful, and their ships left the combat area. After the naval victory, the assault Cossack detachments under the command of chieftains Yakov Lizogub and Frol Minaev (2 thousand people) went on the attack. They were knocked out of the inner fortifications, but managed to gain a foothold on the rampart, from where a direct shelling of the fortress began. After that, Peter ordered all the troops to prepare for a general assault. However, it did not follow. Deprived of support, the garrison threw out the white flag and surrendered on July 19, 1696.
The capture of Azov was Russia's first major victory over the Ottoman Empire. In honor of this victory, a medal with the image of Peter was knocked out. The inscription on it read: "Winner with lightning and waters." For successful actions in the second Azov campaign, governor Aleksey Shein was the first in Russia to receive the rank of generalissimo.
The consequences of the Azov campaigns for the history of Russia were enormous.
Firstly, they expanded the foreign policy plans of Peter. Access to the Sea of Azov did not solve the problem of Russia's access to the Black Sea, since the way there was reliably covered by Turkish fortresses in the Kerch Strait. To solve this problem, Peter organizes the Great Embassy in European countries. The tsar hoped with their help to oust the Turks from Europe and achieve Russia's access to the Black Sea coast.
Secondly, the experience of the Azov campaigns convincingly confirmed the need for further reorganization of the Russian armed forces. The Azov campaigns marked the beginning of the creation of the Russian fleet. From 1699, the recruitment of a new regular army began. Its distinctive feature was the lifelong service of conscripts (in the regiments of a foreign system, soldiers, after a military campaign, as a rule, went home).
The mission of the Great Embassy did not justify the hopes of Peter. In Europe in those years, the confrontation between France and Austria escalated, and no one sought a serious fight with Turkey. In 1699, at the Karlovitsky Congress, representatives of the countries of the "Holy League", with the exception of Russia, signed peace with the Ottoman Empire. A year later, Russia also concluded peace with Turkey. According to the Treaty of Constantinople in 1700, the Russians received Azov with adjacent lands and stopped the tradition of sending gifts to the Crimean Khan.
The collapse of the Black Sea hopes leads to the reorientation of Peter's foreign policy plans to the Baltic coast. Soon the Northern War began there, which became a turning point in the history of Russia.
According to the materials of the portal "Great wars in the history of Russia"