| Crimean–Nogai slave raids in Eastern Europe | |||||||
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| Part of theOttoman wars in Europe and theRusso-Crimean Wars | |||||||
Painting by Polish artistJózef Brandt depictingZaporozhian Cossacks engaged in combat withCrimean Tatars,c. 1890 | |||||||
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Between 1441 and 1774, theCrimean Khanate and theNogai Horde conductedslave raids throughout lands primarily controlled byRussia[a] andPoland–Lithuania.[b] Concentrated inEastern Europe, but also stretching to theCaucasus and parts ofCentral Europe, these raids were often supported by theOttoman Empire and involved the transportation of European men, women, and children to theMuslim world, where they were put on the market and sold as part of theCrimean slave trade and theOttoman slave trade.[1] The regular abductions of people over the course of numerous incursions by theCrimeans and theNogais greatly drained Eastern Europe's human and economic resources, consequently playing an important role in the emergence of the semi-militarizedCossacks, who organizedretaliatory campaigns against the raiders and their Ottoman backers.[2][3][4][5]
Trading posts inCrimea had previously been established by theGenoese and theVenetians to facilitate earlierWestern European slave routes. The Crimean–Nogai raids largely targeted the "Wild Fields" of thePontic–Caspian steppe, which extends about 800 kilometres (500 mi) north of theBlack Sea and which now contains the majority of the combined population ofsoutheastern Ukraine andsouthwestern Russia.
Figures for the total number of Europeans affected by the raids vary: Polish historian Bohdan Baranowski estimated that thePolish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (modern-dayPoland,Lithuania,Latvia,Estonia,Ukraine, andBelarus) lost an average of 20,000 people yearly and as many as one million people from 1474 to 1694.[6] Ukrainian-American historian Mikhail Khodarkhovsky estimates that 150,000 to 200,000 people were abducted from Russian-controlled lands in the first half of the 17th century.[7]
The first major raid occurred in 1468 and was directed atsoutheastern Poland.[1] In 1769,Tatars conducted one last significant raid and captured 20,000 slaves during theRusso-Turkish War of 1768–1774, which ended with the Ottomans' cession of territory in what is nowsouthern Ukraine, followed by theCrimean Khanate's annexation by the Russian Empire in 1783.[8] That same year, Russia suppressed theKuban Nogai uprising, bringing an end to the slave raids and commencing the colonization of Crimean and Nogai lands.
Thesteppes of southern Eurasia are flat and most of its societies were either nomadic or semi-nomadic, even those based in urban centers, likeKazan,Crimea, andAstrakhan.
Given the mobility of nomadic nations, warfare and slave trade proved more lucrative than trade because of the wide-open terrain. Additionally, the decentralized and fractious powers that Russia encountered on its eastern andsouthern borders were organized for war, leaving East Slavic lands in a constant state of warfare with numerous potential invaders. Armed mainly with spears, bows, and sabres, raiders could travel for hundreds of miles across an open steppe landscape with no natural impediment like mountain ranges, attack villages with little warning, and then leave with captives. Traveling light and on horseback, the main concern of the Tatars was finding sufficient fodder for their horses. Sedentary farming societies, with or without a powerful army, were easy prey for the highly mobile raiders.[9]
Security on the steppe's wide-open terrain remained precarious and in ever-present danger. Even in the mid-18th century, with greater security at the southern frontier, Russian peasants there continued to farm their lands fully armed, often superficially indistinguishable fromCossacks.[10]
Most of the raids fell on territory of today's Russia and Ukraine – lands previously divided between the Grand Duchy of Moscow and the Duchy of Lithuania, although some fell onMoldavia andCircassia (North Caucasus).
The main economic goal of the raids was booty, some of it material, but most of it human.[11] These human trade goods were mostly sold on to the Ottoman Empire, although some remained in Crimea. Slaves and freedmen formed approximately 75% of the Crimean population.[12] According to the Encyclopædia Britannica, "It is known that for every slave the Crimeans sold in the market, they killed outright several other people during their raids, and a couple more died on the way to the slave market."[12] The main slave market wasCaffa which after 1475 was part of the coastal strip of Crimea that belonged to the Ottomans. In the 1570s close to 20,000 slaves a year went on sale in Caffa.[13]

The Crimean Khanate broke off from theGolden Horde in 1441. When the Horde came to an end in 1502, the buffer between Crimea and its northern neighbors disappeared. The Khans took advantage of the conflicts between Lithuania and Moscow, allying now with one, then with the other, and using the alliance with one as a justification to attack the other. During the Russo-Lithuanian War of 1500–1506 the Crimeans were allied with Russia and penetrated deep into Lithuania. Relations soon deteriorated. Near continuous raids on Muscovy began in 1507.[14][15]
Crimean KhanDevlet I Giray burnt down Moscow during the1571 campaign. Contemporaries counted up to 80,000 victims of theTatar invasion in 1571, with 150,000 Russians taken as captives.[16]Ivan the Terrible, having learnt that Crimean Khanate army was approaching Moscow, fled from Moscow toKolomna with hisoprichniks.[15]
After the burning of Moscow, Devlet Giray Khan, supported by theOttoman Empire, invaded Russia again in 1572. The combined force of Tatars and Turks, however, was defeated in theBattle of Molodi by the Russian army, led by Prince MikhailVorotynsky and Prince Dmitriy Khvorostinin.[17]
In 1620, Tatars took part in theBattle of Cecora, where they vastly contributed to the crushing victory of the Turks over thePoles-Lithuanians.[18] In 1672, KhanSelim I Giray was assigned to join Ottoman army during thePolish–Ottoman War (1672–76) in which he was successful in the conquest ofBar.[19]

At the beginning of this period, almost 700 miles of sparsely populated grassland – the so-called Wild Fields – separated the Crimean Khanate from the Duchy of Moscow. The Oka River, 40 miles south of Moscow, was the city's principal and northernmost line of defense, guarded by the Beregovaya Sluzhba ("river-bank service"). These guards remained in place there after the construction of the Belgorod Line far to the south. They rarely crossed the Oka in that direction, even when the southward fortresses suffered massive attacks.[20]
Three main routes, called trails, traversed the terrain between Muscovy and Crimea. To minimize the necessity of fording rivers, the trails generally followed the high ground between them.[c]
Caffa, which belonged to the Ottoman Empire after 1475, was Crimea's main slave market. Artillery and a strong garrison ofJanissaries protected the city. The Crimean towns ofKarasubazar,Tuzleri,Bakhchysarai andKhazleve also sold slaves. The slave dealers were Turks, Arabs, Greeks, Armenians and Jews, and both the Crimean khan and the Turkish pasha taxed them in exchange for that right. Caffa sometimes had as many as 30,000 slaves, most of whom came from Muscovy and the southeastern lands of thePolish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.Sigismund von Herberstein, who was a Habsburg diplomat and theHoly Roman Empire's ambassador to Muscovy, wrote that "old and infirmed men, who will not fetch much at a sale, are given up to the Tatar youths, either to be stoned, or to be thrown into the sea, or to be killed by any sort of death they might please."[21] In 1630, a Lithuanian namedMichalo Lituanus wrote:[22][21]
Among these unfortunates [Slavic slaves] there are many strong ones; if they [Tatars] have not castrated them yet, they cut off their ears and nostrils, burned cheeks and foreheads with the burning iron and forced them to work with their chains and shackles during the daylight, and sit in the prisons during the night; they are sustained by the meager food consisting of the dead animals’ meat, rotten, full of worms, which even a dog would not eat. The youngest women are kept for wanton pleasures.
Alan W. Fisher describes the fate of the slaves:[23]
"The first ordeal [of the captive] was the long march to the Crimea. Often in chains and always on foot, many of the captives died en route. Since on many occasions the Tatar raiding party feared reprisals or, in the seventeenth century, attempts by Cossack bands to free the captives, the marches were hurried. Ill or wounded captives were usually killed rather than be allowed to slow the procession. An Ottoman traveler in the mid-sixteenth century who witnessed one such march of captives from Galicia marveled that any would reach their destination—the slave markets of Kefe. He complained that their treatment was so bad that the mortality rate would unnecessarily drive their price up beyond the reach of potential buyers such as himself. A Polish proverb stated: “Oh how much better to lie on one's bier, than to be a captive on the way to Tartary.”
According to Ukrainian-Canadian historianOrest Subtelny, "from 1450 to 1586, eighty-six raids were recorded, and from 1600 to 1647, seventy. Although estimates of the number of captives taken in a single raid reached as high as 30,000, the average figure was closer to 3000...InPodilia alone, about one-third of all the villages were devastated or abandoned between 1578 and 1583."[2]
The human losses during the raids in Eastern Europe were significant. According to partial statistics and fragmentary estimates, nearly 2 million Russians, Ukrainians, and Poles were taken into slavery by the Crimean Tatars from 1468 to 1694.[24][unreliable source?] In the first half of the 17th century alone, an estimated 150 to 200 thousand people were taken into slavery from the territory of the Moscow State. These figures do not take into account those who were killed during the attacks.[25]
The largest captures of slaves occurred in theDnieper,Podolia,Volhynia, andGalicia regions, with more than a million people taken from these lands between 1500 and 1644.[26][page needed] During the second half of the 17th century, these regions saw numerous wars with Tatar participation, suggesting an extremely high number ofyasyr (captives) during this period. In 1676, for example, 40 thousand people were taken away inVolhynia,Podolia, andGalicia.[26][page needed] According to some estimates, the total amount of captives seized from territory ofPoland-Lithuania between 1500 and 1700 could’ve been 1 million; at least half of whom could have been ethnicPoles.[27]
After theAzov campaigns ofPeter I in the 18th century, the raids became smaller and were mostly carried out in theDnieper region, theAzov region, and the Don, by both theTatars and theCossacks in both directions.[28]The last major raid inHungary occurred in 1717.[29]