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Moskva i tatarskii mir: Sotrudnichestvo i protivostoianie v epokhu peremen, XV–XVI vv. By Bulat Raimovich Rakhimzianov. St. Petersburg: Izdatel΄stvo Evraziia, 2016. 396 pp. Appendixes. Notes. Bibliography. Chronology. Glossary. 659, hard bound.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2019

Mikhail Krom*
Affiliation:
European University at St. Petersburg
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Abstract

Type
Book Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies 2019 

A new book by Bulat R. Rakhimzianov continues on a larger scale his earlier research on Muscovite-Tatar relations and Tatar enclaves within the Muscovite realm, started with his 2009 monograph on the Kasimov Khanate (Kasimovskoe khanstvo [1445–1552 gg.]: Ocherkii istorii). In the Introduction, the author states his purpose, to reveal the involvement of Muscovy into the complex system of mutual relations between the “later Golden Horde states” (pozdnezolotoordynskie gosudarstva) in the fifteenth through sixteenth centuries (8–9). Drawing on abundant primary sources, mainly Moscow foreign office records (posol΄skie knigi), both archival and published, Rakhimzianov carefully explores various forms of Muscovite-Tatar cooperation in the period that followed after the disintegration of the Golden Horde.

The book under review consists of two chapters, a conclusion, select bibliography, and three appendices including a chronology of the main events in central Eurasia in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, a glossary, and biographical notes on the persons mentioned in the text. In the first chapter, the author examines the phenomenon of Tatar emigration to Muscovy, which took different forms, from a short stay (euphemistically called opochiv, literally “a rest”) to a permanent residence that led to the formation of specific Tatar enclaves, semi-autonomous principalities known as iurty. The Kasimov khanate, established in 1445, was the largest among them, but similar Tatar settlements, on the basis of the grand-princely grants, existed also in Romanov (on the Volga), Kashira, Zvenigorod, Serpukhov, and some other Russian towns.

The second chapter focuses upon the administrative status of the Tatar enclaves in the Muscovite realm and their role in maintaining contacts between Moscow, the Crimea, and the Noghay Horde. This section (and the whole book) ends up with enumerating the indicators of Muscovy's deep involvement in the steppe politics and of its long-lasting subordinate status vis-à-vis the Tatar world.

Rakhimzianov is to be commended for presenting a nuanced and colorful picture of Muscovite-Tatar relations in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, and he is certainly right to stress that contacts between Muscovy and the Tatar world had much more aspects than conventional historiographical accounts have tended to show (97). He goes too far, however, when he comes to the conclusion that Muscovy was “one of the later Golden Horde states,” although (he admits) “it differed from its Tatar partners and rivals in traditions of state organization and government, as well as in religion, culture, and ruling dynasty” (234). According to Rakhimzianov, what Muscovy had in common with the other later Golden Horde states was its real participation in the struggle for the legacy of the Horde, on par with Tatar polities.

I think the term “a later Golden Horde state,” when applied to Muscovy, is misleading. To begin with, the Muscovite rulers had never claimed the legacy of the Golden Horde. And if the only basis for using the term is an active role in steppe politics, then one can also apply it … to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania whose rulers hosted the former khans (like Tokhtamysh in the 1390s or Sheikh-Akhmed in the early sixteenth century), plotted with Crimea against Muscovy in the 1470s, sent “gifts” to the ruling khans and their courtiers, and so on.

Moreover, the term “a later Golden Horde state,” when attributed to Muscovy, is unhappy in yet another respect, as it blurs the difference between two types of state organization: khanates-successors to the Golden Horde, on the one hand, and the Muscovite state, on the other. The former preserved the clan-based structures of power and other archaic features of the steppe empire, while the latter in the second half of the fifteenth century had stepped on the path of early modern state building, with sovereignty claims, (proto)bureaucracy, and military innovation.

Still, in spite of some risky generalizations and vague terminology, Rakhimzianov's book is a valuable contribution to east European history, as it expands our knowledge of both Muscovy and the Tatar world in the period of their dramatic transformation.