The following is a list of Mongol and Tatar raids against Rus' principalities following the Mongol invasion:
Year | Raid |
1223 | Battle of the Kalka River |
1237–1242 | Mongol invasion of Rus' |
1252 | Nevruy's horde devastated Pereslavl-Zalessky and Suzdal. |
1258/1259 | Mongol attacks against Danylo of Halych, led by Burundai. |
1273 | Mongol twice attacked Novgorod territory, devastating Vologda and Bezhitsa. |
1274 | Mongols devastated Smolensk. |
1275 | Mongol invasion of south-eastern Rus', Kursk pillaged. |
1278 | Mongols pillaged the Ryazan Principality. |
1281 | The horde of Kovdygay and Alchiday sacked Murom and Pereslavl-Zalessky, ruined vicinities of Suzdal, Rostov, Vladimir, Yuryev-Polsky, Tver and Torzhok. |
1282 | Mongols attacked Vladimir and Pereslavl-Zalessky. |
1283 | Mongols sacked Vorgolsk, Rylsk, and Lipetsk, overrunning Kursk and Vorgol. |
1285 | The Mongol warlord Eltoray, the son of Temir, pillaged Ryazan and Murom. |
1293 | The Mongol warlord Dyuden came to Rus and pillaged fourteen towns, including Murom, Moscow, Kolomna, Vladimir, Suzdal, Yuriev-Polsky, Pereslavl-Zalessky, Mozhaysk, Volokolamsk, Dmitrov and Uglitch. During the same summer Takhtamir looted the Tver principality and took slaves in the Vladimir principality. |
1307 | Tatars pillaged the Ryazan principality. |
1315 | Tatars pillaged Torzhok in the Novgorod principality as well as Rostov |
1317 | Tatars devastated the Tver principality |
1318 | Tatars sacked Kostroma and Rostov |
1322 | Tatars devastated Yaroslavl |
1327 | The Golden Horde organised a punitive expedition to the Tver principality |
1358, 1365, 1373 | Tatars sacked the Ryazan principality |
1375 | Tatars attacked the southeastern suburb of Nizhniy Novgorod |
1377 and 1378 | Tatars attacked the Nizhniy Novgorod and Ryazan principalities |
1380 | Dmitri Donskoi defeated Tatars at Battle of Kulikovo |
1382 | Khan Tokhtamysh burns down Moscow, tens of thousands of its citizens died |
1391 | Tatars attacked Vyatka |
1399 | Tatars attacked Nizhniy Novgorod |
1408 | Tatars sacked Serpukhov, as well as the vicinities of Moscow, Pereyaslavl, Rostov, Yuriev, Dmitrov, Nizhni Novgorod and Galich |
1410 | Tatars ruined Vladimir |
1415 | Tatars devastated Elets |
1429 | Tatars looted the vicinities of Galich and Kostroma |
1439 | Tatar incursions into the vicinities of Moscow and Kolomna |
1443 | Tatars looted the outskirts of Ryazan, but were repelled from the city proper |
1445 | Tatars attacked Nizhni Novgorod and Suzdal |
1449, 1451, 1455, 1459 | Tatars looted the outskirts of Moscow |
1468 | Tatars looted the vicinities of Galich |
1472 | Tatars plundered Aleksin |
1480 | The Great stand on the Ugra river marks the end of the Tatar-Mongol yoke in Russia. |
History of Russia | |
---|---|
This article is part of a series |
|
Volga Bulgaria (7th–13th) | |
Khazar Khaganate (7th–10th) | |
Rus' Khaganate (8th–9th) | |
Novgorodian Rus' (862—882) | |
Kievan Rus' (9th–12th) | |
Vladimir-Suzdal (12th–14th) | |
Novgorod Republic (12th–15th) | |
Mongol invasion (1220s–1240s) | |
Tatar Yoke (13th–15th) | |
Grand Duchy of Moscow (1340–1547) | |
Tsardom of Russia (1547–1721) | |
Russian Empire (1721–1917) | |
Russian Provisional Government / Russian Republic (1917) | |
Russian SFSR / Soviet Union (1917–1991) | |
Russian Federation (1992–present) | |
Timeline | |
Russia Portal |