Kazakh–Nogai War (1508)
| Kazakh–Nogai War (1508) | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part of Kazakh–Nogai Wars | |||||||
| |||||||
| Belligerents | |||||||
| Kazakh Khanate | Nogai Horde | ||||||
| Commanders and leaders | |||||||
| Burunduk Khan | Alchagir | ||||||
The Kazakh–Nogai War (1508) was a military conlict between the Kazakh Khanate and the Nogai Horde.
In 1508, the Kazakhs occupied the Yaik River and took Saray-Jük. As V.V. Trepavlov suggests, the Kazakhs were marching in large numbers, "after all, the eastern Nogai outposts did not dare to repel the raid overnight and called reinforcements from the Volga. There is no mention in the archival materials whether there was a battle between the Nogais and the Kazakhs. It is only known that Alshagyr-Mirza returned to his camp in the spring of 1509 and fought against Sheikh-Muhammad. Perhaps these events were reflected in the well-known epic "Koblandy Batyr," where it is said that during one of his campaigns, Alshagyr, capturing the people of Koblandy Batyr, destroyed the city of Karaspan. According to S. Zholdasbayuly, this city was located on the left bank of the Syr Darya River.[1][2] In the following years, the Crimean campaigns were repeated, and many Nogai uluses were forced to acknowledge their dependence on Crimea.[3]
References
- ^ Atygaev, Nurlan (2023). The Kazakh Khanate: essays on the foreign policy history of the XV-XVII centuries [not in English] (in Russian). Almaty: Eurasian Scientific Research Institute of the Yasavi Moscow State Technical University. pp. 87–88. ISBN 978-601-7805-24-1.
- ^ Trepavlov, V. V. (2016). History of Nogai Horde (in Russian). Kazan: Publishing house "Kazan real estate". pp. 141–144. ISBN 978-5-9907552-5-3.
- ^ Isin, A. (2002). Restoration of Kazakh-Russian relations and relations between the Kazakh and Nogai states in the 70s of the 16th century (in Russian). Semipalatinsk: Tengri. p. 57. ISBN 9965492298.