The Golden Horde: Mongol Rule Over Russia Explained — Fexingo History
In 1374, the city of Nizhny Novgorod erupted. A Mongol tax collector named Saraika and his Tatar retinue were attacked and killed by an angry mob. The culprit wasn't a commoner — it was the local bishop, Dionysius, who had rallied the townspeople. This wasn't random violence; it was a calculated defiance orchestrated by Prince Dmitry Konstantinovich, who had just received a yarlyk for the Grand Principality of Vladimir from the emir Mamai. The murder of a baskak — the Mongol official who oversaw tribute collection and reported directly to Sarai — was an open act of rebellion. It triggered a series of reprisals, including the sack of Novosil by Mamai's forces, and pushed Moscow and the Horde toward the open war that culminated at Kulikovo Field in 1380. This episode explores the role of the baskak in the 14th century, the growing defiance of Russian princes under the temnik Mamai, and the forgotten murder that lit the fuse of Russian resistance. #Baskak #NizhnyNovgorod #Saraika #Dionysius #DmitryKonstantinovich #Mamai #Yarlyk #Moscow #Kulikovo #GoldenHorde #TatarYoke #MongolTax #Novosil #Bishop #RussianHistory #MedievalRussia #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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