Hayder of Crimea

Hayder Khan Girai, Hayder (Crimean Tatar: Hayder, حيدر) (lived ?–1487, reigned 1456?, 1475) was either once or twice briefly a Khan of Crimea.

Hayder Giray
Khan of the Tatar Crimean Khanate
(1st reign)
Reign1456
PredecessorHacı I Giray
SuccessorHacı I Giray
Khan of the Tatar Crimean Khanate
(2nd reign)
Reign1475
PredecessorMeñli I Giray
SuccessorNur Devlet
Bornunknown
Died1487
Muscovy
DynastyGiray dynasty
ReligionIslam

He was one of the sons of the dynasty's founder Hacı I Giray (c. 1441–1466). It is reported that in 1456 he rebelled against his father and briefly occupied the throne, but this is not certain. [1]

After his father's death, for twelve years (1466–1478), the throne alternated between Hayder's brothers Nur Devlet and Meñli I Giray. During one of Mengli's reigns Hayder was held in honorable confinement at the Genoese fortress of Sudak.

In March 1475 the nobles replaced Mengli with Hayder. He and the Shirin Bey Eminek raided the Lithuanian border. In May–December 1475 the Turks captured the Genoese ports on the south shore. They released Nur Devlet from prison in Sudak and made him khan. Hayder yielded to Nur Devlet but their relations were not good. Nur Devlet proved unpopular and in the spring of 1478 the Turks released their prisoner Mengli and placed him on the throne.

Hayder and Nur Devlet fled to Kiev in the Polish Kingdom. About 1479 they moved to Muscovy under protection of the grand duke Ivan III, who later banished Hayder to Northern Muscovy for reasons that remain unknown[2]. He died about 1487 in Beloozero, Vologda oblast.

Preceded by
Hacı I Giray
Khan of Crimea
1456
Succeeded by
Hacı I Giray
Preceded by
Meñli I Giray
Khan of Crimea
1475
Succeeded by
Nur Devlet

See also

Sources

  • Oleksa Gaivoronsky. Poveliteli Dvukh Materikov, second edition, Kiev 2010, volume I, pp. 58, 63, 65, 67, 74.
  1. This claim appears in several Wikipedia articles, but does not seem to be in the usual printed sources.
  2. Gaivoronsky, p74 says that there were rumors that the Poles were planning to use him and Ivan decided to be safe, but his only source is Velyaminov-Zernov, which is very old.

History of Crimea

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