Jani Beg (Persian language: جانی بیگ, Turki/Cuman language: جانی بک; died 1357), also known as Janibek Khan, was Khan of the Golden Horde from 1342 until his death in 1357. After his father, Öz Beg Khan, died in 1341, Jani Beg defeated his older brother, Tini Beg, to become khan.
Jani Beg is known to have actively interfered in the affairs of the Russian principalities and Lithuania. Like his father, Jani Beg supported the house of Moscow and its heads, Simeon and Ivan II. Relations between the Russian principalities were generally peaceful, with Jani Beg only permitting one small-scale operation against Ryazan; however, he interfered in Moscow's relations with Suzdal, supported anti-Muscovite elements in Ryazan, and contributed to Tver's fragmentation. He also allowed those principalities to grow increasingly independent, to the point that their rulers began calling themselves grand princes – a title that had been reserved to only the ruler of Vladimir-Suzdal. The Russian chroniclers referred to him as "the good tsar".
Jani Beg also confirmed the yarlik to the Venetians at the start of his reign. However, in September 1343, a Venetian noble named Andreolo Civran killed a Mongol official in Tanais, which led to Jani Beg expelling all the Latins from the Italian colonies. The Venetian senate condemned Civran and sent envoys to negotiate with Jani Beg, but Jani Beg demanded that Civran be judged by a Mongol court. The Genoese and Venetians formed a temporary alliance and imposed a trade embargo, while Jani Beg responded by sending more troops to Feodosia in Crimea.
Jani Beg commanded a massive Crimean Tatars force that attacked Kaffa, then a Genoese colony. The siege was lifted by an Italian relief force in February. In 1345, Jani Beg again besieged Kaffa; however, his assault was again unsuccessful due to an outbreak of plague among his troops. Jani Beg's army catapulted infected corpses into Kaffa in an attempt to use the plague to weaken the defenders. Infected Genoese sailors subsequently sailed from Kaffa to Genoa, Messina, and Constantinople, introducing the Black Death into Europe. The story involving the catapult has been disputed. It is originally based on Gabriel de Mussis of Piacenza in Italy, who wrote about the plague in 1348. It is more likely that rats carrying plague-infested fleas went from the Jani Beg's camp to the city and thereby infected the Genoese.O. Benedictow: The Black Death 1346–1353: The Complete History. Woodbridge 2006.Matthew J. Broughton Catapulted Death: Can a Flying Corpse Distribute the Plague? Retrieved: 30 June 2022.
In 1342, Janibeg temporarily imposed a tax on the Russian Church at the instigation of a Russian prince who harbored resentment toward the church due to its significant wealth and reputation. By that time, the Golden Horde's treasury had drained because of natural disasters and warfare; however, Janibeg restored the tax exempt status of the church in September 1347 and reconfirmed it in 1351, returning to the religious policy of Genghis Khan.Enerelt Enkhbold, " Religious Services and Rational Choices: Two Cases of Limited Tax Exemption in the Mongol Empire,"
In the winter of 1356–1357, Jani Beg attacked the region of Azerbaijan in Iran and conquered the city of Tabriz, installing his own governor. The Ilkhanate was politically fragmented and the region was under the control of Malek Ashraf, but Jani Beg was able to secure the support of the Shirvanshah, and his army of 300,000 was able to easily take the region. To celebrate his victory, Jani Beg had coins minted in the city. He also asserted Jochid dominance over the Chagatai Khanate, but as soon as the Jochid armies left, the governor of Tabriz declared independence and was soon killed by the Muzaffarid ruler Mubariz al-Din Muhammad, who then withdrew from the region as he could not hold it. This resulted in the Jalayirids annexing the region.
Following his conquests, Berdi Beg returned to Sarai in 1357, but on the way, he fell ill and died. Persian sources say either Berdi Beg or the were responsible for his death due to Jani Beg being too old, while the Nikon Chronicle, a later Russian source, says that the beys strangled him to death. Jani Beg's contemporaries suspected that he was killed on the order of Berdi Beg, but the exact cause of death is unknown due to the lack of direct sources.
Jani Beg maintained his father's policy of centralization, which allowed him to integrate the old territories of Orda Khan back into the Golden Horde; however, the Blue Horde never submitted to his rule, especially after a major revolt in 1342. Although Jani Beg maintained peace with the Russian princes, his conflict with the Latins had negative consequences for the Golden Horde's trade economy, including a shortage of metal—particularly silver—which led to a decline in minting. It was not until after Jani Beg's death in 1358 that a new agreement was signed with the Venetians, which allowed them to return to Tanais. The economic decline also coincided with the Black Death.
The symbolism of the Golden Horde flag depicted by the Catalan Atlas () is fairly similar to the type of tamgha symbols (such as ) actually found on the coinage of the Golden Horde. of Mengu-Timur. Bulghar mint. Dated AH 672 or 3 (AD 1273-1275) Such symbols were used until the time of Jani Beg, but essentially disappear thereafter.
/ref> Despite the incident, Jani Beg continued to protect the Russian Church. Following the death of Simeon of Moscow in 1353, Jani Beg sided with Simeon's younger brother, Ivan II, when the throne of Vladimir was contested by the prince of Nizhny Novgorod-Suzdal. As a result, Jani Beg managed to maintain the balance of power among the principalities and prevent war from breaking out over the succession. The princes of Moscow were considered loyal and Jani Beg viewed Moscow as the best counterbalance to the growing power of Lithuania.
Legacy
Catalan Atlas (1375)
Family
Genealogy
In popular culture
See also
Bibliography
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