The ushkuyniks (, ), also spelled ushkuiniks, were medieval Novgorodian who operated in the north of European Russia as well as along the Volga until the 15th century.
The word likely derives either from Oskuya river, or from Veps language *uškoi̯ (small boat).
Many ushkuyniks wore mail , though it was more common for them to wear hybrid assemblages of armor acquired through purchase or looting; mail and plate bechterets was also commonly worn and this would become typical in late medieval and early modern Russia. The weaponry of the ushkuyniks was also influenced by the Tatars, with short-range weapons including spears, swords, and especially sabres, while bows and crossbows were used as long-range weapons. Better equipment and funds for expeditions were given by or Novgorodian merchants.
The ushkuyniks first appear in the historical record as an organized force in the 1320s. Arranged in squadrons which could number several thousand, Ushkuyniks enjoyed the patronage of influential boyar families of Novgorod, who used them to demonstrate Novgorod's military clout to its neighbours and to advance its trade interests and influence along the Volga river.
During the 1360s and 1370s, Novgorodian merchants sent out expeditions of the ushkuyniks to raid settlements along the Middle Volga, with the partial aim of protecting against incursions by rivals on their guild's monopoly on the northern hinterland and also to force the settlements to give the merchants legal trading rights. During the campaign of 1360, the ushkuyniks sailed from Novgorod by the portages to the Volga river. Under command of the boyar Anfal Nikitin, they gained possession of Zhukotin, a trade emporium in Volga Bulgaria. A ruler of the Golden Horde, which controlled Zhukotin, was furious and ordered Grand Prince Dmitry Konstantinovich to capture the ushkuyniks and to bring them to the Horde for trial, but Dmitry's punitive expedition failed.
In 1363, the ushkuyniks launched the first Novgorodian raid along the Ob River in western Siberia. At the same time, the chronicles describe Karelo-Novgoridian raids on Norwegian Finnmark.
Three years later, without consulting their superiors in Novgorod, they approached Nizhny Novgorod and, wishing to punish Dmitry for his hostile action, massacred Armenians and Tatars merchants trading there. This led to a diplomatic row, when Dmitry demanded apologies from Novgorod Republic.
In 1371, the ushkuyniks sacked Yaroslavl, Kostroma and other Upper Volga cities. Three years later they sailed with upwards of ninety ships to pillage the Kirov Oblast region. In 1375, they defeated the militia of Kostroma and burnt the city to the ground. The destruction was so severe that Kostroma had to be rebuilt elsewhere. After that, they looted Nizhny Novgorod and sailed down the Volga to Astrakhan, where they were annihilated by a Tatar general.
By 1391, the ushkuyniks had recovered from this reverse and felt strong enough to resume their activities. In this period Patrikas, the overlord of the Korela district, was their patron. In 1391 the pirates sacked both Zhukotin and Kazan. With Muscovy's power on the ascendant, the Novgorod Republic was pressed into putting down their filibustering activities in the first decades of the 15th century. After Novgorod was annexed by Moscow in the 1470s, Moscow acquired the legacy of the Novgorodian policy of commercial expansion to the northeast, while at the same time pursuing its policy of "gathering the Russian lands", leading to Russian eastward expansion intensifying in the following decades, especially following the conquests of the Astrakhan and Kazan Khanate khanates in the mid-16th century. Novgorodian pirates were succeeded by the soldiers and Cossacks forces of Moscow.
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