Devlet II Giray

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Devlet II Giray
Khan of the Tatar Crimean Khanate
(1st reign)
Reign1699–1702
PredecessorSelim I Giray
SuccessorSelim I Giray
Khan of the Tatar Crimean Khanate
(2nd reign)
Reign1709–1713
PredecessorQaplan I Giray
SuccessorQaplan I Giray
Born1648
Died1718 (Aged 69-70)
DynastyGiray dynasty
ReligionIslam

Devlet II Giray (1648–1718) was Khan of the Crimean Khanate from 1699 to 1702 and from 1709 to 1713. His eldest son was Selim I Giray.

First rule (1699–1702)

Ottoman sultan Mustafa II, but was immediately stripped of his power. Sultan restored Selim I Giray to the Crimean throne.[1]

Second reign 1709-1713

Much of his second reign involved the conflicts between Peter the Great and Charles XII of Sweden. During the Great Northern War Ivan Mazepa revolted against Russia and Charles moved east to join him. Both were defeated at the Battle of Poltava in July 1709, about six months after Devlet came to the throne. Some of Mazepa's Cossacks were settled in Crimean territory at Oleshky. Charles fled to Ottoman territory and tried to stir up a Swedish-Turkish-Crimean war against Russia. When the Turks failed to expel Charles, Peter invaded Moldavia (Pruth River Campaign of 1710). A Turkish army went north, 40,000 Tatars under Devlet's son went northwest and Peter was surrounded. He was allowed to withdraw by signing a treaty in which he gave up Azov and smaller forts near the Sea of Azov (1711). Devlet continued to press for Turkish action against the growing power of Russia. In 1713 the Sultan ordered Devlet and Ismail Pasha to escort Charles to Poland (it is not clear to which faction). Charles refused and was captured (Skirmish at Bender). There was a shift in Turkish policy and Devlet was deposed (December 1713), partly because of his mistreatment of Charles at Bender.

One source([2]) says that in early 1711 Devlet's son Mekhmed, Mazepa's successor and some Swedes, Poles and Turkish soldiers raided around Bratslav, fought a number of battles and retreated to Bender at the approach of a Russian army. The same spring Devlet himself moved on Kharkov, was defeated, and returned to Crimea.

Second dethronement and death

Sultan Ahmed III deposed Devlet II Giray from the throne of the Crimean Khanate following allegations of improper treatment of the Swedish King Charles XII (who sought asylum in Turkey) during the campaigns against Russia (Devlet II Giray considered Charles XII a prisoner) and sent him into exile to the Ottoman island of Rodos in the Aegean Sea. Devlet II Giray then moved to Vize in present-day Turkey and died there in 1719.[3]

Sources and notes

  • Henry Hoyle Howorth, History of the Mongols, 1880, Part 2, pp. 568-570(outdated), 572-574
  1. ^ http://www.hansaray.org.ua/e_geray_chrono.html Archived 2012-07-17 at the Wayback Machine (Unreachable as of 20nov21)
  2. ^ ru:Крымско-ногайские набеги на Русь without footnotes as to sources.
  3. ^ http://www.hansaray.org.ua/e_geray_chrono.html Archived 2012-07-17 at the Wayback Machine (Unreachable as of 20nov21)
Preceded by Khan of Crimea
1699–1702
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Qaplan I Giray
Khan of Crimea
1709–1713
Succeeded by
Qaplan I Giray