The turn of the XVII-XVIII centuries was one of the turning points in the history of the Crimean Khanate. The port increasingly pacified the" warlike impulses", i.e. raids, of the Tatars. After the Treaty of Bakhchisarai (1681), the Ottoman Turks pushed Crimea away from the khanate's solution of "their" problems in relations with Moscow. The actions of the Sultan's court to implement the Treaty of Constantinople of 1700 (which, among other things, limited Tatar invasions of Russia and eliminated the "wake") caused serious objections in the Crimea, which were expressed in the rebellion of Devlet Giray II [Sanin, 1993, pp. 275-279], who was exiled to fr. Rhodes. The state of uneasy relations between the suzerain and vassal was also influenced by the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, which in 1684 even proposed that Crimea secede from the Porte (Artamonov, 2003, p. 65).
The end of the 17th century was marked in the history of the Crimean Khanate by another remarkable event - for the first time, the Kettlebell found new subjects in the person of several hundred Orthodox Slavs, mainly Cossacks, natives of the Don [Archive of the St. Petersburg Institute of Biology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, f. 178, op. 1, d.12366, 12449, 12450, 12348].
Keywords: Old Believers, Kuma River, Agrakhan River, Crimean Khanate, Cossacks, Don, Kuban, North Caucasus regions, Azak.
As early as the end of the 17th century, a group of Old Believer Cossacks left for the North Caucasus. Subsequently, the Zaporozhye Cossacks became subjects of the Khans (the beginning of the XVIII century) [Mshchev, 2006], and at the end of August 1708, a large group of participants in the Bulavinsky uprising moved to Kuban, which received the name Nekrasov in history. At the turn of the XVII-XVIII centuries, the Kuban Cossacks became a powerful force, whose military traditions, having passed the formation on the Don, were developed in the North Caucasus. There is a well-known case when the Crimean Khan resorted ...
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