Giray dynasty

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House of Giray
Parent houseBorjigin Dynasty
CountryCrimean Khanate
Founded1431 - Hacı I Giray
Titles
DissolutionQasim:
1512 -

Astrakhan:
1523, 1531, 1549 -

Kazan:
1551 -

Crimea:
1783 -

Budjak Horde:
1792 -

The House of Giray (Crimean Tatar: Geraylar, كرايلر‎; Ottoman Turkish: آل جنكيز, romanizedÂl-i Cengiz, lit.'Genghisids'), also Girays,[1] were the Genghisid/Turkic dynasty that reigned in the Khanate of Crimea from its formation in 1431 until its downfall in 1783. The dynasty also supplied several khans of Kazan and Astrakhan between 1521 and 1550. Apart from the royal Girays, there was also a lateral branch, the Choban Girays (Çoban Geraylar).

Before reaching the age of majority, young Girays were brought up in one of the Circassian tribes, where they were instructed in the arts of war. The Giray Khans were elected by other Crimean Tatar dynasts, called myrzas (mırzalar). They also elected an heir apparent, called the qalgha sultan (qalğa sultan). In later centuries, the Ottoman Sultan obtained the right of installing and deposing the khans at his will.

Their early ancestor was Togay Timur (Tuqa Timur), a younger son of Jochi. The story of the Girays begin with Öreng Timur, son of Togay Timur, receiving Crimea from Mengu-Timur.[2]

During Ottoman suzerainty[edit]

According to some scholars, the Girays were regarded[by whom?] as the second family of the Ottoman Empire after the House of Ottoman: "If Rome and Byzantium represented two of the three international traditions of imperial legitimacy, the blood of Genghis Khan was the third... If ever the Ottomans became extinct, it was understood that the Genghisid Girays would succeed them" [3]

During the 15th and early 16th centuries, the Giray Khan was second to the Ottoman Emperor - and thus superior to the Grand Vizier - in the Ottoman protocol. After the disobedience and 1584 removal of Mehmed II Giray, the Sultan demoted the Crimean Khan to the level of Grand Vizier. The Giray Khans were also sovereigns of their own realm. They could mint coins, make law by decree, and had their own tughras.

Alliances[edit]

Tatars fighting Zaporozhian Cossacks

The Crimean Khanate made alliances with the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and with the Zaporizhian Sich. The assistance of İslâm III Giray during the Khmelnytsky Uprising in 1648 contributed greatly to the initial momentum of military successes for the Cossacks. The relationship with the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth was also strong - the dynasty of Girays would seek sanctuary in Lithuania in the 15th century before establishing themselves on the Crimean peninsula.

Downfall[edit]

After the khanate's annexation by Imperial Russia in 1783, the last khan Şahin Giray remained nominally in power until 1787, when he took refuge in the Ottoman Empire, and was executed in Rhodes.

Other dynasts were permitted by the Russian authorities to reside in their Bakhchisaray palace. Selim III's young son, Qattı Giray, was converted by missionaries to Protestantism and married a Scottish heiress, Anne Neilson.[4]

After downfall[edit]

After the execution of Şahin Giray by Abdul Hamid I, his family lived in Burgazada, Istanbul.[5]

Family Tree[edit]

House of Giray

Golden Horde/White Horde/Great Horde (After Islamization)
Kazan Khanate
Crimean Khanate
Qasim Khanate

Hacı I Giray
r. 1428–1429, 
1431–1434

r. 1441–1456, 
1456–1466
Nur Devlet
r. 1466–1469, 
1475–1476

r. 1477–1477
r. 1486–1491
Hayder
r. 1456–1456, 
1475–1475
Meñli I Giray
r. 1467–1467, 
1469–1475

r. 1478–1515
Satylghan
r. 1491–1506
Janai
r. 1506–1512
Mehmed I Giray
r. 1493–1495
r. 1515–1523
Saadet I Giray
r. 1524–1532
Sahib I Giray
r. 1521–1524
r. 1532–1551
Mubarak GirayFetih Giray
Ğazı I Giray
r. 1523–1524
İslâm I Giray
r. 1524–1524, 
1525–1525

r. 1528–1528, 
1532–1532
Devlet I Giray
r. 1549–1551
r. 1551–1577
Safa Giray
r. 1524–1531, 
1535–1546

r. 1546–1549
Mehmed II Giray
r. 1577–1584
İslâm II Giray
r. 1584–1588
Ğazı II Giray
r. 1588–1596, 
1596–1607
Fetih I Giray
r. 1596–1596
Selâmet I Giray
r. 1607–1610
Mubarak GirayUtamesh Giray
r. 1549–1551
Saadet II Giray
r. 1584–1584
İnayet Giray
r. 1635–1637
Toqtamış Giray
r. 1607–1607
Choban GirayBahadır I Giray
r. 1637–1641
İslâm III Giray
r. 1644–1654
Mehmed IV Giray
r. 1641–1644, 
1654–1666
Qırım GirayMubarak GirayCanibek Giray
r. 1610–1623, 
1628–1635
Mehmed III Giray
r. 1623–1628
Safa GirayAdil Giray
r. 1666–1671
Selim I Giray
r. 1671–1678, 
1684–1691

r. 1692–1699, 
1702–1704
Haci II Giray
r. 1683–1684
Saadet III Giray
r. 1691–1691
Murad Giray
r. 1678–1683
Safa Giray
r. 1691–1692
Devlet III Giray
r. 1715–1717
Devlet II Giray
r. 1699–1702, 
1709–1713
Saadet IV Giray
r. 1717–1724
Ğazı III Giray
r. 1704–1707
Qaplan I Giray
r. 1707–1709, 
1713–1715

r. 1730–1736
Meñli II Giray
r. 1724–1730, 
1737–1739
Selamet II Giray
r. 1739–1743
Arslan Giray
r. 1748–1756, 
1767–1767
Ahmad GirayFetih II Giray
r. 1736–1737
Qırım Giray
r. 1758–1764, 
1768–1769
Halim Giray
r. 1756–1758
Selim II Giray
r. 1743–1748
Maqsud Giray
r. 1767–1768
Devlet IV Giray
r. 1769–1770, 
1775–1777
Bahadır II Giray
r. 1782–1782
Sahib II Giray
r. 1771–1775
Şahin Giray
r. 1777–1782, 
1782–1783
Selim III Giray
r. 1764–1767, 
1770–1771
Qaplan II Giray
r. 1770–1770

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Alternative spellings include Geray, Girey, Guirey, Ghirai, Ghiray, and Ghiray.
  2. ^ "HACI GİRAY I". TDV Encyclopedia of Islam (44+2 vols.) (in Turkish). Istanbul: Turkiye Diyanet Foundation, Centre for Islamic Studies. 1988–2016.
  3. ^ Simon Sebag Montefiore, Prince of Princes: The Life of Potemkin. London, 2000.
  4. ^ Hakan Kırımlı, “Crimean Tatars, Nogays, and Scottish Missionaries: The Story of Kattı Geray and Other Baptised Descendants of the Crimean Khans”, Cahiers du monde russe 45, no. 1 (2004): 61–107.
  5. ^ FERİDUN EMECEN, "ŞÂHİN GİRAY", TDV İslâm Ansiklopedisi, https://islamansiklopedisi.org.tr/sahin-giray (14.07.2020).