Isker as a Mythologeme in the Study of Siberian Khanate History »

Research literature on the history of Siberian Khanate consider Isker not only as a metropolitan center but also as a large and well-fortified town. The analysis of written and archaeological sources shows that such an assumption in many respects developed under the influence of the authors, who des...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: D.N. Maslyuzhenko, S.F. Tataurov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Tatarstan Academy of Sciences, Marjani Institute of History 2015-12-01
Series:Золотоордынское обозрение
Subjects:
Online Access:http://goldhorde.ru/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/%D0%97%D0%9E-4-2015-135-150.pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1846093991001456640
author D.N. Maslyuzhenko
S.F. Tataurov
author_facet D.N. Maslyuzhenko
S.F. Tataurov
author_sort D.N. Maslyuzhenko
collection DOAJ
description Research literature on the history of Siberian Khanate consider Isker not only as a metropolitan center but also as a large and well-fortified town. The analysis of written and archaeological sources shows that such an assumption in many respects developed under the influence of the authors, who described it later, a long time after the abandonment of Isker. They were influenced to a large extent by ideas about how Tatar city might have looked as an ideal model, the embodiment of which they searched on the ruins of the Siberian cities of the 15th–16th centuries. Authors of this work consider that conditions of a fortress location, as well as artifacts, found there, do not confirm this traditional version. Isker came under the authority of Siberian Shibanids (with a throne place situated in Chimgi-Tura (Tyumen)) not earlier than in 1563, after the Siberian people had invited Kuchum ibn Murtaza to become their khan. At the same time, representatives of a dynasty controlled not only the lands in the south of Western Siberia, but also across the Syr Darya. Being natives of a nomadic environment, their center of power was situatetd in nomadic khan’s encampment, from which they moved from summering in the north to wintering grounds in the south. Exactly in this encampment, but not in geopolitically and ecologically uncomfortably located Isker, it is supposed to be the khan’s treasury and the place for his family as well as seyyids and other Muslim preachers. Isker was only a place of collecting the yasak from Ugrian groups of local population during the autumn and spring periods. For these reasons, its protection during Yermak’s attack was not the khan’s priority task. The town was abandoned easily. Isker is not so important for the history of Siberia as for Russian history during the period of incorporation of Siberia into the Muscovy. For the Russian tsars, Isker became a symbol of the legitimacy of power of Ivan the Terrible in Siberia.
format Article
id doaj-art-7d1cd471856c41fbab7570c0d6a5dca2
institution Kabale University
issn 2308-152X
2313-6197
language English
publishDate 2015-12-01
publisher Tatarstan Academy of Sciences, Marjani Institute of History
record_format Article
series Золотоордынское обозрение
spelling doaj-art-7d1cd471856c41fbab7570c0d6a5dca22025-01-02T15:36:52ZengTatarstan Academy of Sciences, Marjani Institute of HistoryЗолотоордынское обозрение2308-152X2313-61972015-12-014135150Isker as a Mythologeme in the Study of Siberian Khanate History »D.N. Maslyuzhenko0S.F. Tataurov1Kurgan State UniversityOmsk branch of Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography of SB RAS, F.M. Dostoyevsky Omsk State UniversityResearch literature on the history of Siberian Khanate consider Isker not only as a metropolitan center but also as a large and well-fortified town. The analysis of written and archaeological sources shows that such an assumption in many respects developed under the influence of the authors, who described it later, a long time after the abandonment of Isker. They were influenced to a large extent by ideas about how Tatar city might have looked as an ideal model, the embodiment of which they searched on the ruins of the Siberian cities of the 15th–16th centuries. Authors of this work consider that conditions of a fortress location, as well as artifacts, found there, do not confirm this traditional version. Isker came under the authority of Siberian Shibanids (with a throne place situated in Chimgi-Tura (Tyumen)) not earlier than in 1563, after the Siberian people had invited Kuchum ibn Murtaza to become their khan. At the same time, representatives of a dynasty controlled not only the lands in the south of Western Siberia, but also across the Syr Darya. Being natives of a nomadic environment, their center of power was situatetd in nomadic khan’s encampment, from which they moved from summering in the north to wintering grounds in the south. Exactly in this encampment, but not in geopolitically and ecologically uncomfortably located Isker, it is supposed to be the khan’s treasury and the place for his family as well as seyyids and other Muslim preachers. Isker was only a place of collecting the yasak from Ugrian groups of local population during the autumn and spring periods. For these reasons, its protection during Yermak’s attack was not the khan’s priority task. The town was abandoned easily. Isker is not so important for the history of Siberia as for Russian history during the period of incorporation of Siberia into the Muscovy. For the Russian tsars, Isker became a symbol of the legitimacy of power of Ivan the Terrible in Siberia.http://goldhorde.ru/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/%D0%97%D0%9E-4-2015-135-150.pdfSiberian khanateIskerKuchumurban culture of Western Siberia.
spellingShingle D.N. Maslyuzhenko
S.F. Tataurov
Isker as a Mythologeme in the Study of Siberian Khanate History »
Золотоордынское обозрение
Siberian khanate
Isker
Kuchum
urban culture of Western Siberia.
title Isker as a Mythologeme in the Study of Siberian Khanate History »
title_full Isker as a Mythologeme in the Study of Siberian Khanate History »
title_fullStr Isker as a Mythologeme in the Study of Siberian Khanate History »
title_full_unstemmed Isker as a Mythologeme in the Study of Siberian Khanate History »
title_short Isker as a Mythologeme in the Study of Siberian Khanate History »
title_sort isker as a mythologeme in the study of siberian khanate history
topic Siberian khanate
Isker
Kuchum
urban culture of Western Siberia.
url http://goldhorde.ru/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/%D0%97%D0%9E-4-2015-135-150.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT dnmaslyuzhenko iskerasamythologemeinthestudyofsiberiankhanatehistory
AT sftataurov iskerasamythologemeinthestudyofsiberiankhanatehistory