Thomas Blackwood
How the Golden Horde Forged Russia and Transformed EurasiaThis comprehensive history examines the Golden Horde, the Mongol empire that dominated Russia and the Eurasian steppes for over two centuries and fundamentally shaped the development of modern Russia. Drawing on chronicles, archaeological evidence, and contemporary accounts, the book traces the empire’s dramatic arc from Batu Khan’s devastating conquests in the thirteen hundreds through its fragmentation and ultimate destruction by Timur’s campaigns. The narrative explores how the Golden Horde created unprecedented commercial networks connecting China to Europe, established sophisticated administrative systems that Moscow would later inherit, and facilitated cultural exchanges between civilizations while also examining the human costs of conquest including the slave trade and forced deportations. The book demonstrates that understanding Russian autocracy, imperial expansion, and political culture requires grappling with the Mongol inheritance that Russians simultaneously absorbed and struggled against. Through detailed military analysis, institutional history, and examination of how different eras have remembered the Tatar Yoke, this work reveals the Golden Horde as one of the pivotal political formations in world history, an empire whose legacy continues to shape Eurasia today.