Content deleted Content added
Nogai was not a khan, nor was his grandfather. |
→Conflict with Tokhta and death: 1294–1300: copy edit with General fixes; url trimming of identifying info perWP:LINKSTOAVOID and Citation Style |
||
Line 100:
==Conflict with Tokhta and death: 1294–1300==
However, Tokhta would prove a more headstrong ruler than either Tuda-Mengur or Talabuga. Nogai and Tokhta soon found themselves embroiled in a deadly rivalry; while they cooperated in raids against rebellious Rus' principalities, they remained in competition. Tokhta's father-in-law and wife often complained that Nogai seemed to consider himself superior to Tokhta, and Nogai repeatedly rejected any demands Tokhta made of him to attend his court. They also disagreed over the policy of trading rights for the Genoese and Venetian cities in Crimea. Two years after Nogai installed Tokhta, their rivalry came to a head and Tokhta set out to gather his supporters for a war against Nogai.<ref>Marco Polo. [https://books.google.com/books?id=VovVAAAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=marco+polo+the+travels
===Battle of Nerghi Plains===
|