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Muravsky Trail information


Vasseur de Beauplan's 1648 map of the Wild Fields showing the Muravsky Trail on the left (east)
Trails leading toward of South-Central Rus'.

Muravsky Trail or Murava Route (Russian: Муравский шлях, Ukrainian: Муравський шлях) was an important trade route and an invasion route of the Crimean Nogays during the Russo-Crimean Wars of the 16th and early 17th centuries. As described in the Book to the Great Chart of Muscovy (1627), the route went north from the Tatar fortress of Or Qapı (Perekop), the gateway of the Crimean peninsula, east of the Dnieper, to the Russian fortress of Tula, 193 km south of Moscow.

To avoid major river crossings, the route followed the high ground between the basins of the Dnieper and Don, making an almost straight line from the Dnieper bend to Tula. It ran mostly through thinly populated tallgrass steppe country ('Muravá' is an old Slavic word for prairie or grassland) avoiding forests, marshes and river crossings. Apart from the main route, there were a number of branches and bypaths, of which the Kalmius Trail and the Izyum Trail were by far the most important.

Between 1500 and 1550, 43 Tatar raids used this trail. In the wake of the Russo-Crimean War (1571), it became increasingly clear that only a defense line south of the Great Zasechnaya cherta would put an end to annual incursions. Such a chain of eleven forts and obstructions, the "Belgorod Defense Line", was constructed at the behest of Boris Godunov, including, among other fortified settlements, the towns of Livny (1586), Voronezh (1586), Kursk (1587, rebuilt), Yelets (1592, rebuilt), Stary Oskol (1593), Valuyki (1593) and Belgorod (1596, rebuilt).

After this, the Tatars began avoiding this route. It later became a main route used by the Cossacks to raid Crimea.

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Muravsky Trail

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Muravsky Trail or Murava Route (Russian: Муравский шлях, Ukrainian: Муравський шлях) was an important trade route and an invasion route of the Crimean...

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Izium Trail

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Crimean Nogays in the 16th and 17th centuries. It branched off the Muravsky Trail at the upper reaches of the Oril river and, after crossing the Seversky...

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Kalmius

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later renamed Mariupol. The Kalmius Trail was a Tatar raiding trail, one of the branches of the Muravsky Trail.[citation needed] After an offensive by...

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Livny

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Grand Duchy of Moscow in the case of a Crimean Tatar raid along the Muravsky Trail. Thirty years later, Ivan the Terrible sent prince Masalsky to build...

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Sloboda Ukraine

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to launch annual raids into Russian territories along the Muravsky Trail and Izyum Trail. In 1591, a Tatar raid reached the Moscow region, compelling...

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Great Zasechnaya cherta

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Crimean-Nogai Raids that ravaged the southern provinces of the country via the Muravsky Trail during the Russo-Crimean Wars. It was south of the original line along...

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Wild Fields

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Sich was established. The Wild Fields were traversed by the Muravsky Trail and Izyumsky Trail, important warpaths used by the Crimean Tatars to invade and...

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Kursk

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Russia, traditionally crossed the Seym river, and their main road, the Muravsky Trail, passed east of the city. In this regard, Kursk, despite not being part...

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Voronezh

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Voronezh was established in 1585 by Feodor I as a fort protecting the Muravsky Trail trade route against the slave raids of the Nogai and Crimean Tatars...

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Roads in Ukraine

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routes, or truck routes. Muravsky Trail Izium Trail, a branch of the Muravsky Trail Kalmius Route, a branch of the Muravsky Trail Bila Tserkva Road Silk...

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Black Trail

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towards Bar, Ukraine. Near Ternopil, the Podolian Trail merged with the Black Trail. Crimean-Nogai raids into East Slavic lands Muravsky Trail Izyum Trail...

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Route from the Varangians to the Greeks

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gradually lost its significance. For a related military route, see Muravsky Trail.[citation needed] "Holmgard and beyond That's where the winds will us...

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Stary Oskol

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kilometres (37 mi) south. Both are on the Oskol River. It was near the Muravsky Trail used by Crimeans and Nogais to raid Muscovy. In 1571 a fort was built...

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Izium

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"devastating" attacks by the Crimean Tatars. The Izium Trail, one of the branches of the Muravsky Trail, was a warpath of the Crimeans in the area in the 16th...

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Lyapunov family

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different cities: as Head of Cheboskary (1583), Dankov (1584, next to a Muravsky Trail); he had a wife named Denisova-Ushakova Nikiforovna Anna (Fetiniya -...

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Mariupol

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where lack of water made early settlement precarious. Being near the Muravsky Trail exposed it to frequent Crimean–Nogai slave raids and plundering by Tatar...

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Novy Oskol

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(37 mi) north. Both are on the south-flowing Oskol River. It was near the Muravsky Trail used by Crimeans and Nogais to raid Muscovy. In 1637 it was founded...

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