1242
Golden Horde established on the Volga
Returning from central Europe, Batu Khan settled his army in tents near the lower Volga and founded the Ulus of Jochi, later known as the Golden Horde. From Sarai on the river, he would collect tribute from the Russian principalities for two centuries. The Horde's control over the Volga trade routes made Sarai one of the largest cities in the medieval world, rivaling Cairo and Constantinople.
Alexander Nevsky wins the Battle on the Ice
On the frozen surface of Lake Peipus, Nevsky's lightly armored Rus cavalry ambushed the heavy Teutonic Knights and drove them onto thin ice. The battle, later immortalized on film by Eisenstein, halted the crusading order's eastward thrust into Orthodox territory. The Teutonic Order's losses, though exaggerated by later legend, were severe enough to establish a permanent boundary between Catholic and Orthodox influence in the region.
Batu Khan establishes Sarai on the Volga
Returning from his European campaign, the grandson of Genghis chose a site on the lower Volga and founded the city of Sarai as capital of the Golden Horde. From its felt tents and mudbrick markets, Mongol officials would collect tribute from Russian princes for the next two centuries. At its peak Sarai housed over half a million people, a polyglot metropolis of Turkic warriors, Russian artisans, and Italian merchants.
Mudejar art flourishes in Toledo
Under Castilian rule, Muslim craftsmen known as mudejars built palaces and synagogues that wedded Iberian Islamic ornament to Christian patronage. The Santa Maria la Blanca synagogue, finished around this time, is a brick-walled forest of horseshoe arches made for a Jewish congregation. The coexistence of three faiths under one artistic tradition produced a hybrid visual culture found nowhere else in medieval Europe.