The army of Vytautas moves from the…
1398 CE
The army of Vytautas moves from the Dnieper River and attacks northern Crimea in 1398 building a castle there and raiding east as far as the River Don; Lithuania now spans from the Baltic Sea to the Black Sea.
A number of Tatar captives are brought to ethnic Lithuania.
Vytautas and his cousin, Wladyslaw II (or IV) Jagiello of Poland, inspired by their great successes, win support from Pope Boniface IX for organizing a crusade against the Mongols.
This political move also demonstrates that the formerly pagan Grand Duchy of Lithuania has fully accepted Christianity and is defending the faith on its own, and that the Teutonic Knights have no further basis for attacks against Lithuania.
Groups
Polytheism (“paganism”)
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Germans
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Papal States (Republic of St. Peter)
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Christians, Roman Catholic
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Teutonic Knights of Prussia, or Monastic state of the Teutonic Knights (House of the Hospitalers of Saint Mary of the Teutons in Jerusalem)
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Timurid Empire
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Tatars
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Golden Horde, Khanate of the (Kipchak Khanate)
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Lithuania, Grand Duchy of
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Nogai Horde
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