The Russians, having in 1679 and 1680 repulsed the attacks of the Crimean Tatars, on January 3, 1681, sign the Bakhchisaray Peace Treaty with the Ottoman Empire and the Crimean Khanate.
They agree to a twenty-year truce and accept the Dnieper River as the demarcation line between the Ottoman Empire and Moscow's domain.
All sides agree not to settle the territory between the Southern Bug and Dnieper rivers.
After the signing of the treaty, the Nogai hordes still retain the right to live as nomads in the southern steppes of Ukraine, while the Cossacks retain the right to fish in the Dnieper and its tributaries; to obtain salt in the south; and to sail on the Dnieper and the Black Sea.
The sultan then recognizes Muscovy's sovereignty in the Left-bank Ukraine region and the Zaporozhian Cossack domain, while the southern part of the Kiev region, the Bratslav region, and Podolia are left under Ottoman control.