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  1. The Crimean Khanate self-defined as the Throne of Crimea and Desht-i Kipchak and in old European historiography and geography known as Little Tartary, was a Crimean Tatar state existing from 1441–1783, the longest-lived of the Turkic khanates that succeeded the empire of the Golden Horde.

  2. El Kanato de Crimea (en tártaro de Crimea: Qırım Hanlığı; en ruso: Крымское ханство - Krýmskoye kanstvo; ucraniano: Кримське ханство - Krimske kanstvo; turco: Kırım Hanlığı) fue el Estado de los tártaros de Crimea desde 1441 hasta 14 de febrero de 1784. Fue el más duradero de los kanatos túrquicos que sucedieron al Imperio de la Horda de Oro .

  3. Khanate of Crimea, one of the successor states to the Mongol empire. Founded in 1443 and centred at Bakhchysaray, the Crimean khanate staged occasional raids on emergent Muscovy but was no longer the threat to Russian independence that its parent state, the Golden Horde, had been even after.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. One of the surviving political elements of the Golden Horde, the Crimean Khanate comprised all of the Crimean peninsula, except for the southern and western coast, which was a province of the Ottoman Empire after 1475 (Kefe Eyalet), and survived until 1783 when it was annexed by the Russian Empire.

  5. 15 de sept. de 2016 · The Crimean Khanate and the Great Power Struggle for the Ukraine in the 17th Century. James Hardy | European History | December 28, 2020. The recent annexation of the Crimea by the Russian Federation should remind us of the competing and complicated claims of legitimacy over this tiny black sea territory, in this case between Ukraine and Russia.