- Baidar
Baidar was the second son of
Chagatai Khan .He participated European campaign (Elder boys campaign as known in Mongolia) with his nephewBüri from 1235-1241. He commanded Mongol army assignated to Poland withKadan and probablyOrda Khan .Baidar defeated many
Poles ,Russians ,Germans and Moravians. On 13 February 1241 the Mongols crossed the frozenVistula . The town ofSandomierz was taken and plundered. Further to the west, on 18 March Orda and Baidar met the Polish army under the command of DukeBoleslaw V (not present at the battle) at thebattle of Chmielnik . The Poles were heavily defeated and Boleslaw with a part of his troops fled toMoravia . On 22 March the Mongols stood beforeKraków , many of whose inhabitants had already made their escape. OnPalm Sunday the Mongols set the town on fire and took prisoner large numbers of the people who had remained. Moving further west, Orda and Baidar reached a place east ofOpole , where they forced DukeMiecislaw 's army to retreat. NearRacibórz they crossed theOder . Racibórz was burnt by its inhabitants when they left the town.Breslau (present-dayWrocław ) fell into the hands of the Mongols, although the citadel itself did not surrender. Their first assault against the fortress having failed, the Mongols wasted no time on a siege. They bypassed the citadel and pushed forward to the west.After defeating a combined force of Poles, Germans, Templars and
Teutonic Knights at Liegnica (seeBattle of Legnica ), Baidar camped for about two weeks in the neighbourhood ofOthmachau (betweenOpole andKlodzko ). Early in May 1241 they enteredMoravia . Various small, unprotected places were plundered. When an attempt to take the town ofOlomouc came to nothing they joined, viaBrno ,Batu 's main army inHungary . AlthoughBohemia remained unmolested, Moravia had much to endure. The destruction in Poland,Silesia and Moravia was all much of the same kind.Some European chronicles claim Baidar was killed near
Olmutz in 1240. It is not true. He participated in the election ofGüyük Khan in 1247.References
*Genghis Khan: Conqueror of the World, Leo de Hartog
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