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As the Mongols approached Kyiv in November 1240, their huge army made a dreadful impression on the defenders. βAnd nothing could be heard above the squeaking of his carts, the bawling of his [Batuβs] innumerable camels, and the neighing of his herds of horses, and the Land of Rusβ was full of enemies,β wrote the chronicler. When the Kyivans refused to surrender, Batu brought in catapults to destroy the city walls, built of stones and logs in the times of Yaroslav the Wise. The citizens rushed to the Dormition Cathedral, the first stone church built by Volodymyr to celebrate his baptism. But the weight of the people and their belongings proved too heavy for the walls, which collapsed, burying the refugees. St. Sophia Cathedral survived but, like other city churches, was robbed of its precious icons and vessels. The victors pillaged the city; the few survivors remained in terror in the ruins of the once magnificent capital whose rulers had aspired to rival Constantinople. Giovanni da Pian del Carpine, an ambassador of Pope Innocent IV who passed through Kyiv in February 1246 on his way to the Mongol khan, left the following description of the consequences of the Mongol attack on the Kyiv Land: βWhen we were journeying through that land, we came across countless skulls and bones of dead men lying about on the ground.
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