Polish–Lithuanian occupation of Moscow


During the Russian–Polish War of the Time of Troubles for two years, the Moscow Kremlin was occupied by a Polish–Lithuanian garrison under the command of Stanislav Zholkiewski, which was assisted by Russian boyars led by Mikhail Saltykov.
Since March 1611, occupied by the Poles and Lithuanians, Moscow was besieged by the Cossacks of Prince Dmitry Trubetskoy. Finally liberated in the fall of 1612 by the Second People's Militia. The date of the capture of Kitay–Gorod is celebrated in modern Russia as a Day of National Unity, and it is celebrated symbolically on November 4, that is, simultaneously with the celebration in honor of the Kazan Icon of the Mother of God.

Zholkevsky in Moscow

After the tsarist troops were defeated at Klushino and the Seven Boyars agreed to elevate the prince Vladislav to the Russian throne, to maintain order in the capital until the arrival of the new head of state in October–November 1610, the Polish–Lithuanian troops of Stanislav Zholkevsky entered Moscow without a fight. From the beginning of August, Zholkevsky camped on the Khoroshevsky Meadows and the Khodynsky Field. He entered the city under pressure from the king, although he himself was against the occupation of the Russian capital.
At the end of 1610 in Moscow and the Novodevichy Convent, about 6,000 soldiers of armored and hussar banners, 800 infantrymen of a foreign order, 400 hayduks were stationed in Moscow and the Novodevichy Convent – only four regiments led by Alexander Gonsevsky, Martin Kazanovsky, Alexander Zborovsky and Ludwig Weicher. For each soldier, there were three civilians from among the "Tushinites" who had joined them on the way to Moscow, servants and waitresses.
Zholkiewski placed the soldiers in Moscow so that in the event of an attack they could come to each other's aid or retreat to the Kremlin. A significant part of the garrison was located west of the Kremlin wall near the Neglinnaya River. To maintain order, a tribunal was established in which the Russian side was represented by Grigory Romodanovsky and Ivan Streshnev, and the Polish–Lithuanian side – by Alexander Korychinsky and Lieutenant Malynsky.
When Zholkevsky went to Smolensk in November for a meeting with Sigismund III, he took his regiments with him. Several units were left at the Novodevichy Convent to control the roads to Mozhaysk and Volokolamsk. The rest of the hetman placed closer to the besieged Smolensk – in Vereya and Mozhaysk.

Siege of Moscow by the Cossacks

In March 1611, in connection with the formation of the First People's Militia, the commander of the Polish–Lithuanian garrison, Gonsevsky, provoked street battles, during which most of Moscow burned down. Having broken the resistance of the townspeople in advance, Gonsevsky hoped to minimize support for the First Militia.
In April and early May, the militias stormed the ramparts of the Zemlyanoy City and the walls of the White City, liberating most of the territory of Moscow, after which they locked the invaders behind the Kitay–Gorod and Kremlin Walls. The Cossacks of Prince Dmitry Trubetskoy actually took the Kremlin garrison under siege.
Together with the Poles, members of the Semiboyarshchina sat in the besieged Kremlin, as well as the future Tsar Mikhail Fedorovich Romanov with his mother.

Hunger and cannibalism

Provisions for the garrison were collected in the Moscow region by the regiment of Jan Peter Sapega. To feed the Polish–Lithuanian army were allocated "stations" northeast of Moscow. According to the testimony of the memoirist Samuil Maskevich, "what anyone liked, and whether the greatest boyar's wife or daughter, they took them by force". After the death of Sapieha in September 1611, Jan Karol Chodkiewicz, the great Lithuanian hetman, took over the difficult task of collecting food.
The entire first half of 1612 was unusually cold. Not receiving salaries, many of the garrison's soldiers formed a confederation and left the Russian capital. Famine began in the city. Speculators from the Moscow region sold bread in the city at 30 times the price.
At the end of 1611, carts with provisions collected by Samuil Koretsky reached the Kremlin. In January 1612, Budzila's regiment was able to break through to Moscow. He brought up food supplies, which temporarily eased the food situation. The Hungarian infantrymen of Felix Nevyarovsky, who later arrived in time, did not bring food and their presence only accelerated the return of the lack of food. On July 25, Yakub Bobovsky brought several carts of grain, but it was a drop in the sea.
Avraamy Palitsyn claims that after their entry into the Kremlin, Trubetskoy's Cossacks "having acquired a lot of vanities and half of human flesh are salty and under the slings there is a lot of human corpse".

Autumn 1612

Seeing the uselessness of resistance, the Polish–Lithuanian formations began to leave the city. The most efficient regiment of Zborovsky went to Smolensk in early June 1612. Until the end of the summer, Gonsevsky followed him with all the veterans of the Klushino Battle. Together with them, the retreating took away the remnants of the Kremlin treasury. Nikolai Strus was left at the head of the garrison of Gonsevsky.
In early autumn, Khodkevich returned from a campaign in the Upper Volga lands with 400 carts of provisions. During the bloody battles on September 1–3, 1612, he approached the besieged Kremlin by 1800 meters, but having lost fifteen hundred soldiers in 2 days of fighting, he was forced to retreat. After that, the fate of the besieged was sealed.
Trubetskoy's Cossacks at the beginning of November established control over Kitay–Gorod, after which Strus opened negotiations on the terms of surrender. The Kremlin garrison capitulated on November 7. Although they promised to "leave the defeated in health and have respect", after the surrender of the Kremlin, a massacre of its defenders took place: "The Cossacks beat the whole regiment, leaving a few".

Fate of the prisoners

Before the Truce of Deulino of 1619 and the exchange of prisoners that followed, the Poles and Litvins captured in the Kremlin were settled in Yaroslavl, Balakhna, Nizhny Novgorod and other Upper Volga cities. The prisoners in Galich and Unzha were completely exterminated. In Nizhny Novgorod, the mother of Prince Pozharsky stood up for Budzila with her comrades, after which they were placed "in a dungeon in which they had been sitting for nineteen weeks, very dark, thin and stinking".