poland – muscovite war (1609 – 1619)

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Poland – Muscovite War (1609 – 1619) By Greg Hopper

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Poland – Muscovite War (1609 – 1619). By Greg Hopper. The Beginning. It was one consequences of the Time of Troubles (1604-1613). In 1598, Feodor I, the son of Ivan IV, had died. He was the last member of the Rurik that had ruled in parts of Russia since the ninth century. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Poland – Muscovite War (1609 – 1619)

Poland – Muscovite War(1609 – 1619)

By Greg Hopper

Page 2: Poland – Muscovite War (1609 – 1619)

The Beginning• It was one consequences of the Time of

Troubles (1604-1613).• In 1598, Feodor I, the son of Ivan IV, had died.

He was the last member of the Rurik that had ruled in parts of Russia since the ninth century.

• Fedor was followed by Tsar as Boris Godunov. • In 1604 his rule was challenged by the first

False Dmitry, one of a series of men who claimed to be Fedor’s son Dmitry, who had actually died in 1591.

• Godunov died (1605) before he could defeat the False Dmitry, who briefly held the Russian throne, before being killed in 1606.

• Vasilii Shuiskii was declared Tsar, but he was unpopular in Russia.

Page 3: Poland – Muscovite War (1609 – 1619)

Poland Intervenes• A number of Dmitry’s supporters had been

Polish, and their massacre in 1606 triggered a period of Polish intervention in the civil war.

• Finally, in 1609 Sigismund III made the war official claiming the Russian throne himself.

• The Polish intervention in Russia triggered an alliance between Sweden and Moscow.

• Poland soon sieges Smolensk.• A combined army, under the Tsar’s brother

Dmitri Shuiskii, was sent to relief the siege of Smolensk, but it was heavily defeated at the battle of Klushino.

Page 4: Poland – Muscovite War (1609 – 1619)

Poland Revolt in Russia• The same year saw the beginning of

an anti-Polish uprising in Russia.• The Poles were forced to withdraw

from most of Russia in 1612, while the garrison in the Kremlin was forced to surrender and then massacred.

• In 1613, Michael Romanov, the son of the Patriarch Filaret, was elected Tsar.

• After he was Tsar, some stability returned.

Page 5: Poland – Muscovite War (1609 – 1619)

Another Attempt• The Swedish-Russian alliance now

collapsed and was replaced by a renewed Swedish-Russian War (1613-1617).

• In 1617, Wladyslaw took advantage of this war to make another attempt to gain what he now saw as “his” throne.

• In 1617- 1618, he made a determined attempt to capture Russia, but Michael made peace with the Swedes, and held off the renewed Polish attack.

Page 6: Poland – Muscovite War (1609 – 1619)

The End of the War• Both sides were now ready for a truce.

In January 1619 the Truce of Deulino suspended hostilities for fourteen and a half years.

• The truce would be broken early by the Russians in the Smolensk War of 1632-34.

• The Russians were forced to recognize the Polish occupation of Smolensk, Seversk, Chernihiv and the surrounding areas.

• In return Russian prisoners, held in Warsaw, were freed.

Page 7: Poland – Muscovite War (1609 – 1619)

Works Cited

• http://www.historyofwar.org/articles/wars_polish_muscovite_1609-19.html