Sigismund III Vasa, the king of Poland …
Years: 1632 - 1632
September
Sigismund III Vasa, the king of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania, had died in spring 1632, and although the Commonwealth nobility will soon elect Sigismund's son Wladyslaw IV Vasa as their new ruler, Poland's neighbors, expecting delays in the electoral process, tests the Commonwealth's perceived weakness.
Swedish king Gustav II Adolf has sent envoys to Russia and the Ottoman Empire to propose an alliance and war against the Commonwealth.
Russia, having recovered to a certain extent from the Time of Troubles, agrees with the assessment that the Commonwealth will be weakened by the death of its king, and unilaterally attacks without waiting for the Swedes and the Ottomans.
Russia's aim is to gain control of Smolensk, which it had ceded to the Commonwealth in 1618 at the Truce of Deulino, ending the last Russo-Polish War.
Smolensk is the capital of the Commonwealth's Smoleńsk Voivodeship, but it had often been contested, and it had changed hands many times during the fifteenth, sixteenth and seventeenth centuries (from the days of the Muscovite-Lithuanian Wars).
A major supporter of the war is the Tsar's father, Patriarch Filaret, who represents the anti-Polish camp at court.
Inspired by the Zemsky Sobor's (Russian parliament's) call for vengeance and reclamation of lost lands, the Muscovite army of approximately thirty-four thousand five hundred-man army sallies west.
Locations
People
Groups
- Crimean Khanate
- Ottoman Empire
- Cossacks, Zaporozhian
- Sweden, (second) Kingdom of
- Russia, Tsardom of
- Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (Commonwealth of the Two Nations)
