Tsar Vasili Shuiski is unpopular and weak …

Years: 1607 - 1607
December

Tsar Vasili Shuiski is unpopular and weak in Russia and his reign is far from stable.

He is perceived as anti-Polish; he had led the coup against the first False Dmitri, killing over five hundred Polish soldiers in Moscow and imprisoning a Polish envoy.

The second False Dmitry, who first appears on the scene circa 1607 at Starodub, is believed to have been either a priest's son or a converted Jew, and is relatively highly educated for the time.

He speaks both the Russian and Polish languages and is something of an expert in liturgical matters.

He pretended at first to be the Muscovite boyar Nagoy, but confesses under torture that he is Tsarevich Dmitry, whereupon he is taken at his word and joined by thousands of Cossacks, Poles, and Muscovites.

In the course of the year Jerzy Mniszech, father of Marina Mniszech, widow of the first Dimitry, 'reunites' him with Marina, who miraculously recognizes her late husband in this second Dimitry (subsequently quieting her conscience by privately marrying this impostor, who in no way resembles her first husband, False Dmitry I).

This brings him the support of the magnates of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth who had supported False Dmitry I. Adam Wiśniowiecki, Roman Różyński, and Jan Sapieha decide to support the second pretender as well, supplying him with some early funds and seventy-five hundred soldiers, among them Aleksander Józef Lisowski, leader of the infamous mercenary band later known as Lisowczycy.

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