In October–November 1610, after
tsarist troops were defeated
at Klushino and the
Seven Boyars agreed to elevate Polish prince
Władysław IV Vasa to the Russian throne so as to maintain order in the capital until the arrival of a new head of state, the
Commonwealth troops of
Stanisław Żółkiewski entered Moscow without a fight. Żółkiewski camped on the
Khoroshyovsky Meadows and
Khodynka Field. Although he personally opposed the occupation of the Russian capital, he entered the city under the pressure of Polish king
Sigismund III. At the end of 1610, about 6,000 armored and cavalry soldiers, 800 infantrymen, and 400
hajduks were stationed at Moscow and
Novodevichy Convent, led by
Aleksander Korwin Gosiewski,
Marcin Kazanowski,
Aleksander Zborowski and
Ludwik Wejher. For every soldier, there were three civilians who had joined them on the way to Moscow acting as servants,
sutlers and prostitutes. Żółkiewski 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 Commonwealth side by Aleksander Koryciński and a Lieutenant (
Porucznik) Maliński. When Żółkiewski 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 were staged closer to the besieged Smolensk, in
Vereya and Mozhaysk. ==Siege of Moscow by the Cossacks==