Shuysky Tribute

In 1611 at the parliament, Stanisław Żółkiewski shows King Zygmunt III and Prince Władysław, the imprisoned Czar Shuisky, as depicted by Tommaso Dolabella, from the collection in the Pidhirtsi Castle.
Stanislaw Żółkiewski shows King Zygmunt III and prince Władysław in 1611 at the parliament with the captured Shuisky Czars, by Tommaso Dolabella, from the collection in the Pidhirtsi Castle
Tribute of Czars Shuysky, Jan Kanty Szwedkowski
Czars Shuysky introduced by Hetman Stanislaw Zolkiewski of parliament in Warsaw before King Sigismund III, Jan Matejko, 1853
Shuisky Czars at the polish parliament in Warsaw, sketch for the painting Jan Matejko

Shuisky tribute was the act of homage of the deposed Mickail Shuisky of Russia and his retinue to the Polish King Sigismund III Vasa and teenage prince Władysław (the then-heir to the Russian throne) on October 29, 1611, in the Senate Hall of the Royal Castle in Warsaw.

Hetman of the Crown Stanisław Żółkiewski, who had captured Moscow the previous year, held a victory procession to the Royal Palace through the city of Warsaw, during which he led the prisoners: the former Russian tsar Vasily IV Shuysky, his two brothers Ivan and Dmitry, the wife of the latter, Grand Duchess Ekaterina Grigoryevna (a daughter of Ivan the Terrible's associate Malyuta Skuratov and sister of a former tsarina, the spouse of Tsar Boris Godunov), military commander Mikhail Shein, and Patriarch Filaret who would ascend to power in Russia later on as the father and de facto ruler behind the back of his son Michael I of Russia, the founder of the Romanov Dynasty.