Abstract
The article is devoted to the study of the "Register" of the tsar’s treasury, lost during the "Moscow ruin" in 1610–1612. The document was discovered as part of the materials of the Great Embassy of the boyar Prince I. M. Vorotynsky near Smolensk in 1615-1616. The work reveals the circumstances of the investigation and the accounts of the treasury, plundered by a foreign garrison in Moscow. The analysis of the chronology and structure of the main losses of the tsar’s treasury makes it possible to clarify the history of the "Muscovite" crown of King Sigismund III, the tsar’s "hat" received as a pledge by the regiment of Hetman Jan Sapieha, other jewels and objects given to the "army" by the great Hetman of Lithuania Karl Khodkevich and the "Moscow elder" Alexander Gosevsky. The article examines the discussion of the issue of reimbursement of the treasury that disappeared from the tsar’s treasuries and Kremlin cathedrals at the embassy congresses near Smolensk in 1615-1616 between the Moscow ambassadors and the commissars of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.