PRUSSIA

prŭshˈə, Ger. Preussen, former state, the largest and most important of the German states. Berlin was the capital. The chief member of the German Empire (1871–1918) and a state of the Weimar Republic (1919–33), Prussia occupied more than half of all Germany and the major part of N Germany. Before 1919 it consisted of 13 provinces: Berlin, Brandenburg, East Prussia (separated after 1919 from the rest of Prussia by the Polish Corridor), Hanover, Hesse-Nassau (see Hesse), Hohenzollern (a Prussian enclave between Württemberg and Baden in SW Germany), Pomerania, Rhine Province, Saxony, Schleswig-Holstein, Upper Silesia and Lower Silesia, and Westphalia. (Grenzmark Posen–West Prussia was sometimes considered a 14th province.) Prussia surrounded several smaller German states and stretched from the borders of the Netherlands, Belgium, and Luxembourg in the west to those of Lithuania and Poland in the east, and from the Baltic Sea, Denmark, and the North Sea in the north to the Main River, the Thuringian Forest, and the Sudetes Mts. in the south.

The region that was Prussia is made up mainly of low-lying land, drained by several rivers, notably the Rhine; the Weser; the Oder; and the Elbe, which divided the state into roughly equal eastern and western parts. After Berlin, the largest cities of the area were Cologne, Breslau (Wroclaw), Essen, Frankfurt, Düsseldorf, Hanover, Dortmund, Magdeburg, and Königsberg (Kaliningrad). The region also included the gigantic industrial Ruhr district.

Industrially and politically the most prominent state of Germany prior to World War II, Prussia was partitioned among the four Allied occupation zones after 1945. In 1947 the Allied Control Council for Germany formally abolished the state of Prussia. This action not only confirmed an accomplished fact; it was also intended as a blow against the spirit of German militarism and aggression, long held to be connected with Prussia. Most of the former Prussian provinces became part of the new states of the Federal Republic of Germany and of the German Democratic Republic (now reunified). The USSR annexed the northern part of East Prussia; Poland acquired the rest of East Prussia, as well as all Prussian territory E of the Oder and Neisse rivers.

History

Growth of Brandenburg-Prussia

Prussia in its modern meaning came into existence only in 1701, when the elector of Brandenburg assumed the title "king in Prussia." Before then Prussia meant only the flat, sandy region later known as East Prussia (excluding the bishopric of Ermeland), separated from Brandenburg by a part of Poland (later known as West Prussia) and bordering on the Baltic Sea. The original inhabitants, the Borussi (or Prussians), were of Baltic stock. They were conquered and largely exterminated by the Teutonic Knights in the 13th cent. The Knights effected the Germanization of Prussia.

Through the secularization (1525) of the domain of the Teutonic Order by the grand master Albert of Brandenburg, the domain became a hereditary duchy under Polish suzerainty, ruled by a branch of the Hohenzollern dynasty of Brandenburg. In 1618 the duchy of Prussia passed through inheritance to the elector of Brandenburg, and in 1660, by the treaty of Oliva, full independence from Polish suzerainty was confirmed to Frederick William, the Great Elector. In the course of the 17th cent. the electors of Brandenburg directed themselves westward, acquiring the duchy of Cleves, together with the counties of Mark and Ravensberg (1614) and the bishoprics of Minden, Magdeburg, and Halberstadt (1648). In the east, Brandenburg gained (1648) Farther (i.e., eastern) Pomerania, which connected it with the Baltic Sea but not with Prussia.

Rise of the Prussian State

The electorate with its dependencies had become a major German state by the end of the 17th cent., a position that it owed largely to the secularization of church lands during the Reformation (the major part of its new acquisitions had been ecclesiastic territory) and to its successful diplomacy at the Peace of Westphalia (1648). In 1701, Elector Frederick III had himself crowned "king in Prussia" at Königsberg (Kaliningrad) and styled himself King Frederick I. He remained a prince of the Holy Roman Empire by virtue of his rank as margrave and elector of Brandenburg and his holdings within the empire, but not as king of Prussia, which lay outside the imperial boundaries. This technicality gave the kings of Prussia a measure of independence from the emperor not possessed by the other princes of the empire.

As a result of the Northern War, Prussia gained (1720) the eastern part of Swedish Pomerania (including Stettin). In the following 20 years, however, King Frederick William I, the true creator of the Prussian state, avoided military ventures and used diplomacy in order to create a unified state. He fully developed the features that had distinguished Prussia since the time of the Great Elector. The army, necessary to defend Prussia's scattered lands, was also the chief force in unifying and shaping the state. In order to build a strong army in their relatively poor country, Prussia's rulers developed a government-controlled economy and an obedient central bureaucracy (the Generaldirektorium). The landed aristocrats, the Junkers, were brought into military and state service and in turn were left free to enserf their peasants.

Frederick William's successor, Frederick II, or Frederick the Great (reigned 1740–86), used the efficient military instrument bequeathed him by his father to enter upon a period of conquest. On a slim pretext (see Silesia) and without a declaration of war, he invaded (1740) Austrian territory, thus gaining the initiative in the War of the Austrian Succession (1740–48). Acting with utter disregard for its allies, Prussia got out of the war in 1742 by the Treaty of Berlin, reentered it in 1744, and quit again in 1745 at the Treaty of Dresden. In both treaties Maria Theresa of Austria was forced to cede nearly all of Silesia to Prussia. Although it gained no additional territory in the Seven Years War (1756–63), Prussia emerged from the war as the chief military power of the Continent. By the partition of Poland of 1772 (see Poland, partitions of) Prussia gained Pomerelia (except Danzig) and Ermeland. Pomerelia was organized into the province of West Prussia, and the original Prussia became known as East Prussia.

Frederick was succeeded (1786) by Frederick William II, who further added to Prussia by the partitions of Poland of 1793 and 1795. However, under his rule and that of his successor, Frederick William III (1797–1840), Prussia underwent a period of eclipse as a result of the French Revolutionary Wars and the wars of Napoleon I. Defeated by the French, Prussia withdrew from the antirevolutionary coalition in the Treaty of Basel (1795) and remained neutral until 1806. Its armies were crushed by Napoleon in the twin battles of Jena and Auerstedt, and in 1807 Prussia had to accept the harsh Treaty of Tilsit, by which it lost all lands W of the Elbe and most of its share of Poland and became a virtual dependency of France.

Prussia was fortunate to possess, at this low ebb in its history, such able and energetic reformers as Karl vom und zum Stein, Karl August von Hardenberg, and Wilhelm von Humboldt. These men helped transform Prussia into a progressive state by abolishing serfdom and nobiliary privileges, introducing agrarian and other social and economic reforms, and laying the groundwork for an exemplary system of universal education. Gerhard von Scharnhorst and August, Graf von Gneisenau at the same time put the Prussian army on a modern basis.

Prussia was forced to send auxiliary troops for Napoleon's 1812 campaign in Russia, but late in the year Yorck von Wartenburg concluded a separate truce with Russia, and in 1813 Prussia joined the coalition against France. Field Marshal Blücher played a major role in defeating Napoleon at Leipzig (1813) and at Waterloo (1815). At the Congress of Vienna, Prussia gained, in addition to its recovered territories, the entire Rhine prov. and Westphalia, the northern half of Saxony, the remainder of Swedish Pomerania, and a large part of W Poland, including Danzig (Gdańsk), Poznań, and Gniezno. However, Prussia disappointed the hopes of German liberals by following the lead of the Austrian chancellor, Metternich, in the Holy Alliance.

A constitution promised in 1811 failed to materialize under the increasingly reactionary government of Frederick William III, and the half-hearted constitutional schemes of Frederick William IV were impracticable. By 1834 Prussia had, however, taken the lead in the economic unification of Germany (see Zollverein), which was a prerequisite to political union. The March Revolution of 1848 was put down by force, and in 1849 Frederick William IV refused the imperial crown of Germany offered by the Frankfurt Parliament. His scheme for a German Union under Prussian leadership and excluding Austria was punctured in the Convention of Olomouc (1850), and Prussia returned to the restored German Confederation.

Supremacy of Prussia

In 1861, William I (regent since 1858) became king, and in 1862 he appointed as premier Otto von Bismarck, who directed the destiny of Prussia and (after 1871) of Germany until 1890. Bismarck effected the elimination of Austria from German affairs and the union of Germany under Prussian hegemony by means of three deliberately planned wars. The first war (1864) was fought in alliance with Austria against Denmark over Schleswig-Holstein. Its settlement furnished a pretext for the Austro-Prussian War of 1866, in which Prussia quickly and thoroughly defeated Austria and its allies and gained additional territory by the annexation of Hanover, Electoral Hesse, Nassau, Schleswig-Holstein, and the free city of Frankfurt am Main. The German Confederation was dissolved, and the Prussian-led North German Confederation took its place. Finally, in the Franco-Prussian War (1870–71), the North German Confederation overwhelmed France, and in 1871 William I of Prussia was proclaimed emperor of Germany.

In its main features the subsequent history of Prussia was that of Germany. However, Bismarck's Kulturkampf against the Roman Catholic Church was largely confined to the kingdom of Prussia, which, like the other German states, continued as an individual member of the empire.

The Prussian constitution adopted in 1850 and amended in the following years was far less liberal than the federal constitution of the empire. The government was not responsible to the Prussian Landtag (lower chamber), whose powers were small and whose members were elected by a suffrage system based on tax-paying ability. The house of lords was largely controlled by the conservative Junkers, who held immense tracts of generally poor land E of the Elbe (particularly in East Prussia). Endowed with little money and much pride, they had continued to form the officer corps of the army. The rising industrialists, notably the great Rhenish and Westphalian mine owners and steel magnates, although their interests were often opposed to those of the Junkers, exerted an equally reactionary influence on politics. The Prussian constitution was liberalized after Prussia became a republic in 1918, and the Junkers lost many of their estates through the cession of Prussian territory to Poland. However, both the Junkers and the Rhenish industrialists continued to exert much power behind the scenes, and when Franz von Papen became (1932) German chancellor and commissioner for Prussia, they came into their own. In July, 1932, Papen suspended the Prussian parliament and ousted the Social Democrat Otto Braun, who had been premier of Prussia (with brief interruptions) from 1920.

Early in 1933, Adolf Hitler seized power and made Hermann Goering premier of Prussia; Hitler's rise had been aided by the Rhenish industrialists. By a decree of Hitler issued in Jan., 1934, the German states ceased to exist as political units, and it was no longer possible to differentiate clearly between Prussia and the rest of Germany.

Bibliography

The classic histories of Prussia are those of Ranke, Treitschke, and Droysen. See also Sir John A. R. Marriott and C. G. Robertson, The Evolution of Prussia (1915, rev. ed. 1946); F. L. Carsten, Origins of Prussia (1954); H. Tuttle, History of Prussia (4 vol., 1884–96, repr. 1971); T. M. Barker, ed., Frederick the Great and the Making of Prussia (1976); S. B. Fay, The Rise of Brandenburg-Prussia to 1786 (1937, rev. ed. 1981); H. W. Koch, A History of Russia (1987).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Prussia  - 11208 results

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...Christine of BrunswickWolfenbuttel, Queen of Prussia, 125 . See also Frederick II, the Great , King of Prussia Elizabethschrein Marburg , 28 -29 Engels...255 , 279 Ferdinand, Prince Louis of Prussia, 128 Ferdinand II, Holy Roman emperor...
...present to regain the ground which Prussia has lost. Nonetheless, this is the only way to win the position which Prussia needs for the fulfillment of its state...assurance that His Majesty the King of Prussia would still remain king in his country...
...000,000 are subjects of the King of Prussia; of 86 towns with a population of over...Beitrage , amounting to 12,750,000, Prussia contributes 8,000,000. Since 1871...been a member of the Prussian service; Prussia has 17 members out of 61 in the Federal...
...foreigner for treason against Germany. But Prussia had not the happiness of being left alone...in the sequel, at a sum greater than Prussia, now an insignificant State, poor by...For the five years that fol lowed, Prussia is to be conceived, in addition to all...
...victory -- that after the Battle of Wagram Prussia still contemplates joining Austria, and...followed that battle, is regarded by Prussia as a contrivance on the part of Austria...another disadvantageous peace. Meanwhile Prussia had almost ceased to conceal her views...
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Bismarck, Prussia German nationalism by Edgar Feuchtwanger...state. Bismarcks Prussian apprenticeship Prussia was, like many European countries before...monarchical regime that had existed in Prussia and most of Europe before 1848. In this...
...Kingdom. the Rise and Downfall of Prussia, 1600-1947. by James M. Brophy Iron Kingdom. The Rise and Downfall of Prussia, 1600-1947. By Christopher Clark...one of the most significant works on Prussia in the last thirty years. Indeed...
...Iron Kingdom: The Rise and Downfall of Prussia, 1600-1947. by Jonathan R. White Iron Kingdom: The Rise and Downfall of Prussia, 1600-1947. By Christopher Clark...00.) In the beginning, there was no Prussia, and in the end the state was dissolved...
The Austro-Prussian War: Austrias War with Prussia and Italy in 1866 by Scott W. Lackey The Austro-Prussian War: Austrias War with Prussia and Italy in 1866. By Geoffrey Wawro. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996. Pp. xii...
...Connection between Sweden and Brandenburg-Prussia. by Daniel Riches IN A SHORT BIOGRAPHICAL...rising military powers, Brandenburg-Prussia. In fact, Dutch military theory and...development did not come to Brandenburg-Prussia directly from the Low Countries, but...
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Remember Prussia? by William Anthony Hay Christopher Clark, Iron Kingdom: The Rise and Downfall of Prussia, 1600-1947 (Cambridge, MA: Belknap...eventually regained their independence. Prussia, however, met the fate of which Kipling...
PRUSSIA 1701 A EUROPEAN AFFAIR. by Daniel Snowman...commemorate the 300th anniversary of `Prussia. I have to word that carefully. There...had himself crowned Frederick I, King in Prussia, in far-off Konigsberg (todays Kaliningrad...
The Kingdom of Prussia is Founded by Richard Cavendish January 18th, 1701 PRUSSIA, which was to become a byword for German militarism...population was German, though the Poles annexed part of Prussia in the following century, leaving the Knights...
...Humiliation at the Hands of a Beligerent Prussia. by Mark Bryant Though the Franco-Prussian...long, waxed moustache, Wilhelm I of Prussia with his bushy side-whiskers, and the...began over a dispute between France and Prussia over who should become the new monarch...
...Kingdom: The Rise and Downfall of Prussia, 1600-1947. by Jeremy Black The Iron Kingdom The Rise and Downfall of Prussia, 1600-1947 Christopher Clark Allen...713 99466 5 The core of Germany is Prussia. There is the source of the recurring...
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From Prussia with Love; European Hero: Jacobite Exile...killed fighting for Frederick the Greats Prussia. A statue in his home town of Peterhead...so important to Scotland but he was to Prussia. He was a soldier of great humanity and...
From Prussia WITH LOVE; the Imminent Divorce of Prince...Dorchester in 1946, the would-be King of Prussia - whose family lost all their Polish lands...Friedrich Georg Wilhelm Christophe of Prussia (who adopted the family name of Mansfield...
To Prussia with Love; Welsh Lamb and Beef Is on the March across Europe and beyond. Andrew Forgrave, Rural Affairs Editor, Reports from...
From Prussia with Love. Byline: Roger Lewis Marlene Dietrich: A Personal Biography by Charlotte Chandler JR Books pounds sterling18.99...
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encyclopedia articles on: Prussia  - 379 results

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PRUSSIA prush , Ger. Preussen, former state...state of the Weimar Republic (1919 33), Prussia occupied more than half of all Germany...provinces: Berlin, Brandenburg , East Prussia (separated after 1919 from the rest of...
EAST PRUSSIA Ger. Ostpreussen, former province of Prussia, extreme NE Germany. The region of East Prussia has low rolling hills that are heavily wooded, and it is dotted by many lakes (especially in Masuria ). The region is drained by several...
WEST PRUSSIA Ger. Westpreussen, former province of Prussia, 9,867 sq mi (25,556 sq km), NE Germany, extending...the Baltic Sea, between Pomerania on the west and East Prussia on the east. Danzig was the capital. The larger part...
WILLIAM I , emperor of Germany and king of Prussia 1797 1888, emperor of Germany (1871 88) and king of Prussia (1861 88), second son of the future King Frederick William III of Prussia and Louise of Mecklenburg. Essentially conservative...
FREDERICK II , king of Prussia or Frederick the Great, 1712 86, king of Prussia (1740 86), son and successor of Frederick William...both times securing Upper and Lower Silesia for Prussia. In the Seven Years War (1756 63), possession...
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