West Prussia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- For the district of East Prussia, see West Prussia (district)
| Province of Prussia | |||||
| |||||
| West Prussia (red}, within the Kingdom of Prussia (blue), within the German Empire (black), as of 1871. | |||||
| Capital | Danzig | ||||
| History | |||||
| - Established | 1773 | ||||
| - Disestablished | 1919 | ||||
| Area | |||||
| - 1890 | 25,534 km2 9,859 sq mi | ||||
| Population | |||||
| - 1890 est. | 1,433,681 | ||||
| Density | 56.1 /km² 145.4 /sq mi | ||||
West Prussia (German: Westpreußen (help·info); Polish: Prusy Zachodnie) was a province of the Kingdom of Prussia from 1773-1824 and 1878-1918.
Contents |
[edit] History
In the Thirteen Years' War (1454-1466), the towns of Pomerelia and western Prussia rebelled against the Teutonic Knights and sought the assistance of King Kazimierz IV Jagiellon of Poland. In the Peace of Toruń in 1466, Pomerellia and western Prussia became the Polish province of Royal Prussia (with several special rights, especially in Danzig), while eastern Prussia remained with the Teutonic Knights, who were reduced to vassals of Poland. Royal Prussia became part of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1569.
Most of Royal Prussia was annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia in the First Partition of Poland in 1772, and became the Province of West Prussia the following year, with the exception of Warmia which was joined with the Duchy of Prussia to form the Province of East Prussia. In 1793, during the Second Partition of Poland, the Hanseatic city of Danzig (Gdańsk), no longer able to rely on its own strength, was annexed into the Kingdom of Prussia and added to West Prussia. Some of the areas of Greater Poland annexed in 1772 that formed the Netze District were added to West Prussia in 1793 as well.
In 1806 during the Napoleonic Wars, southern parts of West Prussia were moved to the Duchy of Warsaw. From 1824-1878 West Prussia was combined with East Prussia to form the Province of Prussia, after which they were reestablished as separate provinces.
After the Treaty of Versailles in 1919, most of West Prussia was granted to the Second Polish Republic, while small parts of the west and east of the former province remained in Germany. The western remainder formed Posen-West Prussia in 1922, while the eastern remainder became part of the District of West Prussia within East Prussia. In the Potsdam Conference of 1945 after World War II, all of former West Prussia was placed under the administration of Poland and was later recognized as part of Poland by East and West Germany in ensuing decades. The Landsmannschaft Westpreußen (German for "Ethnic Association of West Prussia") is a non-profit organization formed in 1948 by German refugees to Western Germany displaced from their homes in West Prussia by the Soviet occupation and Expulsion of Germans after World War II from Ex-German Eastern Territories.
[edit] Historical population
| Inhabitants | non-German citizens | |
|---|---|---|
| West Prussia | 1,433,681 | 1,976 |
From 1885 to 1890 West Prussia's population decreased by 1%.
- 1875 - 1,343,057
- 1880 - 1,405,898
- 1890 - 1,433,681 (681,195 Protestants, 717,532 Catholics, 21,750 Jews, others)
- 1900 - 1,563,658 (730,685 Protestants, 800,395 Catholics, 18,226 Jews, others)
[edit] Subdivisions
Note: Prussian provinces were subdivided into units called "Kreise" (singular "Kreis", abbreviated "Kr.", English circle), which were similar to large counties in Anglo-American terms. Cities would have their own "Stadtkreis" (English: municipal county) and the surrounding rural area would be named for the city, but referred to as a "Landkreis" (English: rural county).
| Kreis ("County") | Polish spelling | 1905 Pop | Poles | Germans | Jewish | Origin |
| Kreis Danzig (northern) | ||||||
| Danzig Stadtkreis | Gdańsk | |||||
| Elbing Stadtkreis | Elbląg | |||||
| Berent | Kościerzyna | 49.4% | ||||
| Danziger-Höhe | Gdańsk-Wyżyny | 9.7% | ||||
| Danziger-Niederung | Gdańsk-Niziny | |||||
| Dirschau | Tczew | 39.9% | ||||
| Elbing | Elbląg | |||||
| Karthaus | Kartuzy | 68.7% | ||||
| Marienburg | Malbork | |||||
| Neustadt | Wejherowo | 52.2% | ||||
| Preußisch Stargard | Starogard Gdański | 72.6% | ||||
| Putzig | Puck | 68.6% | ||||
| Kreis Marienwerder (southern) | ||||||
| Graudenz Stadtkreis | Grudziądz | 10.9% | ||||
| Thorn, Stadtkreis | Toruń | 22.7% | ||||
| Briesen | Wąbrzeźno | 57.4% | ||||
| Culm (Kulm) | Chełmno | 53.0% | ||||
| Deutsch Krone | Wałcz | |||||
| Flatow | Złotów | 25.4% | ||||
| Graudenz, Landkreis | Grudziądz | 40.5% | ||||
| Konitz | Chojnice | 53.7% | ||||
| Löbau | Lubawa | 80.1% | ||||
| Marienwerder | Kwidzyn | 35.7% | ||||
| Rosenberg | Susz | 6.9% | ||||
| Schlochau | Człuchów | 11.2% | ||||
| Schwetz | Świecie | 53.6% | ||||
| Strasburg | Brodnica | 65.2% | ||||
| Stuhm | Sztum | 36.4% | ||||
| Thorn, Landkreis | Toruń | 51.6% | ||||
| Tuchel | Tuchola | 63.8% |
[edit] Office Holders
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- (German) www.westpreussen-online.de
- (German) Administrative subdivision of the province in 1910
- (German) Westpreussenlied (midi)
- http://users.foxvalley.net/~goertz/faqwpr.html
| Kingdom of Prussia | 1740: Silesia 1773: East Prussia | West Prussia | Netze District 1793: South Prussia 1795: New East Prussia | New Silesia 1815: Brandenburg | Jülich-Cleves-Berg | Lower Rhine | Pomerania | Posen | Saxony | Westphalia 1822: Rhine Province 1829: Prussia 1850: Hohenzollern 1867: Hanover | Hesse-Nassau | Schleswig-Holstein | |
| Free State of Prussia | 1919: Lower Silesia | Upper Silesia 1920: Berlin 1922: Posen-West Prussia |
fr:Prusse occidentale ko:서프로이센 nl:West-Pruisen no:Vestpreussen pl:Prusy Zachodnie sv:Västpreussen


