East Prussia
East Prussia (German: Ostpreußen; Polish: Prusy Wschodnie; Russian: Восточная Пруссия — Vostochnaya Prussiya) was a province of Kingdom of Prussia, situated on the territory of former Ducal Prussia. The northern part of East Prussia corresponds today to Russia's Kaliningrad Oblast (Königsberg), the southern parts form Poland's Warminsko-Mazurskie Voivodship. East Prussia enclosed the bulk of the ancient ancestral lands of the Baltic Prussians.
East Prussia was located along the south-east corner of the Baltic Sea.\nIts capital was Königsberg (now Kaliningrad)
*The numbers for "non-German citizens" represent only people, who did not speak German language.From 1885 to 1890 Berlin had gained 20% inhabitants, Brandenburg and Rhineland gained 8,5%, Westphalia 10% , while East Prussia had lost 0,07 and West Prussia 0,86 %. Following Counties had large Polish populations, according to German census from 1900: Johannisburg (Provinz Ostpreußen) 70,2 % \n Ortelsburg (Provinz Ostpreußen) 74,5 % \n Lyck (Provinz Ostpreußen) 53,2 % \n Neidenburg (Provinz Ostpreußen) 69,3 % \n Sensburg (Provinz Ostpreußen) 50,5 % \n Lötzen (Provinz Ostpreußen) 38,1 % \n Oletzko County Oletzko (Provinz Ostpreußen) 33,5 % \n Osterode (Provinz Ostpreußen) 43,9 % \n Allenstein (Provinz Ostpreußen) 47,1 % \n Rössel (Provinz Ostpreußen) 14,0 % Weimar RepublicThe German Empire became a Republic in 1918, with the abdication of Emperor Wilhelm II. As a consequence of the lost World War I and according to the Versailles Treaty, a plebiscite was to be held in the southern parts of East Prussia in 1920 to decide whether these areas should belong to the re-established state of Poland or remain German. 96.7 % of the people voted for remaining within Germany. \n(Note: the choice on the ballot was in fact between "East Prussia" and "Poland")Nazi reign\nWW2During the World War II, the province was extended (see Polish areas annexed by Nazi Germany). In 1939, East Prussia had 2.49 million inhabitants. Many were killed in the war, most of them young people conscripted to the German army and killed in action. The Red Army had entered the eastern-most tip of Prussia by August 29 1944. The brutal massacres and rapes of civilians committed by the Soviet troops spread panic in the province and caused many to flee in long trecks, also via the baltic sea more than 2 million people were evacuated. The remaining population of East Prussia was during the years after the war expulsed by the communist Soviet and Polish regimes. Many people were also deported as slave labourers to Eastern parts of the Soviet Union and lost their lives there. After the expulsion of the German population, Russians Belorussians and Ukrainians were settled in the northern part and Sambia and Polish expatriates from eastern parts of Poland taken over by the Soviet Union were settled in the southern part of East Prussia, now Polish "Warmia i Mazury".Further readingPublications in German
Publications in Polish
External links\n*German Empire: Province of East PrussiaSee also\n*Landsmannschaft Ostpreußen\nCategory:Kingdom of Prussia \n\n\n \n\n\nnds:Ostpreußen |
||||||||
"Argue for your limitations, and sure enough they're yours." - Richard Bach |
East Prussia (