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Capitulation of Franzburg

The capitulation of Franzburg (German: Franzburger Kapitulation) was a treaty providing for the capitulation of the Duchy of Pomerania to the forces of the Holy Roman Empire during the Thirty Years' War.[1] It was signed on 10 November (O.S.) or 20 November (N.S.) 1627[nb 1] by Bogislaw XIV, Duke of Pomerania and Hans Georg von Arnim, commander in chief of an occupation force belonging to the army of Ferdinand II, Holy Roman Emperor, led by Albrecht von Wallenstein.[1] While the terms of the capitulation were unfavourable for the Duchy of Pomerania already, occupation became even more burdensome when the occupation force did not adhere to the restrictions outlined in Franzburg.[2] Stralsund resisted with Danish, Swedish and Scottish support, another Danish intervention failed. Imperial occupation lasted until Swedish forces invaded in 1630, and subsequently cleared all of the Duchy of Pomerania of imperial forces until 1631.[3]

Franzburg, Western Pomerania, in 1618

Background edit

 
Location of the Duchy of Pomerania ("Pommern") within the Upper Saxon Circle (rose) of the Holy Roman Empire (white)

The Duchy of Pomerania adopted Protestantism in 1534.[4] With the Second Defenestration of Prague in 1618, the Thirty Years' War started as a primarily Catholic-Protestant conflict between Ferdinand II, Holy Roman Emperor and the Catholic League on the one side and Protestant nobility and states on the other. Pomerania was a member of the internally divided Protestant Upper Saxon Circle,[5] that most prominently included the electorates of Saxony and Brandenburg, and had declared neutrality in 1620.[6] Facing a victorious Catholic League, the Saxon electorate switched to the emperor's side in 1624, while Brandenburg and Pomerania kept resisting imperial demands.[7] Aware of the League's military superiority however, they refused an alliance offered by Protestant Denmark.[8]

In 1625, imperial forces led by Albrecht von Wallenstein occupied the Lower Saxon prince-bishoprics of Magdeburg and Halberstadt, thereby also occupying and looting the Upper Saxon counties of Honstein and Wernigerode.[8] Wallenstein's army had been raised to support the League's forces commanded by Johann Tserclaes, Count of Tilly.[9]

As a countermeasure, Danish forces led by Ernst von Mansfeld occupied the Brandenburgian regions Altmark and Prignitz southwest of Pomerania also in 1625, but were defeated by the Imperial troops in the Battle of Dessau Bridge in 1626.[8] Except for The Electorate of Saxony, which was treated by Wallenstein as a de facto member of the Catholic League, the Upper Saxon states, bare of sufficient military means for self-defence, were subsequently occupied and devastated by the imperial forces after Denmark had been neutralized.[8] Formally, the circle maintained neutrality.[10]

In November 1626, the Swedish Empire recruited troops in Pomerania even though the duke had disapproved.[11] In February 1627, Swedish troops crossed the duchy for Poland, an imperial ally Sweden was at war with.[11] In July, imperial troops crossed into the duchy near Pyritz (now Pyrzyce).[12] To prevent the pending occupation, duke Bogislaw XIV offered 60,000 Talers in October, later raised to 200,000 Talers.[12] Unimpressed Albrecht von Wallenstein instead ordered Hans-Georg von Arnim to occupy all Pomeranian ports and to confiscate all vessels.[12]

The occupation of Pomerania was a strategical measure rather than punishment for prior disobedience.[1] It was implemented to secure the southern coastline of the Baltic Sea for the empire against Christian IV of Denmark, whose land forces were operating on imperial soil until the Treaty of Lübeck in 1629, and whose naval dominance in the Baltic Sea the empire was unable to challenge.[1]

Provisions edit

 
Hans Georg von Arnim, signed for the empire

The treaty ruled on the conditions of the billeting ("hospitatio") of the Imperial troops.[1] Sources vary on whether Bogislaw XIV obliged himself to the intake of eight[13][14][15] or ten[16][17] regiments (approximately 24,000 soldiers).[15] According to Herbert Langer, twenty multi-ethnic regiments with a total of 31,000 infantry and 7,540 cavalry were actually counted.[1] To this number added military staff and civilian baggage of unknown number.[1]

In general, all towns and villages were required to quarter the troops, exempted were specified domains of the House of Pomerania, estates of knights, houses of clergy, councillors and academics, as well as the ducal residences Damm (now Szczecin-Dąbie), Köslin (now Koszalin), Stettin (now Szczecin) and Wolgast.[1]

The capitulation also included restrictions on the army, in particular it forbade among others the interference with trade, traffic and crafts; holdups and robberies which would harm towns, burghers, peasants or travellers; looting and extortion; rape of decent women;[nb 2] quartering of soldiers' families and servants; and frivolous use of arms.[18]

Contributions, which were to pay to the imperial forces by the duchy, were fixed at a weekly 407 Reichstalers per company and an additional 2,580 Reichstalers per respective staff.[13]

Implementation and consequences edit

 
Albrecht von Wallenstein

The towns of Anklam, Demmin, Greifswald and Kolberg (now Kolobrzeg) were made seats of a garrison each, while in other towns, smaller units took quarter.[19] Cavalry was stationed primarily in villages due to both the easier handling of the horses and the lower proportion of desertion compared to infantry.[19]

Although not ruled out verbatim in the capitulation's text, the conditions of quartering in Pomerania followed established practice: House and estate owners were to provide the soldier with bed, vinegar and salt, and also share kitchen and heatable living room at no cost.[19] In theory, food had to be paid for; the soldiers were to either compensate their hosts or buy their victuals in special depots set up by the military.[19]

Wallenstein had promised Ferdinand II, Holy Roman Emperor to fund his army himself.[20] In practice, this meant that the army was fed and paid by contributions of the occupied territories and war loot.[20] Since the higher ranks often kept the already small fraction of war loot and contributions thought to pay the lower ranks for themselves, the soldiers satisfied their needs at the expense of the local population instead (bellum se ipsum alet).[19]

In addition to noncompliance with the capitulation's provisions by the military, hardship resulted from more frequent epidemics caused by the quartering, and by shrinking natural resources.[18] By 7 May 1628, Pomerania had already paid 466,981 Reichstaler as contributions – twice as much as the whole Upper Saxon Circle’s annual output.[13] Suffering in Pomerania was "undescribable and became proverbial".[21] John George I, Elector of Saxony, who still perceived the Upper Saxon Circle his sphere of influence and anticipated imperial occupation of his thitherto spared electorate, sharply criticized Wallenstein’s practices, yet without result.[21]

 
Alexander Leslie

Stralsund was the only town in the Duchy of Pomerania to resist imperial occupation, resulting in the Battle of Stralsund.[22] Unwilling to surrender the considerable independence it had long enjoyed as a Hanseatic town, Stralsund ignored the duke's order to adhere to the capitulation, instead turned to Denmark and Sweden for support and was aided in her defense by both.[23] Christian IV of Denmark deployed a Scottish force raised by Donald Mackay, and the Scots Alexander Seaton and Alexander Leslie were in charge of the defense when the former colonel, Holke, retired to seek reinforcements.[24][nb 3] Wallenstein laid siege to the town, and in July 1628 commanded several unsuccessful assaults in person.[25] When Stralsund turned out to become his first serious misfortune in the war, he lifted the siege to win a last battle against Christian IV near Wolgast.[25] Christian IV, who had already destroyed Wallenstein's naval facilities in Greifswald,[26] had intended to secure another Pomeranian port besides Stralsund there, but was utterly defeated and retreated to Denmark.[27] Stralsund however signed an alliance with Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden, providing him with a bridgehead on imperial territory manned with a Swedish expeditionary force and thus ultimately marking the Swedish entrance into the Thirty Years' War.[25]

In February 1629, Bogislaw XIV pledged to ease the occupation, and though Ferdinand II re-assured the duke, he took no action.[28] Instead the imperial Edict of Restitution of March advertised the re-Catholization of the empire’s Protestant states.[21] The Treaty of Lübeck, which ended the hostilities between the Danish king and the emperor in May, likewise did not result in a relief or a lift of the occupation,[21] even though the capitulation of Franzburg had been justified with the emperor's right to recruit military support from his subjects to their own and the empire's protection.[1]

After France had mediated a truce between the Swedish Empire and the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in September 1629, Sweden was ready for an invasion of the Holy Roman Empire.[25] The invasion was started when Gustavus Adolphus' troops landed on Usedom island in the spring of 1630, while simultaneous assaults on Rügen and the adjacent mainland by the Stralsund garrison cleared his flank.[29] As a consequence, the capitulation of Franzburg was replaced by a Pomeranian-Swedish alliance confirmed in the Treaty of Stettin.[30]

Legacy edit

 
Gustavus Adolphus, memorial plaque at the Greifswald cathedral (Swedish Pomerania until 1815)

The capitulation of Franzburg marked the beginning of the Thirty Years' War in the Duchy of Pomerania. The severe plight the capitulation inflicted on the people[22] only foreshadowed the utter devastation of the duchy by the end of the war, when two thirds of the population were left dead.[31]

The successful resistance of Stralsund to the terms of the capitulation granted the Swedish Empire a foothold in the Holy Roman Empire – especially after Denmark withdrew her forces following the Treaty of Lübeck. The Swedish garrison in Stralsund was the first on German soil in history.[1] A Riksdag commission had approved of Gustavus Adolphus' plans to intervene on the empire's soil already in the winter of 1627/28, and in January 1629, the Riksråd approved of an offensive war, put into effect in the following year.[32] Swedish forces invaded Pomerania in 1630 and by 16 June 1631 had cleared the last imperial stronghold, Greifswald.[33] With short war-caused interruptions, Sweden kept her continental foothold in what became known as Swedish Pomerania until the Congress of Vienna of 1815.

Bogislaw XIV, Duke of Pomerania, who had just part by part inherited the previously internally partitioned duchy to become her sole ruler in 1625,[34] issued a paper called Dreijährige Drangsal ("three years of distress") after the Swedish take-over, which read that the capitulation in Franzburg had been forced upon him by the military.[1] At the same time, he wrote a letter to the Holy Roman Emperor apologizing for the Swedish alliance, saying he had no choice but to obey Swedish demands, and included a passage in the Treaty of Stettin stating the alliance be for the empire's best.[35] Bogislaw did not survive the war: He died without issue in 1637, terminating some 500 years of rulership of the House of Pomerania.[36]

The town of Franzburg, where the capitulation was signed, fell victim to the war, too: It was devastated completely.[37] In 1670, a mere 70 people lived in the town.[38] Only in 1728 was Franzburg resettled.[37]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In the 17th century, the Julian calendar was used in the region, which then was ten days late compared to the Gregorian calendar; 10 November – Julian, 20 November – Gregorian.
  2. ^ The German original reads "Verbot von Notzucht und Schändung 'redlicher Weibsbilder'". Langer (2003), p. 404
  3. ^ Scotsman Seaton, in command of the Scottish-Danish forces, was relieved by Leslie, future Earl of Leven, a Scot in Swedish service. Salmon (2003), p. 32

Sources edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Langer (2003), p. 402
  2. ^ Langer (2003), pp. 403–404
  3. ^ Langer (2003), p. 406
  4. ^ Theologische Realenzyklopädie II (1993), p. 44
  5. ^ Nicklas (2002), p. 214
  6. ^ Nicklas (2002), p. 205
  7. ^ Nicklas (2002), p. 220
  8. ^ a b c d Nicklas (2002), p. 222
  9. ^ Kohler (2002), p. 99
  10. ^ Nicklas (2002), p. 226
  11. ^ a b Heitz (1995), p. 217
  12. ^ a b c Heitz (1995), p. 218
  13. ^ a b c Krüger (2006), p. 171
  14. ^ Porada (1997), p. 23
  15. ^ a b Langer (1998), pp. 293–299
  16. ^ "Kirchengeschichte Pommerns". Pomeranian Evangelical Church, Evangelical Lutheran Church of Mecklenburg. Kirche in MV. Retrieved 2009-08-02.
  17. ^ Hinz (1994), p. 15
  18. ^ a b Langer (2003), p. 404
  19. ^ a b c d e Langer (2003), p. 403
  20. ^ a b Beier (1997), p. 151
  21. ^ a b c d Nicklas (2002), p. 229
  22. ^ a b Theologische Realenzyklopädie II (1993), p. 45
  23. ^ Press (1991), pp. 212–213
  24. ^ Mackillop (2003), p. 16
  25. ^ a b c d Heckel (1983), p. 143
  26. ^ Lockhart (2007), p. 169
  27. ^ Guthrie (2002), p. 143
  28. ^ Heitz (1995), p. 219
  29. ^ Langer (2003), p. 401
  30. ^ Buchholz (1999), p. 233
  31. ^ Buchholz (1999), pp. 263, 332
  32. ^ Theologische Realenzyklopädie I (1993), p. 172
  33. ^ Langer (2003), p. 406
  34. ^ Hildisch (1980), p. 97
  35. ^ Sturdy (2002), p. 59
  36. ^ Dubilski (2003), p. 25
  37. ^ a b Timm, Andreas; Buck, Rüdiger (eds.). (in German). State Chancellory of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. Archived from the original on 2009-01-01. Retrieved 2009-08-01.
  38. ^ Klaus, Sandra (ed.). "Franzburg" (in German). Szczecin Castle Museum. Archived from the original on 2007-05-27. Retrieved 2009-08-01.

Bibliography edit

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  • Guthrie, William P. (2002). Battles of the Thirty Years War: from White Mountain to Nordlingen, 1618-1635. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 0-313-32028-4. Retrieved 2009-08-06.
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  • Krause, Gerhard; Balz, Horst Robert (1993). Müller, Gerhard (ed.). Theologische Realenzyklopädie I (in German). Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 3-11-013898-0.
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capitulation, franzburg, capitulation, franzburg, german, franzburger, kapitulation, treaty, providing, capitulation, duchy, pomerania, forces, holy, roman, empire, during, thirty, years, signed, november, november, 1627, bogislaw, duke, pomerania, hans, georg. The capitulation of Franzburg German Franzburger Kapitulation was a treaty providing for the capitulation of the Duchy of Pomerania to the forces of the Holy Roman Empire during the Thirty Years War 1 It was signed on 10 November O S or 20 November N S 1627 nb 1 by Bogislaw XIV Duke of Pomerania and Hans Georg von Arnim commander in chief of an occupation force belonging to the army of Ferdinand II Holy Roman Emperor led by Albrecht von Wallenstein 1 While the terms of the capitulation were unfavourable for the Duchy of Pomerania already occupation became even more burdensome when the occupation force did not adhere to the restrictions outlined in Franzburg 2 Stralsund resisted with Danish Swedish and Scottish support another Danish intervention failed Imperial occupation lasted until Swedish forces invaded in 1630 and subsequently cleared all of the Duchy of Pomerania of imperial forces until 1631 3 Franzburg Western Pomerania in 1618Contents 1 Background 2 Provisions 3 Implementation and consequences 4 Legacy 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Sources 7 1 References 7 2 BibliographyBackground edit nbsp Location of the Duchy of Pomerania Pommern within the Upper Saxon Circle rose of the Holy Roman Empire white The Duchy of Pomerania adopted Protestantism in 1534 4 With the Second Defenestration of Prague in 1618 the Thirty Years War started as a primarily Catholic Protestant conflict between Ferdinand II Holy Roman Emperor and the Catholic League on the one side and Protestant nobility and states on the other Pomerania was a member of the internally divided Protestant Upper Saxon Circle 5 that most prominently included the electorates of Saxony and Brandenburg and had declared neutrality in 1620 6 Facing a victorious Catholic League the Saxon electorate switched to the emperor s side in 1624 while Brandenburg and Pomerania kept resisting imperial demands 7 Aware of the League s military superiority however they refused an alliance offered by Protestant Denmark 8 In 1625 imperial forces led by Albrecht von Wallenstein occupied the Lower Saxon prince bishoprics of Magdeburg and Halberstadt thereby also occupying and looting the Upper Saxon counties of Honstein and Wernigerode 8 Wallenstein s army had been raised to support the League s forces commanded by Johann Tserclaes Count of Tilly 9 As a countermeasure Danish forces led by Ernst von Mansfeld occupied the Brandenburgian regions Altmark and Prignitz southwest of Pomerania also in 1625 but were defeated by the Imperial troops in the Battle of Dessau Bridge in 1626 8 Except for The Electorate of Saxony which was treated by Wallenstein as a de facto member of the Catholic League the Upper Saxon states bare of sufficient military means for self defence were subsequently occupied and devastated by the imperial forces after Denmark had been neutralized 8 Formally the circle maintained neutrality 10 In November 1626 the Swedish Empire recruited troops in Pomerania even though the duke had disapproved 11 In February 1627 Swedish troops crossed the duchy for Poland an imperial ally Sweden was at war with 11 In July imperial troops crossed into the duchy near Pyritz now Pyrzyce 12 To prevent the pending occupation duke Bogislaw XIV offered 60 000 Talers in October later raised to 200 000 Talers 12 Unimpressed Albrecht von Wallenstein instead ordered Hans Georg von Arnim to occupy all Pomeranian ports and to confiscate all vessels 12 The occupation of Pomerania was a strategical measure rather than punishment for prior disobedience 1 It was implemented to secure the southern coastline of the Baltic Sea for the empire against Christian IV of Denmark whose land forces were operating on imperial soil until the Treaty of Lubeck in 1629 and whose naval dominance in the Baltic Sea the empire was unable to challenge 1 Provisions edit nbsp Hans Georg von Arnim signed for the empireThe treaty ruled on the conditions of the billeting hospitatio of the Imperial troops 1 Sources vary on whether Bogislaw XIV obliged himself to the intake of eight 13 14 15 or ten 16 17 regiments approximately 24 000 soldiers 15 According to Herbert Langer twenty multi ethnic regiments with a total of 31 000 infantry and 7 540 cavalry were actually counted 1 To this number added military staff and civilian baggage of unknown number 1 In general all towns and villages were required to quarter the troops exempted were specified domains of the House of Pomerania estates of knights houses of clergy councillors and academics as well as the ducal residences Damm now Szczecin Dabie Koslin now Koszalin Stettin now Szczecin and Wolgast 1 The capitulation also included restrictions on the army in particular it forbade among others the interference with trade traffic and crafts holdups and robberies which would harm towns burghers peasants or travellers looting and extortion rape of decent women nb 2 quartering of soldiers families and servants and frivolous use of arms 18 Contributions which were to pay to the imperial forces by the duchy were fixed at a weekly 407 Reichstalers per company and an additional 2 580 Reichstalers per respective staff 13 Implementation and consequences edit nbsp Albrecht von WallensteinThe towns of Anklam Demmin Greifswald and Kolberg now Kolobrzeg were made seats of a garrison each while in other towns smaller units took quarter 19 Cavalry was stationed primarily in villages due to both the easier handling of the horses and the lower proportion of desertion compared to infantry 19 Although not ruled out verbatim in the capitulation s text the conditions of quartering in Pomerania followed established practice House and estate owners were to provide the soldier with bed vinegar and salt and also share kitchen and heatable living room at no cost 19 In theory food had to be paid for the soldiers were to either compensate their hosts or buy their victuals in special depots set up by the military 19 Wallenstein had promised Ferdinand II Holy Roman Emperor to fund his army himself 20 In practice this meant that the army was fed and paid by contributions of the occupied territories and war loot 20 Since the higher ranks often kept the already small fraction of war loot and contributions thought to pay the lower ranks for themselves the soldiers satisfied their needs at the expense of the local population instead bellum se ipsum alet 19 In addition to noncompliance with the capitulation s provisions by the military hardship resulted from more frequent epidemics caused by the quartering and by shrinking natural resources 18 By 7 May 1628 Pomerania had already paid 466 981 Reichstaler as contributions twice as much as the whole Upper Saxon Circle s annual output 13 Suffering in Pomerania was undescribable and became proverbial 21 John George I Elector of Saxony who still perceived the Upper Saxon Circle his sphere of influence and anticipated imperial occupation of his thitherto spared electorate sharply criticized Wallenstein s practices yet without result 21 nbsp Alexander LeslieStralsund was the only town in the Duchy of Pomerania to resist imperial occupation resulting in the Battle of Stralsund 22 Unwilling to surrender the considerable independence it had long enjoyed as a Hanseatic town Stralsund ignored the duke s order to adhere to the capitulation instead turned to Denmark and Sweden for support and was aided in her defense by both 23 Christian IV of Denmark deployed a Scottish force raised by Donald Mackay and the Scots Alexander Seaton and Alexander Leslie were in charge of the defense when the former colonel Holke retired to seek reinforcements 24 nb 3 Wallenstein laid siege to the town and in July 1628 commanded several unsuccessful assaults in person 25 When Stralsund turned out to become his first serious misfortune in the war he lifted the siege to win a last battle against Christian IV near Wolgast 25 Christian IV who had already destroyed Wallenstein s naval facilities in Greifswald 26 had intended to secure another Pomeranian port besides Stralsund there but was utterly defeated and retreated to Denmark 27 Stralsund however signed an alliance with Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden providing him with a bridgehead on imperial territory manned with a Swedish expeditionary force and thus ultimately marking the Swedish entrance into the Thirty Years War 25 In February 1629 Bogislaw XIV pledged to ease the occupation and though Ferdinand II re assured the duke he took no action 28 Instead the imperial Edict of Restitution of March advertised the re Catholization of the empire s Protestant states 21 The Treaty of Lubeck which ended the hostilities between the Danish king and the emperor in May likewise did not result in a relief or a lift of the occupation 21 even though the capitulation of Franzburg had been justified with the emperor s right to recruit military support from his subjects to their own and the empire s protection 1 After France had mediated a truce between the Swedish Empire and the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth in September 1629 Sweden was ready for an invasion of the Holy Roman Empire 25 The invasion was started when Gustavus Adolphus troops landed on Usedom island in the spring of 1630 while simultaneous assaults on Rugen and the adjacent mainland by the Stralsund garrison cleared his flank 29 As a consequence the capitulation of Franzburg was replaced by a Pomeranian Swedish alliance confirmed in the Treaty of Stettin 30 Legacy edit nbsp Gustavus Adolphus memorial plaque at the Greifswald cathedral Swedish Pomerania until 1815 The capitulation of Franzburg marked the beginning of the Thirty Years War in the Duchy of Pomerania The severe plight the capitulation inflicted on the people 22 only foreshadowed the utter devastation of the duchy by the end of the war when two thirds of the population were left dead 31 The successful resistance of Stralsund to the terms of the capitulation granted the Swedish Empire a foothold in the Holy Roman Empire especially after Denmark withdrew her forces following the Treaty of Lubeck The Swedish garrison in Stralsund was the first on German soil in history 1 A Riksdag commission had approved of Gustavus Adolphus plans to intervene on the empire s soil already in the winter of 1627 28 and in January 1629 the Riksrad approved of an offensive war put into effect in the following year 32 Swedish forces invaded Pomerania in 1630 and by 16 June 1631 had cleared the last imperial stronghold Greifswald 33 With short war caused interruptions Sweden kept her continental foothold in what became known as Swedish Pomerania until the Congress of Vienna of 1815 Bogislaw XIV Duke of Pomerania who had just part by part inherited the previously internally partitioned duchy to become her sole ruler in 1625 34 issued a paper called Dreijahrige Drangsal three years of distress after the Swedish take over which read that the capitulation in Franzburg had been forced upon him by the military 1 At the same time he wrote a letter to the Holy Roman Emperor apologizing for the Swedish alliance saying he had no choice but to obey Swedish demands and included a passage in the Treaty of Stettin stating the alliance be for the empire s best 35 Bogislaw did not survive the war He died without issue in 1637 terminating some 500 years of rulership of the House of Pomerania 36 The town of Franzburg where the capitulation was signed fell victim to the war too It was devastated completely 37 In 1670 a mere 70 people lived in the town 38 Only in 1728 was Franzburg resettled 37 See also editPomerania during the Early Modern Age Thirty Years War Battle of Stralsund 1628 Battle of Wolgast Duchy of Pomerania Swedish PomeraniaNotes edit In the 17th century the Julian calendar was used in the region which then was ten days late compared to the Gregorian calendar 10 November Julian 20 November Gregorian The German original reads Verbot von Notzucht und Schandung redlicher Weibsbilder Langer 2003 p 404 Scotsman Seaton in command of the Scottish Danish forces was relieved by Leslie future Earl of Leven a Scot in Swedish service Salmon 2003 p 32Sources editReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k Langer 2003 p 402 Langer 2003 pp 403 404 Langer 2003 p 406 Theologische Realenzyklopadie II 1993 p 44 Nicklas 2002 p 214 Nicklas 2002 p 205 Nicklas 2002 p 220 a b c d Nicklas 2002 p 222 Kohler 2002 p 99 Nicklas 2002 p 226 a b Heitz 1995 p 217 a b c Heitz 1995 p 218 a b c Kruger 2006 p 171 Porada 1997 p 23 a b Langer 1998 pp 293 299 Kirchengeschichte Pommerns Pomeranian Evangelical Church Evangelical Lutheran Church of Mecklenburg Kirche in MV Retrieved 2009 08 02 Hinz 1994 p 15 a b Langer 2003 p 404 a b c d e Langer 2003 p 403 a b Beier 1997 p 151 a b c d Nicklas 2002 p 229 a b Theologische Realenzyklopadie II 1993 p 45 Press 1991 pp 212 213 Mackillop 2003 p 16 a b c d Heckel 1983 p 143 Lockhart 2007 p 169 Guthrie 2002 p 143 Heitz 1995 p 219 Langer 2003 p 401 Buchholz 1999 p 233 Buchholz 1999 pp 263 332 Theologische Realenzyklopadie I 1993 p 172 Langer 2003 p 406 Hildisch 1980 p 97 Sturdy 2002 p 59 Dubilski 2003 p 25 a b Timm Andreas Buck Rudiger eds Franzburg in German State Chancellory of Mecklenburg Vorpommern Archived from the original on 2009 01 01 Retrieved 2009 08 01 Klaus Sandra ed Franzburg in German Szczecin Castle Museum Archived from the original on 2007 05 27 Retrieved 2009 08 01 Bibliography edit Beier Brigitte 2007 Die Chronik der Deutschen in German wissenmedia ISBN 978 3 577 14374 5 Buchholz Werner ed 1999 Pommern in German Siedler ISBN 3 88680 780 0 Dubilski Petra 2003 Usedom in German DuMont ISBN 3 7701 5978 0 Guthrie William P 2002 Battles of the Thirty Years War from White Mountain to Nordlingen 1618 1635 Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 0 313 32028 4 Retrieved 2009 08 06 Heckel Martin 1983 Deutschland im konfessionellen Zeitalter in German Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht ISBN 3 525 33483 4 Heitz Gerhard Rischer Henning 1995 Geschichte in Daten Mecklenburg Vorpommern in German Munster Berlin Koehler amp Amelang ISBN 3 7338 0195 4 Hildisch Johannes 1980 Die Munzen der pommerschen Herzoge von 1569 bis zum Erloschen des Greifengeschlechtes in German Bohlau ISBN 3 412 04679 5 Hinz Johannes 1994 Pommernlexikon in German Kraft ISBN 3 8083 1164 9 Krause Gerhard Balz Horst Robert 1993 Muller Gerhard ed Theologische Realenzyklopadie I in German Walter de Gruyter ISBN 3 11 013898 0 Krause Gerhard Balz Horst Robert 1993 Muller Gerhard ed Theologische Realenzyklopadie II in German Walter de Gruyter ISBN 3 11 016295 4 Kruger Joachim 2006 Zwischen dem Reich und Schweden die landesherrliche Munzpragung im Herzogtum Pommern und in Schwedisch Pommern in der fruhen Neuzeit ca 1580 1715 in German Berlin Hamburg Munster LIT Verlag ISBN 3 8258 9768 0 Lockhart Paul Douglas 2007 Denmark 1513 1660 the rise and decline of a Renaissance monarchy Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 927121 4 Retrieved 2009 08 05 Kohler Alfred Lutz Heinrich 2002 Reformation und Gegenreformation in German 5 ed Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag ISBN 3 486 49585 2 Langer Herbert 1998 Heeresfinanzierung Produktion und Markte fur die Kriegsfuhrung In Bussmann Klaus Schilling Heinz eds 1648 Krieg und Frieden in Europa Munster Osnabruck 24 10 1998 17 01 1999 Katalog zur 26 Europaratsausstellung Katalogband und zwei Textbande Ausstellungskatalog Textband 1 Politik Religion Recht und Gesellschaft Textband 2 Kunst und Kultur Band I in German Munster LWL Institut fur Regionalgeschichte Stiftung Westfalen Initiative Portal Westphalische Geschichte pp 293 299 ISBN 3 88789 127 9 Retrieved 2009 08 02 Langer Herbert 2003 Die Anfange des Garnisionswesens in Pommern In Asmus Ivo Droste Heiko Olesen Jens E eds Gemeinsame Bekannte Schweden und Deutschland in der Fruhen Neuzeit in German Berlin Hamburg Munster LIT Verlag ISBN 3 8258 7150 9 Mackillop Andrew Murdoch Steve 2003 Military governors and imperial frontiers c 1600 1800 A study of Scotland and empires BRILL ISBN 90 04 12970 7 Nicklas Thomas 2002 Macht oder Recht fruhneuzeitliche Politik im Obersachsischen Reichskreis in German Franz Steiner Verlag ISBN 3 515 07939 4 Porada Haik Thomas 1997 Beitrage zur Geschichte Vorpommerns die Demminer Kolloquien 1985 1994 in German Helms ISBN 3 931185 11 7 Press Volker 1991 Kriege und Krisen Deutschland 1600 1715 in German C H Beck ISBN 3 406 30817 1 Salmon Patrick Barrow Tony 2003 Britain and the Baltic Studies in commercial political and cultural relations 1500 2000 University of Sunderland Press ISBN 1 873757 49 2 Sturdy David J 2002 Fractured Europe 1600 1721 Wiley Blackwell ISBN 0 631 20513 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Capitulation of Franzburg amp oldid 1146081349, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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