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Duchy of Prussia

The Duchy of Prussia (German: Herzogtum Preußen, Polish: Księstwo Pruskie, Lithuanian: Prūsijos kunigaikštystė) or Ducal Prussia (German: Herzogliches Preußen; Polish: Prusy Książęce) was a duchy in the region of Prussia established as a result of secularization of the Monastic Prussia, the territory that remained under the control of the State of the Teutonic Order until the Protestant Reformation in 1525.

Duchy of Prussia
Herzogtum Preußen (German)
Prusy Książęce (Polish)
1525–1701
Flag
(1525–1657)
The Duchy of Prussia (yellow)
StatusFief of Poland (until 1657)
Part of Brandenburg-Prussia (from 1618)
CapitalKönigsberg
54°50′N 21°20′E / 54.833°N 21.333°E / 54.833; 21.333Coordinates: 54°50′N 21°20′E / 54.833°N 21.333°E / 54.833; 21.333
Common languagesLow German, German, Polish, Lithuanian
Religion
Lutheranism[1]
Demonym(s)Prussian
GovernmentFeudal monarchy
Duke 
• 1525–1568
Albert
• 1568–1618
Albert Frederick
• 1618–1619
John Sigismund
• 1619–1640
George William
• 1640–1688
Frederick William
• 1688–1701
Frederick
LegislatureEstates
Historical eraEarly modern period
10 April 1525
1657
1701
Today part ofLithuania
Poland
Russia

Overview

The duchy became the first Protestant state when Albert, Duke of Prussia formally adopted Lutheranism in 1525. It was inhabited by a German, Polish (mainly in Masuria), and Lithuanian-speaking (mainly in Lithuania Minor) population.[2]

In 1525, during the Protestant Reformation, in accordance to the Treaty of Kraków, the Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights, Albert, secularized the order's prevailing Prussian territory (the Monastic Prussia), becoming Albert, Duke of Prussia. As the region had been a part of the Kingdom of Poland since the Second Peace of Thorn (1466),[3] King of Poland Sigismund I the Old, as its suzerain, granted the territory as a hereditary fief of Poland to Duke Albert per the Treaty of Kraków, a decision that was sealed by the Prussian Homage in Kraków in April 1525. The new duke established Lutheranism as the first Protestant state church. The capital remained in Königsberg (modern Kaliningrad).

The duchy was inherited by the Hohenzollern prince-electors of Brandenburg in 1618. This personal union is referred to as Brandenburg-Prussia. Frederick William, the "Great Elector" of Brandenburg, achieved full sovereignty over the duchy under the 1657 Treaty of Wehlau, confirmed in the 1660 Treaty of Oliva. In the following years, attempts were made to return to Polish suzerainty, especially by the capital city of Königsberg, whose burghers rejected the treaties and viewed the region as part of Poland.[4][5] The Duchy of Prussia was elevated to a kingdom in 1701.

History

 
 

History of Brandenburg and Prussia
Northern March
965 – 983
Old Prussians
pre – 13th century
Lutician federation
983 – 12th century
Margraviate of Brandenburg
1157 – 1618 (1806) (HRE)
(Bohemia 1373 – 1415)
Teutonic Order
1224 – 1525
(Polish fief 1466 – 1525)
Elector of Brandenburg
1356 – 1806
Duchy of Prussia
1525 – 1618 (1701)
(Polish fief 1525 – 1657)
Malbork Voivodeship and Prince-Bishopric of Warmia within Royal (Polish) Prussia
(Poland 1454/1466 – 1772)
Brandenburg-Prussia
1618 – 1701
Kingdom of Prussia
1701 – 1918
Free State of Prussia (Germany)
1918 – 1947
Klaipėda Region
(Lithuania)
1920 – 1939 / 1945 – present
Działdowo area
(Poland 1918-present)
Warmia, Masuria, Powiśle within Recovered Territories
(Poland 1945 – present)
Berlin and Brandenburg
(Germany)
1947 – 1952 / 1990 – present
Kaliningrad Oblast
(Russia)
1945 – present

Background

As Protestantism spread among the laity of the Teutonic Monastic State of Prussia, dissent began to develop against the Roman Catholic rule of the Teutonic Knights, whose Grand Master, Albert, Duke of Prussia, a member of a cadet branch of the House of Hohenzollern, lacked the military resources to assert the order's authority.

After losing a war against the Kingdom of Poland, and with his personal bishop, Georg von Polenz of Pomesania and of Samland, who had converted to Lutheranism in 1523,[6] and a number of his commanders already supporting Protestant ideas, Albert began to consider a radical solution.

At Wittenberg in 1522, and at Nuremberg in 1524, Martin Luther encouraged him to convert the order's territory into a secular principality under his personal rule, as the Teutonic Knights would not be able to survive the reformation.[7]

Establishment

On 10 April 1525 Albert resigned his position, became a Protestant, and in the Prussian Homage was granted the title "Duke of Prussia" by his uncle, King Sigismund I of Poland. In a deal partly brokered by Luther, Ducal Prussia became the first Protestant state, anticipating the dispensations of the Peace of Augsburg of 1555.

 
The Prussian Homage (by Jan Matejko, 1882, National Museum, Kraków): Albert receives Ducal Prussia as a fief from King Sigismund I of Poland in 1525.
 
Ducal Prussia as a Polish fief (striped) in the second half of the 16th century.

When Albert returned to Königsberg, he publicly declared his conversion and announced to a quorum of Teutonic Knights his new ducal status. The knights who disapproved of the decision were pressured into acceptance by Albert's supporters and the burghers of Königsberg, and only Eric of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, Komtur of Memel, opposed the new duke. On 10 December 1525, at their session in Königsberg, the Prussian estates established the Lutheran Church in Ducal Prussia by deciding the Church Order.[6]

By the end of Albert's rule, the offices of Grand Commander and Marshal of the Order had deliberately been left vacant while the order was left with but 55 knights in Prussia. Some of the knights converted to Lutheranism in order to retain their property and then married into the Prussian nobility, while others returned to the Holy Roman Empire, and remained Catholic.[8] These remaining Teutonic Knights, led by the next Grand Master, Walter von Cronberg, continued to unsuccessfully claim Prussia, but retained much of the estates in the Teutonic bailiwicks outside of Prussia.

 
Outline of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth with its major subdivisions after the 1618 Truce of Deulino, superimposed on present-day national borders.
  Duchy of Courland and Semigallia, Commonwealth fief

On 1 March 1526, Albert married Princess Dorothea, daughter of King Frederick I of Denmark, thereby establishing political ties between Lutheranism and Scandinavia. Albert was greatly aided by his elder brother George, Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach, who had earlier established the Protestant religion in his territories of Franconia and Upper Silesia. Albert also found himself reliant on support from his uncle Sigismund I of catholic Poland, as the Holy Roman Empire, and the Roman Catholic Church, had banned him for his Protestantism.

The Teutonic Order had only superficially carried out its mission to Christianize the native rural population and had erected few churches within the state's territory.[6] There was little longing for Roman Catholicism. Baltic Old Prussians and Prussian Lithuanian peasants continued to practice pagan customs in some areas, for example, adhering to beliefs in Perkūnas (Perkunos), symbolized by the goat buck, Potrimpo, and Pikullos (Patollu) while "consuming the roasted flesh of a goat".[9] Bishop George of Polentz had forbidden the widespread forms of pagan worship in 1524, and repeated the ban in 1540.[6]

On 18 January 1524 Bishop George had ordered the use of native languages at baptisms, which improved the acceptance of baptism by the peasants.[6] There was little active resistance to the new Protestant religion. The Teutonic Knights having brought Catholicism made the transition to Protestantism easier.[10]

The Church Order of 1525 provided for visitations of the parishioners and pastors, first carried out by Bishop George in 1538.[6] Because Ducal Prussia was ostensibly a Lutheran land, authorities traveled throughout the duchy ensuring that Lutheran teachings were being followed and imposing penalties on pagans and dissidents. The rural population of native descent was only thoroughly christianised starting with the Reformation in Prussia.[6]

A peasant rebellion broke out in Sambia in 1525. The combination of taxation by the nobility, the contentions of the Protestant Reformation, and the abrupt secularization of the Teutonic Order's remaining Prussian lands exacerbated peasant unrest. The relatively well-to-do rebel leaders, including a miller from Kaimen and an innkeeper from Schaaken in Prussia, were supported by sympathizers in Königsberg. The rebels demanded the elimination of newer taxes by the nobility, and a return to an older tax of two marks per hide (a measure of land of approximately forty acres).

They claimed to be rebelling against the harsh nobility, not against Duke Albert, who was away in the Holy Roman Empire, saying they would only swear allegiance to him in person. Upon Albert's return from the Empire, he called for a meeting of the peasants in a field, whereupon he surrounded them with loyal troops and had them arrested without incident. The leaders of the rebellion were subsequently executed.[9] There were no more large-scale rebellions. Ducal Prussia became known as a land of Protestantism and sectarianism.[10]

 
 
The duchy became a leading Polish and Lithuanian Lutheran and printing center. In the mid-16th century in Königsberg were published the first translation of the New Testament into Polish by Stanisław Murzynowski and the Catechism of Martynas Mažvydas, which is the first printed book in the Lithuanian language.

In 1544 Duke Albert founded the Albertina University in Königsberg, which became the principal educational establishment for Lutheran pastors and theologians of Prussia.[6] In 1560, the university received a royal privilege from King Sigismund II Augustus of Poland. It was granted the same rights and autonomy those enjoyed by the Kraków University, thus it became one of the leading universities in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. The use of the native languages in church services made Duke Albert appoint exiled Protestant Lithuanian pastors as professors, e.g. Stanislovas Rapolionis and Abraomas Kulvietis, making the Albertina also a centre of Lithuanian language and literature.[11]

While the composition of the nobility changed little in the transition from the monastic state to the duchy, the control of the nobility over the dependent peasantry increased. Prussia's free peasants, called Kölmer, were holders of free estates according to Culm law). These Kölmer held with about a sixth of the arable land, much more than in other nations in the feudal era.[12]

Administratively, little changed in the transition from the Teutonic Knights to ducal rule. Although he was formally a vassal of the crown of Poland, Albert retained self-government for Prussia, his own army, the minting of his currency, a provincial assembly, (de, Landtag), and substantial autonomy in foreign affairs.[13]

Lack of heirs

When Albert died in 1568, his teenage son (exact age is unknown) Albert Frederick inherited the duchy. Sigismund II was also Albert Frederick's cousin. The Elector of Brandenburg Joachim II, converted to Lutheranism in 1539. Joachim wanted to merge his lands with the Prussian dukedom, so his heirs would inherit both. Joachim petitioned his brother-in-law, king Sigismund II of Poland the co-enfeoffment of his line of the Hohenzollern with the Prussian dukedom, and finally succeeded, including the then usual expenses.

On 19 July 1569, when, in Lublin, Poland, duke Albert Frederick rendered King Sigismund II homage and was in return installed as Duke of Prussia in Lublin, the King simultaneously enfeoffed Joachim II and his descendants as co-heirs.

Administration in the duchy declined as Albert Frederick became increasingly feeble-minded, leading Margrave George Frederick of Brandenburg-Ansbach to become Regent of Prussia in 1577.

Following King Sigismund III's Prussian regency contract (1605) with Joachim Frederick of Brandenburg and his Treaty of Warsaw, 1611, with John Sigismund of Brandenburg, confirming the Brandenburgian co-inheritance of Prussia, these two regents guaranteed the free practice of Catholic religion in predominantly Lutheran Prussia. Based on these contracts some Lutheran churches were reconsecrated as Catholic places of worship (e.g. St. Nicholas Church, Elbląg in 1612).

Personal union with Brandenburg

In 1618, the Prussian Hohenzollern became extinct in the male line, and so the Polish fief of Prussia was passed on to the senior Brandenburg Hohenzollern line, the ruling margraves and prince-electors of Brandenburg, who thereafter ruled Brandenburg (a fief of the Holy Roman Empire), and Ducal Prussia (a Polish fief), in personal union. This legal contradiction made a cross-border real union impossible; however, in practice, Brandenburg and Ducal Prussia were more and more ruled as one, and colloquially referred to as Brandenburg-Prussia.

In 1618, the Thirty Years' War broke out, and John Sigismund himself died the following year. His son, George William, was successfully invested with the duchy in 1623 by King of Poland Sigismund III Vasa, thus the personal union Brandenburg-Prussia was confirmed.[10] Many of the Prussian Junkers were opposed to rule by the House of Hohenzollern of Berlin and appealed to Sigismund III Vasa for redress, or even incorporation of Ducal Prussia into the Polish kingdom, but without success.[14]

Due to the Polish–Swedish War, in 1635 the duchy was administered by Polish statesman Jerzy Ossoliński, appointed by Polish King Władysław IV Vasa.[15]

Frederick William the "Great Elector", duke of Prussia and prince-elector of Brandenburg, wished to acquire Royal Prussia in order to territorially connect his two fiefs. Yet, during the Second Northern War, Charles X Gustav of Sweden invaded Ducal Prussia and dictated the Treaty of Königsberg (January 1656), which made the duchy a Swedish fief. In the subsequent Treaty of Marienburg (June 1656), Charles X Gustav promised to cede to Frederick William the Polish voivodships of Chełmno, Malbork, Pomerania, and the Prince-Bishopric of Warmia, if Frederick William would support Charles Gustav's effort.[16]: 82  The proposition was somewhat risky, since Frederick William would definitely have to provide military support, while the reward could only be provided conditional on victory. When the tide of the war turned against Charles X Gustav, he concluded the Treaty of Labiau (November 1656), making Frederick William I the full sovereign in Ducal Prussia and Warmia, which, however, was part of Poland.

Emancipation

In response to the Swedish-Prussian alliance, King John II Casimir of Poland submitted a counter-offer which Frederick William accepted. They signed the Treaty of Wehlau on 19 September 1657 and the Treaty of Bromberg on 6 November 1657. In return for Frederick William's renunciation of the Swedish-Prussian alliance, John Casimir recognised Frederick William's full sovereignty over the Duchy of Prussia.[16]: 83  After almost 200 years of Polish suzerainty over the Teutonic Monastic State of Prussia and its successor Ducal Prussia, the territory passed under the full sovereignty of Brandenburg. Therefore, Duchy of Prussia then became the more adequate appellation for the state. Full sovereignty was a necessary prerequisite to upgrade Ducal Prussia to the sovereign Kingdom of Prussia, in 1701. (Not to be confused with Polish Royal Prussia.)

 
17th-century view of Königsberg

However, the end of Polish suzerainty was met with resistance of the population, regardless of ethnicity, as it was afraid of Brandenburg absolutism and wished to remain part of the Crown of the Kingdom of Poland. The burghers of the capital city of Königsberg, led by Hieronymus Roth, rejected the treaties of Wehlau and Oliva and viewed Prussia as "indisputably contained within the territory of the Polish Crown".[4] It was noted that the incorporation into the Polish Crown under the Treaty of Kraków was approved by the city of Königsberg, while the separation from Poland took place without the city's consent.[4] Polish King John II Casimir Vasa was asked for help, masses were held in Protestant churches for the Polish King and the Polish Kingdom. In 1662, elector Frederick William entered the city with his troops and forced the city to swear allegiance to him. However, in the following decades attempts to return to Polish suzerainty were still made. In 1675, the Polish-French Treaty of Jaworów was even signed, according to which France was to support Polish efforts to regain control of the region, while Poland was to join the ongoing Franco-Brandenburgian war on the French side,[17] however, it was not implemented.

The nature of the de facto collectively ruled governance of Brandenburg-Prussia became more apparent through the titles of the higher ranks of the Prussian government, seated in Brandenburg's capital of Berlin after the return of the court from Königsberg, where they had sought refuge from the Thirty Years' War (1618–1648).

Promotion

Ducal Prussia's full sovereignty allowed Elector Frederick III of Brandenburg to become "king in Prussia" in 1701 without offending Emperor Leopold I. The government of de facto collectively ruled Brandenburg-Prussia, seated in Brandenburg's capital Berlin, mostly appeared under the higher ranking titles of the Prussian government.

Expansion and consolidation

After the Kingdom of Prussia's annexation of the bulk of the province of Royal Prussia in the First Partition of Poland in 1772, former Ducal Prussia — including previously Polish-controlled Warmia within Royal Prussia — was reorganized into the Province of East Prussia, while Pomerelia and the Malbork Land became the Province of West Prussia, with the exceptions of the two principal cities of Gdańsk and Toruń, annexed into West Prussia only in 1793. The Kingdom of Prussia, then consisting of East and West Prussia, being a sovereign state, and Brandenburg, being a fief within the Holy Roman Empire, were amalgamated de jure only after the latter's dissolution in 1806, though later became again partially distinct during the existence of the German Confederation (1815-1866).

See also

References

  1. ^ The duchy's Evangelical (Protestant) church was the first formally established as a state religion.
  2. ^ Notes and Queries. Oxford University Press. 1850.
  3. ^ Górski, Karol (1949). Związek Pruski i poddanie się Prus Polsce: zbiór tekstów źródłowych (in Polish and Latin). Poznań: Instytut Zachodni. pp. 96–97, 214–215.
  4. ^ a b c Janusz Jasiński, Polska a Królewiec, Komunikaty Mazursko-Warmińskie nr 2, 2005, p. 126 (in Polish)
  5. ^ http://bazhum.muzhp.pl/media//files/Komunikaty_Mazursko_Warminskie/Komunikaty_Mazursko_Warminskie-r1995-t-n3/Komunikaty_Mazursko_Warminskie-r1995-t-n3-s311-313/Komunikaty_Mazursko_Warminskie-r1995-t-n3-s311-313.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Albertas Juška, Mažosios Lietuvos Bažnyčia XVI-XX amžiuje, Klaipėda: 1997, pp. 742–771, hereafter the German translation Die Kirche in Klein Litauen (section: 2. Reformatorische Anfänge; (in German)) on: Lietuvos Evangelikų Liuteronų Bažnyčia, retrieved on 28 August 2011.
  7. ^ Christiansen, Eric. The Northern Crusades. Penguin Books. London, 1997. ISBN 0-14-026653-4
  8. ^ Seward, Desmond. The Monks of War: The Military Religious Orders. Penguin Books. London, 1995. ISBN 0-14-019501-7
  9. ^ a b Kirby, David. Northern Europe in the Early Modern Period: The Baltic World, 1492–1772. Longman. London, 1990. ISBN 0-582-00410-1
  10. ^ a b c Koch, H.W. A History of Prussia. Barnes & Noble Books. New York, 1978. ISBN 0-88029-158-3
  11. ^ Albertas Juška, Mažosios Lietuvos Bažnyčia XVI-XX amžiuje, Klaipėda: 1997, pp. 742–771, here after the German translation Die Kirche in Klein Litauen (section: 5. Die Pfarrer und ihre Ausbildung; (in German)) on: Lietuvos Evangelikų Liuteronų Bažnyčia, retrieved on 28 August 2011.
  12. ^ Peter Brandt in collaboration with Thomas Hofmann, Preußen: Zur Sozialgeschichte eines Staates; eine Darstellung in Quellen, edited on behalf of Berliner Festspiele as a catalogue to the exhibition on Prussia between 15 May and 15 November 1981, Reinbek bei Hamburg: Rowohlt, 1981, (=Preußen; vol. 3), pp. 24 and 35. ISBN 3-499-34003-8
  13. ^ Urban, William. The Teutonic Knights: A Military History. Greenhill Books. London, 2003. ISBN 1-85367-535-0
  14. ^ Eulenberg, Herbert. The Hohenzollerns. Translated by M.M. Bozman. The Century Co. New York, 1929.
  15. ^ Władysław Czapliński. "Jerzy Ossoliński h. Topór". Internetowy Polski Słownik Biograficzny (in Polish). Retrieved 11 September 2020.
  16. ^ a b Rutkowski, Henryk (1983). "Rivalität der Magnaten und Bedrohung der Souveränität" [Rivalry of the Magnates and the Threat of Sovereignty]. Polen. Ein geschichtliches Panorama [Poland: A Historical Panorama] (in German). Warszawa: Wydawnictwo Interpress. pp. 81–91. ISBN 83-223-1984-3.
  17. ^ "11 czerwca 1675 roku król Polski Jan III Sobieski i ambasador króla Francji Ludwika XIV podpisali tajny traktat w Jaworowie". Historykon (in Polish). Retrieved 24 October 2020.

duchy, prussia, confused, with, royal, prussia, kingdom, prussia, german, herzogtum, preußen, polish, księstwo, pruskie, lithuanian, prūsijos, kunigaikštystė, ducal, prussia, german, herzogliches, preußen, polish, prusy, książęce, duchy, region, prussia, estab. Not to be confused with Royal Prussia or Kingdom of Prussia The Duchy of Prussia German Herzogtum Preussen Polish Ksiestwo Pruskie Lithuanian Prusijos kunigaikstyste or Ducal Prussia German Herzogliches Preussen Polish Prusy Ksiazece was a duchy in the region of Prussia established as a result of secularization of the Monastic Prussia the territory that remained under the control of the State of the Teutonic Order until the Protestant Reformation in 1525 Duchy of PrussiaHerzogtum Preussen German Prusy Ksiazece Polish 1525 1701Flag 1525 1657 Coat of armsThe Duchy of Prussia yellow StatusFief of Poland until 1657 Part of Brandenburg Prussia from 1618 CapitalKonigsberg54 50 N 21 20 E 54 833 N 21 333 E 54 833 21 333 Coordinates 54 50 N 21 20 E 54 833 N 21 333 E 54 833 21 333Common languagesLow German German Polish LithuanianReligionLutheranism 1 Demonym s PrussianGovernmentFeudal monarchyDuke 1525 1568Albert 1568 1618Albert Frederick 1618 1619John Sigismund 1619 1640George William 1640 1688Frederick William 1688 1701FrederickLegislatureEstatesHistorical eraEarly modern period Prussian Homage10 April 1525 Treaty of Wehlau1657 Coronation1701Preceded by Succeeded byState of the Teutonic Order Kingdom of PrussiaToday part ofLithuaniaPolandRussia Contents 1 Overview 2 History 2 1 Background 2 2 Establishment 2 3 Lack of heirs 2 4 Personal union with Brandenburg 2 5 Emancipation 2 6 Promotion 2 7 Expansion and consolidation 3 See also 4 ReferencesOverview EditThe duchy became the first Protestant state when Albert Duke of Prussia formally adopted Lutheranism in 1525 It was inhabited by a German Polish mainly in Masuria and Lithuanian speaking mainly in Lithuania Minor population 2 In 1525 during the Protestant Reformation in accordance to the Treaty of Krakow the Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights Albert secularized the order s prevailing Prussian territory the Monastic Prussia becoming Albert Duke of Prussia As the region had been a part of the Kingdom of Poland since the Second Peace of Thorn 1466 3 King of Poland Sigismund I the Old as its suzerain granted the territory as a hereditary fief of Poland to Duke Albert per the Treaty of Krakow a decision that was sealed by the Prussian Homage in Krakow in April 1525 The new duke established Lutheranism as the first Protestant state church The capital remained in Konigsberg modern Kaliningrad The duchy was inherited by the Hohenzollern prince electors of Brandenburg in 1618 This personal union is referred to as Brandenburg Prussia Frederick William the Great Elector of Brandenburg achieved full sovereignty over the duchy under the 1657 Treaty of Wehlau confirmed in the 1660 Treaty of Oliva In the following years attempts were made to return to Polish suzerainty especially by the capital city of Konigsberg whose burghers rejected the treaties and viewed the region as part of Poland 4 5 The Duchy of Prussia was elevated to a kingdom in 1701 History Edit History of Brandenburg and PrussiaNorthern March 965 983 Old Prussians pre 13th centuryLutician federation 983 12th centuryMargraviate of Brandenburg 1157 1618 1806 HRE Bohemia 1373 1415 Teutonic Order 1224 1525 Polish fief 1466 1525 Elector of Brandenburg1356 1806 Duchy of Prussia1525 1618 1701 Polish fief 1525 1657 Malbork Voivodeship and Prince Bishopric of Warmia within Royal Polish Prussia Poland 1454 1466 1772 Brandenburg Prussia1618 1701Kingdom of Prussia 1701 1918Free State of Prussia Germany 1918 1947 Klaipeda Region Lithuania 1920 1939 1945 present Dzialdowo area Poland 1918 present Warmia Masuria Powisle within Recovered Territories Poland 1945 present Berlin and Brandenburg Germany 1947 1952 1990 present Kaliningrad Oblast Russia 1945 presentBackground Edit As Protestantism spread among the laity of the Teutonic Monastic State of Prussia dissent began to develop against the Roman Catholic rule of the Teutonic Knights whose Grand Master Albert Duke of Prussia a member of a cadet branch of the House of Hohenzollern lacked the military resources to assert the order s authority After losing a war against the Kingdom of Poland and with his personal bishop Georg von Polenz of Pomesania and of Samland who had converted to Lutheranism in 1523 6 and a number of his commanders already supporting Protestant ideas Albert began to consider a radical solution At Wittenberg in 1522 and at Nuremberg in 1524 Martin Luther encouraged him to convert the order s territory into a secular principality under his personal rule as the Teutonic Knights would not be able to survive the reformation 7 Establishment Edit On 10 April 1525 Albert resigned his position became a Protestant and in the Prussian Homage was granted the title Duke of Prussia by his uncle King Sigismund I of Poland In a deal partly brokered by Luther Ducal Prussia became the first Protestant state anticipating the dispensations of the Peace of Augsburg of 1555 The Prussian Homage by Jan Matejko 1882 National Museum Krakow Albert receives Ducal Prussia as a fief from King Sigismund I of Poland in 1525 Ducal Prussia as a Polish fief striped in the second half of the 16th century When Albert returned to Konigsberg he publicly declared his conversion and announced to a quorum of Teutonic Knights his new ducal status The knights who disapproved of the decision were pressured into acceptance by Albert s supporters and the burghers of Konigsberg and only Eric of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel Komtur of Memel opposed the new duke On 10 December 1525 at their session in Konigsberg the Prussian estates established the Lutheran Church in Ducal Prussia by deciding the Church Order 6 By the end of Albert s rule the offices of Grand Commander and Marshal of the Order had deliberately been left vacant while the order was left with but 55 knights in Prussia Some of the knights converted to Lutheranism in order to retain their property and then married into the Prussian nobility while others returned to the Holy Roman Empire and remained Catholic 8 These remaining Teutonic Knights led by the next Grand Master Walter von Cronberg continued to unsuccessfully claim Prussia but retained much of the estates in the Teutonic bailiwicks outside of Prussia Outline of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth with its major subdivisions after the 1618 Truce of Deulino superimposed on present day national borders Crown of the Kingdom of Poland Grand Duchy of Lithuania Duchy of Livonia Duchy of Prussia Polish fief Duchy of Courland and Semigallia Commonwealth fief On 1 March 1526 Albert married Princess Dorothea daughter of King Frederick I of Denmark thereby establishing political ties between Lutheranism and Scandinavia Albert was greatly aided by his elder brother George Margrave of Brandenburg Ansbach who had earlier established the Protestant religion in his territories of Franconia and Upper Silesia Albert also found himself reliant on support from his uncle Sigismund I of catholic Poland as the Holy Roman Empire and the Roman Catholic Church had banned him for his Protestantism The Teutonic Order had only superficially carried out its mission to Christianize the native rural population and had erected few churches within the state s territory 6 There was little longing for Roman Catholicism Baltic Old Prussians and Prussian Lithuanian peasants continued to practice pagan customs in some areas for example adhering to beliefs in Perkunas Perkunos symbolized by the goat buck Potrimpo and Pikullos Patollu while consuming the roasted flesh of a goat 9 Bishop George of Polentz had forbidden the widespread forms of pagan worship in 1524 and repeated the ban in 1540 6 On 18 January 1524 Bishop George had ordered the use of native languages at baptisms which improved the acceptance of baptism by the peasants 6 There was little active resistance to the new Protestant religion The Teutonic Knights having brought Catholicism made the transition to Protestantism easier 10 The Church Order of 1525 provided for visitations of the parishioners and pastors first carried out by Bishop George in 1538 6 Because Ducal Prussia was ostensibly a Lutheran land authorities traveled throughout the duchy ensuring that Lutheran teachings were being followed and imposing penalties on pagans and dissidents The rural population of native descent was only thoroughly christianised starting with the Reformation in Prussia 6 A peasant rebellion broke out in Sambia in 1525 The combination of taxation by the nobility the contentions of the Protestant Reformation and the abrupt secularization of the Teutonic Order s remaining Prussian lands exacerbated peasant unrest The relatively well to do rebel leaders including a miller from Kaimen and an innkeeper from Schaaken in Prussia were supported by sympathizers in Konigsberg The rebels demanded the elimination of newer taxes by the nobility and a return to an older tax of two marks per hide a measure of land of approximately forty acres They claimed to be rebelling against the harsh nobility not against Duke Albert who was away in the Holy Roman Empire saying they would only swear allegiance to him in person Upon Albert s return from the Empire he called for a meeting of the peasants in a field whereupon he surrounded them with loyal troops and had them arrested without incident The leaders of the rebellion were subsequently executed 9 There were no more large scale rebellions Ducal Prussia became known as a land of Protestantism and sectarianism 10 The duchy became a leading Polish and Lithuanian Lutheran and printing center In the mid 16th century in Konigsberg were published the first translation of the New Testament into Polish by Stanislaw Murzynowski and the Catechism of Martynas Mazvydas which is the first printed book in the Lithuanian language In 1544 Duke Albert founded the Albertina University in Konigsberg which became the principal educational establishment for Lutheran pastors and theologians of Prussia 6 In 1560 the university received a royal privilege from King Sigismund II Augustus of Poland It was granted the same rights and autonomy those enjoyed by the Krakow University thus it became one of the leading universities in the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth The use of the native languages in church services made Duke Albert appoint exiled Protestant Lithuanian pastors as professors e g Stanislovas Rapolionis and Abraomas Kulvietis making the Albertina also a centre of Lithuanian language and literature 11 While the composition of the nobility changed little in the transition from the monastic state to the duchy the control of the nobility over the dependent peasantry increased Prussia s free peasants called Kolmer were holders of free estates according to Culm law These Kolmer held with about a sixth of the arable land much more than in other nations in the feudal era 12 Administratively little changed in the transition from the Teutonic Knights to ducal rule Although he was formally a vassal of the crown of Poland Albert retained self government for Prussia his own army the minting of his currency a provincial assembly de Landtag and substantial autonomy in foreign affairs 13 Lack of heirs Edit When Albert died in 1568 his teenage son exact age is unknown Albert Frederick inherited the duchy Sigismund II was also Albert Frederick s cousin The Elector of Brandenburg Joachim II converted to Lutheranism in 1539 Joachim wanted to merge his lands with the Prussian dukedom so his heirs would inherit both Joachim petitioned his brother in law king Sigismund II of Poland the co enfeoffment of his line of the Hohenzollern with the Prussian dukedom and finally succeeded including the then usual expenses On 19 July 1569 when in Lublin Poland duke Albert Frederick rendered King Sigismund II homage and was in return installed as Duke of Prussia in Lublin the King simultaneously enfeoffed Joachim II and his descendants as co heirs Administration in the duchy declined as Albert Frederick became increasingly feeble minded leading Margrave George Frederick of Brandenburg Ansbach to become Regent of Prussia in 1577 Following King Sigismund III s Prussian regency contract 1605 with Joachim Frederick of Brandenburg and his Treaty of Warsaw 1611 with John Sigismund of Brandenburg confirming the Brandenburgian co inheritance of Prussia these two regents guaranteed the free practice of Catholic religion in predominantly Lutheran Prussia Based on these contracts some Lutheran churches were reconsecrated as Catholic places of worship e g St Nicholas Church Elblag in 1612 Personal union with Brandenburg Edit Main article Brandenburg Prussia In 1618 the Prussian Hohenzollern became extinct in the male line and so the Polish fief of Prussia was passed on to the senior Brandenburg Hohenzollern line the ruling margraves and prince electors of Brandenburg who thereafter ruled Brandenburg a fief of the Holy Roman Empire and Ducal Prussia a Polish fief in personal union This legal contradiction made a cross border real union impossible however in practice Brandenburg and Ducal Prussia were more and more ruled as one and colloquially referred to as Brandenburg Prussia In 1618 the Thirty Years War broke out and John Sigismund himself died the following year His son George William was successfully invested with the duchy in 1623 by King of Poland Sigismund III Vasa thus the personal union Brandenburg Prussia was confirmed 10 Many of the Prussian Junkers were opposed to rule by the House of Hohenzollern of Berlin and appealed to Sigismund III Vasa for redress or even incorporation of Ducal Prussia into the Polish kingdom but without success 14 Due to the Polish Swedish War in 1635 the duchy was administered by Polish statesman Jerzy Ossolinski appointed by Polish King Wladyslaw IV Vasa 15 Frederick William the Great Elector duke of Prussia and prince elector of Brandenburg wished to acquire Royal Prussia in order to territorially connect his two fiefs Yet during the Second Northern War Charles X Gustav of Sweden invaded Ducal Prussia and dictated the Treaty of Konigsberg January 1656 which made the duchy a Swedish fief In the subsequent Treaty of Marienburg June 1656 Charles X Gustav promised to cede to Frederick William the Polish voivodships of Chelmno Malbork Pomerania and the Prince Bishopric of Warmia if Frederick William would support Charles Gustav s effort 16 82 The proposition was somewhat risky since Frederick William would definitely have to provide military support while the reward could only be provided conditional on victory When the tide of the war turned against Charles X Gustav he concluded the Treaty of Labiau November 1656 making Frederick William I the full sovereign in Ducal Prussia and Warmia which however was part of Poland Emancipation Edit In response to the Swedish Prussian alliance King John II Casimir of Poland submitted a counter offer which Frederick William accepted They signed the Treaty of Wehlau on 19 September 1657 and the Treaty of Bromberg on 6 November 1657 In return for Frederick William s renunciation of the Swedish Prussian alliance John Casimir recognised Frederick William s full sovereignty over the Duchy of Prussia 16 83 After almost 200 years of Polish suzerainty over the Teutonic Monastic State of Prussia and its successor Ducal Prussia the territory passed under the full sovereignty of Brandenburg Therefore Duchy of Prussia then became the more adequate appellation for the state Full sovereignty was a necessary prerequisite to upgrade Ducal Prussia to the sovereign Kingdom of Prussia in 1701 Not to be confused with Polish Royal Prussia 17th century view of Konigsberg However the end of Polish suzerainty was met with resistance of the population regardless of ethnicity as it was afraid of Brandenburg absolutism and wished to remain part of the Crown of the Kingdom of Poland The burghers of the capital city of Konigsberg led by Hieronymus Roth rejected the treaties of Wehlau and Oliva and viewed Prussia as indisputably contained within the territory of the Polish Crown 4 It was noted that the incorporation into the Polish Crown under the Treaty of Krakow was approved by the city of Konigsberg while the separation from Poland took place without the city s consent 4 Polish King John II Casimir Vasa was asked for help masses were held in Protestant churches for the Polish King and the Polish Kingdom In 1662 elector Frederick William entered the city with his troops and forced the city to swear allegiance to him However in the following decades attempts to return to Polish suzerainty were still made In 1675 the Polish French Treaty of Jaworow was even signed according to which France was to support Polish efforts to regain control of the region while Poland was to join the ongoing Franco Brandenburgian war on the French side 17 however it was not implemented The nature of the de facto collectively ruled governance of Brandenburg Prussia became more apparent through the titles of the higher ranks of the Prussian government seated in Brandenburg s capital of Berlin after the return of the court from Konigsberg where they had sought refuge from the Thirty Years War 1618 1648 Promotion Edit Ducal Prussia s full sovereignty allowed Elector Frederick III of Brandenburg to become king in Prussia in 1701 without offending Emperor Leopold I The government of de facto collectively ruled Brandenburg Prussia seated in Brandenburg s capital Berlin mostly appeared under the higher ranking titles of the Prussian government Expansion and consolidation Edit After the Kingdom of Prussia s annexation of the bulk of the province of Royal Prussia in the First Partition of Poland in 1772 former Ducal Prussia including previously Polish controlled Warmia within Royal Prussia was reorganized into the Province of East Prussia while Pomerelia and the Malbork Land became the Province of West Prussia with the exceptions of the two principal cities of Gdansk and Torun annexed into West Prussia only in 1793 The Kingdom of Prussia then consisting of East and West Prussia being a sovereign state and Brandenburg being a fief within the Holy Roman Empire were amalgamated de jure only after the latter s dissolution in 1806 though later became again partially distinct during the existence of the German Confederation 1815 1866 See also EditLithuania Minor Province of Prussia Masuria East PrussiaReferences Edit The duchy s Evangelical Protestant church was the first formally established as a state religion Notes and Queries Oxford University Press 1850 Gorski Karol 1949 Zwiazek Pruski i poddanie sie Prus Polsce zbior tekstow zrodlowych in Polish and Latin Poznan Instytut Zachodni pp 96 97 214 215 a b c Janusz Jasinski Polska a Krolewiec Komunikaty Mazursko Warminskie nr 2 2005 p 126 in Polish http bazhum muzhp pl media files Komunikaty Mazursko Warminskie Komunikaty Mazursko Warminskie r1995 t n3 Komunikaty Mazursko Warminskie r1995 t n3 s311 313 Komunikaty Mazursko Warminskie r1995 t n3 s311 313 pdf bare URL PDF a b c d e f g h Albertas Juska Mazosios Lietuvos Baznycia XVI XX amziuje Klaipeda 1997 pp 742 771 hereafter the German translation Die Kirche in Klein Litauen section 2 Reformatorische Anfange in German on Lietuvos Evangeliku Liuteronu Baznycia retrieved on 28 August 2011 Christiansen Eric The Northern Crusades Penguin Books London 1997 ISBN 0 14 026653 4 Seward Desmond The Monks of War The Military Religious Orders Penguin Books London 1995 ISBN 0 14 019501 7 a b Kirby David Northern Europe in the Early Modern Period The Baltic World 1492 1772 Longman London 1990 ISBN 0 582 00410 1 a b c Koch H W A History of Prussia Barnes amp Noble Books New York 1978 ISBN 0 88029 158 3 Albertas Juska Mazosios Lietuvos Baznycia XVI XX amziuje Klaipeda 1997 pp 742 771 here after the German translation Die Kirche in Klein Litauen section 5 Die Pfarrer und ihre Ausbildung in German on Lietuvos Evangeliku Liuteronu Baznycia retrieved on 28 August 2011 Peter Brandt in collaboration with Thomas Hofmann Preussen Zur Sozialgeschichte eines Staates eine Darstellung in Quellen edited on behalf of Berliner Festspiele as a catalogue to the exhibition on Prussia between 15 May and 15 November 1981 Reinbek bei Hamburg Rowohlt 1981 Preussen vol 3 pp 24 and 35 ISBN 3 499 34003 8 Urban William The Teutonic Knights A Military History Greenhill Books London 2003 ISBN 1 85367 535 0 Eulenberg Herbert The Hohenzollerns Translated by M M Bozman The Century Co New York 1929 Wladyslaw Czaplinski Jerzy Ossolinski h Topor Internetowy Polski Slownik Biograficzny in Polish Retrieved 11 September 2020 a b Rutkowski Henryk 1983 Rivalitat der Magnaten und Bedrohung der Souveranitat Rivalry of the Magnates and the Threat of Sovereignty Polen Ein geschichtliches Panorama Poland A Historical Panorama in German Warszawa Wydawnictwo Interpress pp 81 91 ISBN 83 223 1984 3 11 czerwca 1675 roku krol Polski Jan III Sobieski i ambasador krola Francji Ludwika XIV podpisali tajny traktat w Jaworowie Historykon in Polish Retrieved 24 October 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Duchy of Prussia amp oldid 1151765158, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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