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Ostsiedlung

Ostsiedlung (German pronunciation: [ˈɔstˌziːdlʊŋ], literally "East settlement") is the term for the Early Medieval and High Medieval migration of ethnic Germans into the territories in the eastern part of Francia, East Francia, and the Holy Roman Empire and beyond; and the consequences for settlement development and social structures in the areas of settlement. Generally sparsely and in some inland areas only relatively recently populated by Slavic, Baltic and Finnic peoples, the most settled area was known as Germania Slavica. Other regions were also settled, though not as heavily. The Ostsiedlung encompassed multiple modern and historical regions such as Germany east of the Saale and Elbe rivers, the states of Lower Austria and Styria in Austria, Livonia, Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia, Hungary, and Transylvania in Romania.[1][2]

German movement c. 700 CE till 1914.
Stages of German eastern settlement in pink and three shades of green; the black line represents the border of the Holy Roman Empire (Germany) according to the 1348 Treaty of Namysłów

Since the 1980s, historians have interpreted the Ostsiedlung as a part of a civil and social development, termed the High Middle Age Land Consolidation (German: Hochmittelalterlicher Landesausbau). In a pan-European intensification process from the Carolingian-Anglo-Saxon core countries to the periphery of the continent, societies progressed in culture, religion, law and administration, trade and agriculture.[3]

The majority of Ostsiedlung settlers moved individually, in independent efforts, in multiple stages and on different routes. Many settlers were encouraged and invited by the local princes and regional lords,[4][5][6] who sometimes even expelled the indigenous populations to make room for German settlers.[a]

Smaller groups of migrants first moved to the east during the early Middle Ages. Larger treks of settlers, which included scholars, monks, missionaries, craftsmen and artisans, often invited, in numbers unverifiable, first moved eastwards during the mid-12th century. The military territorial conquests and punitive expeditions of the Ottonian and Salian emperors during the 11th and 12th centuries do not form part of the Ostsiedlung, as these actions didn't result in any noteworthy settlement establishment east of the Elbe and Saale rivers. The Ostsiedlung is considered to have been a purely Medieval event as it ended in the beginning of the 14th century. The legal, cultural, linguistic, religious and economic changes caused by the movement had a profound influence on the history of Eastern Central Europe between the Baltic Sea and the Carpathians until the 20th century.[8][9][10]

In the 20th century, accounts of the Ostsiedlung were heavily exploited by German nationalists (including the Nazi movement)[11] to press the territorial claims of Germany and to demonstrate supposed German superiority over non-Germanic peoples, whose cultural, urban and scientific achievements in that era were undermined, rejected, or presented as German.[12][failed verification][13][14] After World War I (1914–1918), the fact that Germany and Austria lost part of their territories in the East appeared as a counterpoint to Ostsiedlung because some of the Germans in the East became foreign citizens when their homes were no longer part of Germany and Austria. The Germans in the East outside Germany and Austria were not expelled and the regions that Germany and Austria lost in the East were dominated by non-German peoples, so the German loss here was not as severe as after World War II.

In and after World War II (1944–1950), Germans were driven out and deported to rump Germany from the East and their language and culture were lost in most areas (including the German-dominated lands which Germany lost after this war) in which German people had settled during the Ostsiedlung; except part of Eastern Austria and especially Eastern Germany.

Early medieval Central Europe Edit

During the 4th and 5th centuries, in what is known as the Migration Period, Germanic peoples seized control of the decaying Western Roman Empire in the South and established new kingdoms within it. Meanwhile, formerly Germanic areas in Eastern Europe and present-day Eastern Germany, were settled by Slavs.[15]

Under Carolingian rule Edit

 
The Limes Saxoniae border between the Saxons and the Slavic Obotrites, established about 810
 
The division of the Carolingian Empire, Treaty of Verdun, 843

Charlemagne, ruler of the Carolingian Empire of Francia, which was founded by Franks (a Germanic people), under whom most of Western and Central continental Europe had been united during the 8th and 9th centuries, created numerous border territories, so called marches (German: Marken), where a substantial portion of the Ostsiedlung would later take place.[16][17] The territories (from north to south):

This was the earliest recorded and planned "eastern policy" under Charlemagne, who wanted to protect the eastern border of the Frankish Empire, and also wanted to solidify his position in the east by declaring war on the Obotrites and Wilzes in the North, as well as on the Sorbs (east of Thuringia) and Czech tribal princes. However, since the goal wasn't to establish an ethnic and linguistic boundary between the Slavs and Germanic tribes, Slavic settlement continued in Thuringia and Northern Bavaria, with individual Slavs even making it to the Rhine Basin.[20]

The tribes that populated these marches were generally unreliable allies of the Empire, and successor kings led numerous, yet not always successful, military campaigns to maintain their authority.

In 843 the Carolingian Empire was partitioned into three independent kingdoms as a result of dissent among Charlemagne's three grandsons over the continuation of the custom of partible inheritance or the introduction of primogeniture.[21]

East Francia and Holy Roman Empire Edit

Louis the German inherited the eastern territories, East Francia, that included all lands east of the Rhine river and to the north of Italy, which roughly corresponded with the territories of the German stem duchies, that formed a federation under the first king Henry the Fowler (919 to 936).[22] The Slavs living within the reach of East Francia (since 962 C.E. the Holy Roman Empire), collectively called Wends or "Elbe Slavs", seldom formed larger political entities. They rather constituted various small tribes, settling as far west as to a line from the Eastern Alps and Bohemia to the Saale and Elbe rivers. As the East Frankish kingdom expanded, various Wendish tribes, that were conquered or allied with the Eastern Franks, such as the Obotrites, aided the Franks in defeating the West Germanic Saxons.[23] The Carolingian tradition of setting up marches at the periphery of the empire would be continued by the East Frankish and Holy Roman Empire's kings during the 11th and 12th centuries.

Under the rule of King Louis the German and Arnulf of Carinthia, the first groups of civilian Catholic settlers were led by Franks and Bavarii to the lands of Pannonia (present-day Burgenland, Hungary, Slovakia and Slovenia).

In a series of punitive actions, large territories in the northeast between the Elbe, Saale, Naab rivers in the west and the Oder, Bober, Kwisa and Vltava rivers in the east were conquered (see also: Battle on the Raxa), and border marches were established in these areas. Fortifications were occupied and new castles built, reinforced by military units to exert military control and collect tributes. No civilian settlers occupied these lands. Christianization was limited to the establishment of mission dioceses such as Lübeck, Brandenburg or Havelberg. The development of a Parish church system only took place after the settlement of German colonists, beginning in the 2nd half of the 12th century. Control over areas that had already been conquered was repeatedly lost. The Slavic revolt of 983 and an uprising of the Obotrites in 1066 had particularly serious consequences.[24][25]

Slavic revolt of 983 Edit

In 983, the Polabian Slavs in the Billung and Northern Marches, stretching from the Elbe river to the Baltic Sea succeeded in a rebellion against the political rule and Christian mission of the recently established Holy Roman Empire. In spite of their new-won independence, the Obotrites, Rani, Liutizian and Hevelli tribes were soon faced with internal struggles and warfare as well as raids from the newly constituted and expanding Piast dynasty (the early Polish) state from the east, Denmark from the north and the Empire from the west, eager to reestablish her marches. The area remained under rule of the Polabian tribes and uncolonized and unchristianized into the 12th century.[26][27]

Eastern marches of East Francia and Holy Roman Empire Edit

The territories (from north to south):

Eastern Saxon Marches Edit

The Sorbian March east of the Saale river was established in the 9th century. King Otto I designated a larger area – the Saxon Eastern March – in 937, that encompassed the territory between the Elbe, the Oder and the Peene rivers. Governed by Margrave Gero, it is also referred to as Marca Geronis. After Gero's death in 965, the march was divided in smaller sectors: Northern March, Lusatian March, Margraviate of Meissen, and March of Zeitz. The march was populated by various West Slavic tribes, the largest being Polabian Slavs tribes in the north and Sorbian tribes in the south.

The Margravate of Meissen and Transylvania were populated by German settlers, beginning in the 12th century. From the end of the 12th century onwards, monasteries and cities were established in Pomerania, Brandenburg, Silesia, Bohemia, Moravia and eastern Austria. In the Baltics, the Teutonic Order founded a crusader state in the beginning of the 13th century.[28][10]

Northeastern Germany and Holstein Edit

 
West-Slavic peoples in Europe until 1125 (yellow borders). Prussia (identified as Pruzzia) has not been a Slavic, but Baltic land.

Background Edit

A call for a crusade against the Wends in 1108, probably coming from a Flemish clerk in the circles of the archbishop of Magdeburg, which included the prospect of profitable land gains for new settlers, had no noticeable effect and resulted in neither a military campaign nor a movement of settlers into the area.[29][30]

Although the first settlers had already arrived in 1124, being mostly of Flemish and Dutch origin, they settled south of the Eider river, followed by the conquest of the land of the Wagri in 1139, the founding of Lübeck in 1143 and the call by Count Adolf II of Schauenburg to settle in Eastern Holstein, and Pomerania in the same year.[31][32]

Weakened by ongoing internal conflicts and constant warfare, the independent Wendish territories finally lost the capacity to provide effective military resistance. From 1119 to 1123, Pomerania invaded and subdued the northeastern parts of the Lutici lands. In 1124 and 1128, Wartislaw I, Duke of Pomerania, at that time a vassal of Poland, invited bishop Otto of Bamberg to Christianize the Pomeranians and Liutizians of his duchy.[33][34] In 1147, as a campaign of the Northern Crusades, the Wendish Crusade was mounted in the Duchy of Saxony to retake the marches lost in 983. The crusaders also headed for Pomeranian Demmin and Szczecin (Stettin), despite these areas having already been successfully Christianized. The Crusade caused widespread devastation and slaughter.[35]

Settlement Edit

This created ideal conditions for German settlement, some of the most prominent supporters of settlement included William IV who had purchased small amounts of land on the frontier of Pomerania, and Wichmann von Seeburg. In 1152 the large numbers of Flemish and Dutch people were introduced to the unoccupied and uncultivated marshlands just east of Magdeburg near the Havel. They founded the cities of Fläming and Jüterbog. Henry the Lion, also settled Mecklenburg with a large number of Flems. With the formation of the Hanseatic League, which allowed further German settlement in coastal towns due to it being the dominant trade republic in the Baltic and North seas.[36]

After the Wendish crusade, Albert the Bear was able to establish and expand the Margraviate of Brandenburg in 1157 on approximately the territory of the former Northern March, which since 983 had been controlled by the Hevelli and Lutici tribes. The Bishopric of Havelberg, that had been occupied by revolting Lutici tribes was reestablished to Christianize the Wends.[37]

In 1164, after Saxon duke Henry the Lion finally defeated rebellious Obotrites and Pomeranian dukes in the Battle of Verchen. The Pomeranian duchies of Demmin and Stettin became Saxon fiefs, as well as the Obodrite territories, which became Mecklenburg, named after the Obotrites residential capital, Mecklenburg Castle. After Henry the Lion lost his internal struggle with Emperor Frederick I, Mecklenburg and Pomerania became fiefs of the Holy Roman Empire in 1181.[38]

Bohemia Edit

Background Edit

German influence over Bohemia first started under the reign of Boleslaus I, these Germans were primarily trader, who dealt in furs, salt, and especially slaves. In 971 AD, Pope John XIII, authorized the creation of the first Bohemian bishopric, the Bishopric of Prague, which was created two years later under the reign of the Otto I. After that, in 993 AD, the first monastery in Bohemia, the Břevnov Monastery. After the founding of the Břevnov Monastery, German influence grew rapidly, with relics, missals, manuscripts, etc. being in German. Even the ducal family being largely ethnically German. Although, due to the invasions of Otto II, there was large anti-German sentiment among the Bohemian populace. Spytihnev (not to be confused with Spytihnev II, Duke of Bohemia), capitalized on this anti-German sentiment, when Boleslaus III succeeded Boleslaus II in 999 AD. Holy Roman Emperor Henry II, wanting to defend the Churches and German influence, invaded Bohemia with an army of Saxons, East Franks, Bavarians assembled in Merseberg under the command of Jaromir (The son of Boleslaus II). This was part of the wider German–Polish War during Otto II's reign. Bretislav I was feared growing German domination, and made an alliance with Hungary, who was also scared of German expansionism in the east. Henry III still attacked and humiliated Bretislav I at the Diet of Regensburg. Bretislav was forced to pay an enormous sum of 8000 Marks, allow the building of German military installations in the Upper Palatinate forest, and had to return Silesia and Chrobatia to Poland, which was Bretislavs main achievement. After this, Bohemia remained loyal to Germany because of fears of another invasion, and Polish and Hungarian expansionism to the North and South. On the epoch of the war of investiture in Germany, Henry IV decisively fixed German-Bohemian relationship by playing off the Polish-Bohemian enmity. In 1080 Bretislav I, fighting under the banner of the Emperor, captured the golden lance of the papal counter-king, Rudolf of Swabia, at the battle of Flarchheim. Bohemia's reward for this loyalty came six years later, in 1086, when Henry IV elevated the Duke to the rank of king.[39]

Settlement Edit

All of this laid the perfect conditions for German settlement and dominance of Bohemia. German settlers, mainly traders, miners, farmers and monks. The trade fairs of Prague attracted many merchants from all over Europe, with many including the Germans settling in Prague, and even making up almost a quarter of all people in Prague. Bretislav II granted them important privileges, notably the right of self-government under magistrates of their own election, and the right of living under German law.[39] During the late 12th and early 13th century, German settlement of the mountainous borderland (Known as the Sudetenland) began. It was caused by the successful settlement of modern day Northeastern Germany. The mountainous area settled first was the Eger Valley, partially due to its southern edges coming under the control of Diepold III who was an ally of Holy Roman Emperor Frederick Barbarossa. Furthermore, the Monastery of Waldsassen owned extensive land in the Eger Valley. The first German villages were Penerit and Neudorf, both founded in 1196. Bavarians and Austrians settled the southern edge, East Franks the middle edge, and Saxon miners the northern edge, notably the Erzgebirge. Unlike in Mecklenburg, Pomerania, Brandenburg, and Silesia, the German settlement was not as heavy, nor were many Czechs assimilated like in Eastern Germany. As German influence grew, with greater numbers of Settlers arriving each year, Soběslav II felt it was necessary to protect the Czechs from Germany, asking Henry II, Duke of Austria to renounce his claims to certain Bohemian lands, this was refused, and in the war that followed he was defeated. This made Soběslavs successors Frederick and Conrad II ruling during a period of unrest. This allowed for greater settlement during the 13th century, where even many Czech towns received so many German settlers they were practically Germanized and became majority Germany.[40] Due to the German influence on the nobility, many castles and villages names were Germanized, such as Zvíkov Castle to Burg Klingenberg. Under the reign of Vladislaus II, various military orders, the most prominent of which, the Knights Hospitaller, were even allowed to bring German settlers into Bohemian land and settle them. During this time, German settlers were exempt from the local Župan Laws, which included various duties such as the upkeep of local infrastructure. In 1219, Litoměřice (German: Leitmeritz), was the first German town to be given the privileges of the Magdeburg Laws in Bohemia.[41] During the 13th-14th century, as much as 1 out of every 6th German settlers was going to Bohemia, while this is lower than in Upper Saxony, Lusatia, and Lower Silesia, It's still a substantial number.[42]

End Edit

Eventually, during the late 14th and early 15th centuries' settlement slowed down, due to numerous factors such as the Black Plague in Germany, and the Hussite Wars.[43]

Prussia and the Baltics Edit

 
lands of the Teutonic Order in 1410

The Teutonic State was formed in the aftermath of the Livonian Crusade, Prussian Crusade and in general the Northern Crusades in the territories of East Prussia, Pomeralia and Livonia. It was established on February 2, 1207[44] as a principality of the Holy Roman Empire[45] and proclaimed by Pope Innocent III in 1215 as a subject to the Holy See.[46]

The Teutonic State established a comprehensive administrative structure, and modernized the old traditional tribal structure of the region. An integral part of the Order other than converting Pagans to Christianity was also to encourage Germans to settle the sparsely populated area. Most German settlers primarily went to urban cities, such as Graudenz, Elbing, and Riga.[47][48] The settlers also established numerous rural settlements, known as Vorwerke in German. Most of the settlers came from the Rhineland region. The Teutonic Order established numerous Castles, and other holdings near populated places such as Kaliningrad to consolidate the conquered lands. While East Prussia was heavily settled and Germanized, Livonia still had a very small German population, because there were no attempts to settle inland. The Germans in Livonia were mainly employees of the Teutonic Order there for administrative purposes, or merchants of the Hanseatic League who settled coastal towns.[49]

Hungary Edit

While Hungary was never conquered by the Holy Roman Empire and was never in focus of German settlement, it still had a sizeable German population. During the 11th century, Stephen I of Hungary invited German priests, abbots, and churchmen to found monasteries and promote the conversion of Hungary. Eventually these Germans' descendants started to fill other occupations, becoming merchants, clerks, and farmers, etc. and were granted the status of free peasants. In 1149, Géza II invited German settlers to Southern Transylvania. Written records call them "Flamands", "Teutons", and "Latins". The term "Saxons" appeared in 1206, and became the official term for local Germans in 1231. The term represented legal status rather than nationality. The Transylvanian Saxons have diverse origins, their pottery, art, and liturgy were not uniform. In the 12th and 13th centuries, more Germans arrived in Hungary, living in dispersed villages known as Königsboden  [de]. By the mid-13th century, their importance in trade (especially in Pozsony, Pest and Nagyszombat) and gold and silver mining (especially in Beszterce and Radna) grew significant.

When Stephen I married Gisela of Bavaria, many German knights came to Hungary, joining its military. They were often rewarded with large estates and entry into the nobility.[50] In 1224, Andrew II signed a charter laying out the duties and rights of the Germans in the kingdom. The king defined their duties such as the payment of tax, military service, and housing of the king and his officials. In exchange, they were able to elect their priests and officials independently and their merchants were exempt from customs duties. Their markets were also not taxed. No outsider was allowed to receive villages or estates in German land where only the monarch and the Count of Hermannstadt had jurisdiction.[51]

Social and demographic background Edit

Political and military events were greatly influenced by a massive population increase throughout Europe in the High Middle Ages. From the 11th to the 13th centuries, the population in the kingdom of Germany increased from about four to twelve million inhabitants.[52][53] During this time, the High Medieval Landesausbau (inland settlement) took place, when arable land was largely expanded at the expense of forested areas. Although new land was won and numerous settlements created, demands could not be absorbed.[54] Another factor was a surplus of offspring of the nobility who were not entitled to inheritance, but after the success of the first crusade, took their chances of acquiring new lands in the peripheral regions of the Empire.[10][55]

There is no doubt that there were "rather numerous German settlers" in Eastern Central who were responsible for bringing German law in the earliest stages of the colonization. Other settlers included Walloons, Jews, Dutch, Flemish, and later Poles, especially in the territory of modern Ukraine.[56]

The migration of the Walser in the territory of present-day Switzerland to areas that had formerly been inhabited by Romans. The Walser settlers left their homes in Valais and founded villages in the uplands of the Alp valleys (in the north of Italy and in the Grisons).[57]

Technical and agricultural development Edit

The Medieval Warm Period, which began in the 11th century resulted in higher average temperatures in Central Europe. Additional technical progress in agriculture, for example through the construction of mills, Three-field farming and increased cultivation of grain (graining) led to general population increase.

The new settlers not only brought their customs and language with them, but also new technical skills and equipment that were adapted within a few decades, especially in agriculture and crafts.[58] These included:

The amount of cultivated land increased as large forested areas were cleared. The extent of land increase differed by region. In Silesia it had doubled (16% of the total area) by the beginning of the 11th century, 30% in the 16th century and the highest increase rates in the 14th century, the total area of arable land increased seven – to twentyfold in many Silesian regions during the Ostsiedlung.

Parallel to agricultural innovations new forms of farm layout and settlement structuring (division and classification of land) were introduced. Farmland was divided into Hufen, (English hides) and larger villages replaced the previously dominant type of small villages consisting of four to eight farms as a complete transformation of the previous settlement structure occurred. The cultural landscape of East Central Europe formed by the medieval settlement processes essentially prevails until today.

Dutch settlers and hydraulic engineering Edit

Flemish and Dutch settlers were among the first to immigrate to Mecklenburg at the beginning of the 12th century. In the following years, they moved further east to Pomerania and Silesia and in the south to Hungary, motivated by the lack of settlement areas in their already largely developed home areas and several flood disasters and famines.[59]

Experienced and skilled hydraulic engineers, they were in high demand at the settlements of the as yet undeveloped areas east of the Elbe. The land was drained by creating a network-like structure of smaller drainage ditches that drained the water in main ditches. Roads connecting the settlers' individual farms ran along these main trenches.

Dutch settlers were recruited by the local rulers in large numbers, especially during the second half of the 12th century. In 1159/60, for example, Albert the Bear granted Dutch settlers the right to take possession of former Slavic settlements. The preacher Helmold of Bosau reported on this in his Slavic chronicle: "Finally, when the Slavs were gradually dispersing, he (Albrecht) sent to Utrecht and the Rhine region, and also to those who live by the ocean, who under the power of the sea had suffered, the Dutch, Zealanders and Flemings, where he attracted a lot of people and let them live in the castles and villages of the Slavs."[59]

Agricultural implements Edit

 
Three-field system with ridge and furrow fields (furlongs)

The Slavs used ploughs and agricultural implements before the arrival of German settlers. The oldest meaningful reference to this can be found in a Slavic chronicle, in which the use of a plough as an areal measurement is mentioned. Although heavier and useful ploughs were brought by the settlers.[b][61]

In the 12th and 13th century documents, the Ard without a mouldboard is mentioned. It tear opens the soil and spreads the soil to both sides without turning it. It is therefore particularly suitable for light and sandy subsoil. In the mid 13th century, the Three-field system was introduced east of the Elbe. This new cultivation method required the use of the heavy mouldboard plough that digs up the earth deeply and turns it around in a single operation.[c]

The different modes of operation of the two devices also had an impact on the shape and size of the cultivation areas. The fields worked with the ard had about the same field length and width and a square base. Long fields with a rectangular base were much more suitable for the mouldboard plough, as the heavy implements had to be turned less often. Planting and cultivation of oats and rye was promoted, and soon these cereals became the most important type of grain. Farmers who used mouldboard ploughs were required to pay double tax fees.[62]

Pottery Edit

Potters were among the first group of artisans who also settled in the rural areas. Typical Slavic ceramics were the Flat-bottom vessels. With the influx of western settlers, new vessel shapes such as the rounded jar were introduced, inclusive hard-fired processes, that improved ceramics quality. This type of ceramics, known as Hard Grayware, became widespread east of the Elbe by the end of the 12th century. It was manufactured extensively in Pomerania by the 13th century, when more advanced manufacturing methods, such as the tunnel kiln, enabled the mass production of ceramic household goods. The demand for household goods such as pots, jugs, jugs and bowls, which had previously been made of wood, increased steadily and promoted the development of new sales markets.

During the 13th century, glazed ceramics were introduced and the import of stoneware increased. The transfer of technology and knowledge affected the way of life of old and new settlers in a variety of ways and, in addition to innovations in agriculture and handicrafts, also included other areas, such as weapons technology, documents and coins.[63]

Architecture Edit

 
Timber Frame House

The Slavic population (Sorbs), who lived east of the Elbe, primarily built log houses, which had proven suitable for the regional climates and wood was plentiful in the continental regions. The German settlers, mainly from Franconia and Thuringia, who advanced into the area in the 13th century, brought with them the half-timbering style, which was already known to the Germanic peoples, as a wood-saving, solid and stable construction method, that allowed multi-storey buildings. A combination of the two construction methods was difficult because the horizontally stacked wood of the log room expands differently in height than the vertical posts of the framework. The result was the new type of half-timbered house with a timber frame around the ground floor block, capable to support a second floor, which was made of half-timber.

Population and settlement Edit

 
German eastward expansion 895–1400

The Ostsiedlung followed an immediate rapid population growth throughout Central and Eastern Europe. During the 12th and 13th centuries, the population density increased considerably. The increase was due to the influx of settlers on the one hand and an increase in slavic populations after the settlement on the other hand. Settlement was the primary reason for the increase e.g. in the areas east of the Oder, the Duchy of Pomerania, western Greater Poland, Silesia, Austria, Moravia, Prussia and Transylvania, while in the larger part of Central and Eastern Europe indigenous populations were responsible for the growth. Author Piskorski wrote that "insofar as it is possible to draw conclusions from the less than rich medieval source material, it appears that at least in some East Central European territories the population increased significantly. It is however possible to contest to what extent this was a direct result of migration and how far it was due to increased agricultural productivity and the gathering pace of urbanization."[64] In contrast to Western Europe, this increased population was largely spared by the 14th-century Black Death pandemic.[65]

With the German settlers new systems of taxation arrived. While the existing Wendish tithe was a fixed tax depending on village size, the German tithe depended on the actual crop yield. Thus higher taxes were collected from the settlers than from the Wends, although settlers were partly exempted from tax payments during the first years after settlement establishment.[58][10]

Urban development and city foundations Edit

Examples of Ostsiedlung towns
 
Poznań (German: Posen), an example of an Ostsiedlung town attached to a preexisting castrum (castle with a suburbium). The castrum was located on the island with the cathedral, the Ostsiedlung town with its rectangular street grid was built on the river's bank.[66]
 
Greifswald in medieval Pomerania is an example of an Ostsiedlung town built in a previously unsettled area.[67] Locators organized the settlement and set up rectangular blocks in an oval area with a central market.

The development of Germania Slavica was also associated with the establishment of towns. There already existed Slavic castle towns, in which merchant quarters formed suburbs at fortified strongholds (grads). Wendish-Scandinavian merchants founded manufacturing and trading settlements (emporia) at the Baltic coast. Large cities included Szczecin which reached 9,000 inhabitants, Kraków which was the capital of the state of Piast Poland and Wrocław, already under civil and religious administration and centers of power. However, they experienced substantial growth since the end of the 12th century through new settlers and expansion (locatio civitatis). The foundation of a bishopric, for example in Havelberg, would lead to the development of a town, although cities were also founded out of nowhere, such as Neubrandenburg. Characteristic of the founding cities are geometrical or rasterized floor plans with main streets, intersecting axes and a central market place. Different settlement phases are reflected in twin cities names such as New town or Old town.[68][69]

The towns established during the Ostsiedlung were Free Towns (civitates liberae) or called "New Towns" by its contemporaries. The rapid increase in the number of towns led to an "urbanization of East Central Europe". The new towns differed from their predecessors in:

  • The introduction of German town law, resulting in far-reaching administrative and judicial rights for the towns. The townspeople were personally free, enjoyed far-reaching property rights and were subject to the town's own jurisdiction only. The privileges granted to the towns were copied, sometimes with minor changes, from the legal charters of the (Lübeck Law in 33 towns[70] at the southern coast of the Baltic Sea), the Magdeburg Law in Brandenburg, areas of modern Saxony, Lusatia, Silesia, northern Bohemia, northern Moravia and the Teutonic Order state, the Nuremberg Law in southwestern Bohemia, the Brünn Law (Brno) in Moravia, based on the charter of Vienna), the Iglau Law (Jihlava) in Bohemian and Moravian mining areas.[71] Besides these basic town laws, several adapted town charters.[71]
  • The introduction of permanent markets. As previously, markets were held only periodically, townspeople were now free to trade and marketplaces became a central feature of the new towns.[72]
  • Layout: The new towns were planned towns as their layout was usually rectangular.[67]

City laws and grants Edit

The granting of city rights played an important role in attracting German settlers.[73] The town charter privileged the new residents and existing suburban settlements with a market were given formal town charter and then rebuilt or expanded. Even small settlements inhabited by native people would eventually be granted these new rights. Regardless of existing suburban settlements, locators were commissioned to establish completely new cities, as the goal was to attract as many people as possible in order to create new, flourishing population centers.[74][75]

Expansion of the German city laws Edit

Among the many different German city laws, the Magdeburg law and the Lübeck law played the greatest role in the new settlements as they served, often in more or less modified form, as models for most cities. Other city rights that were of regional importance include the. Nuremberg law, the Mecklenburg law and the Iglau law. The Lübeck law of 1188 served in the 13th and 14th centuries as the model for around 100 cities in the entire Baltic Sea trading area. Around 350,000 people lived under Lübeck law in the early 15th century. The Magdeburg law, which has its origins in the privileges granted by Archbishop Wichmann of Magdeburg, first spread into Brandenburg, Saxony and Lusatia. Laws based on the Magdeburg model (for example the Kulmer law and Neumarkt law) were introduced in Silesia, Poland, the State of the Teutonic Order, Bohemia and Moravia and beyond.

Religious changes Edit

 
St. Mary of Brandenburg, built on top of the pagan Triglav sanctuary, by Zacharias Garcaeus, 1588

The pagan Wends had been the target of Christianization attempts before the beginning of the Ostsiedlung, since the government of emperor Otto I and the establishment of dioceses east of the Elbe. The Slav uprising of 983 put an end to these efforts for almost 200 years. In contrast to the Czechs and Poles who had been Christianized before the turn of the millennium, the conversion attempts of the Elbe Slavs initially accompanied by violence. The arrival of new settlers from around 1150 on led to a civil Christianization of the areas between the Elbe and Oder. The new settlers first built wooden and later field stone parish churches in their villages. Some places of worship, such as the St. Mary in Brandenburg, and the Lehnin Abbey, were built on pagan shrines. The Cistercians, who had been assigned a prominent role by church authorities, combined the spread of faith and settlement development. Their monasteries with extensive international connections played a vital role in the development of the communities.[76]

Settlers Edit

 
Sachsenspiegel depicting the Ostsiedlung. A Lokator receives the foundation charter from the landlord and acts as village judge. Settlers clear forests and build houses.
 
Ethnic Germans in Central/Eastern Europe, 1925

The majority of the settlers were Germans of the Holy Roman Empire. Significant numbers of Dutch settlers participated, particularly in the early 12th century in the area surrounding the Middle Elbe River.[77] To a lesser extent Danes, Scots or local Wends and (French-speaking) Walloons participated as well. Among the settlers were landless children of noble families who could not inherit property.[78]

Besides the marches, adjacent to the Empire, Germans settled in areas farther east, such as the Carpathians, Transylvania, and along the Gulf of Riga. Settlers were invited by local secular rulers, such as dukes, counts, margraves, princes and (only in a few cases due to the weakening central power) the king. The sovereigns in East Central Europe owned large territories, of which only small portions were arable, which generated very little income.[55] The lords offered considerable privileges to new settlers from the Empire. Starting in the border marks, the princes invited people from the Empire by granting them land ownership and improved legal status, binding duties and the inheritance of the farm. The landowners eventually benefited from these rather generous conditions for the farmers, and generated income from the land that had previously been fallow.[78]

Most sovereigns transferred the specific recruitment of settlers, the distribution of the land and the establishment of the settlements to so-called Lokators (allocator of land). These men, who usually came from the lower nobility or the urban bourgeoisie, organized the settlement trains, that included advertising, equipment and transport, land clearing and preparation of the settlements. Locator contracts settled rights and obligations of the locators and the new settlers.[69][79]

Towns were founded and granted German town law. The agricultural, legal, administrative, and technical methods of the immigrants, as well as their successful Christianization of the native inhabitants, led to a gradual transformation of the settlement areas, as Slavic communities adopted German culture.[citation needed] German cultural and linguistic influence lasted in some of these areas right up to the present day.[1]

In the mid 14th century, the migration process slowed considerably as a result of the Black Death. The population probably decreased by that time and economically marginal settlements were left, in particular at the coast of Pomerania and Western Prussia. Only a century later, local Slavic leaders of Pomerania, Western Prussia and Silesia invited German settlers again.[80]

Assimilation Edit

Settlement was the pretext for assimilation processes that lasted centuries. Assimilation occurred in both directions – depending on the region and the majority population, Slavic and German settlers mutually assimilated each other.

Germans Edit

 
Subcarpathian (Małopolska) Germans in the 15th century

The Polonization process of German settlers in Kraków and Poznań lasted about two centuries. The community could only continue its isolated position with a continuation of newcomers from German lands. The Sorbs also assimilated German settlers, yet at the same time, small Sorbic communities were themselves assimilated by the surrounding German-speaking population. Many Central and Eastern European towns developed into multi-ethnic melting pots.[81]

Treatment, involvement and traces of the Wends Edit

Although Slavic population density was generally not very high compared to the Empire and had, as a result of the extensive warfare during the 10th to 12th centuries, even further declined, some settlement centers maintained their Wendish populations to varying degrees, resisting assimilation for a long time.[81]

In the territories of Pomerania and Silesia, German migrants did not settle in the old Wendish villages and set up new ones on grounds allotted to them by the Slavic nobility and the monastic clergy. In the marches west of the Oder, the Wends were occasionally driven out and the villages rebuilt by settlers. The new villages would nevertheless keep their former Slavic names. In the case of the village Böbelin in Mecklenburg, the evicted Wendish inhabitants repeatedly invaded their former village, hindering a resettlement.[82]

In the Sorbian March the situation was again different as the area and in particular Upper Lusatia is situated close to Bohemia, ruled by a Slavic dynasty, a loyal and powerful duchy of the Empire. In this environment, German feudal lords often cooperated with the Slavic inhabitants. Wiprecht of Groitzsch, a prominent figure during the early German migration period only acquired local power through the marriage to a Slavic noblewoman and the support of the Bohemian king. German-Slavic relations were generally good, while relations between Slavic-governed Bohemia and Slavic-governed Poland were marred by constant struggle.

 
Bilingual German-Sorbian road signs in Saxony, Germany

Discrimination against the Wends was not a part of the general concept of the Ostsiedlung. Rather, the Wends were subject to a low taxation mode and thus not as profitable as new settlers. Even though the majority of the settlers were Germans (Franks and Bavarians in the South, and Saxons and Flemings in the North), Wends and other tribes also participated in the settlement. New settlers were not chosen just because of their ethnicity, a concept unknown in the Middle Ages, but because of their manpower and agricultural and technical know-how.[81]

Most of the Wends were gradually assimilated. However, in isolated rural areas where Wends constituted a substantial part of the population, they continued their culture. These were the Drevani Polabians of the Wendland east of the Lüneburg Heath, the Jabelheide Drevani of southern Mecklenburg, the Slovincians and Kashubs of Eastern Pomerania, and the Sorbs of Lusatia. Lusatia was inhabited by a large population of Sorbs until the end of the 19th century as linguistic assimilation occurred in a relatively short time.

Language exchange Edit

The Ostsiedlung caused the adoption of loan words, foreign words and loan translations among the German and the Slavic languages. Direct contact between Germans and Slavs caused direct language exchange of language elements due to the bilingualism of people or the spatial proximity of the speakers of the respective language. Remote contact took place during trade travels or political embassies.[83][84]

The oldest adoption of naming units dates back to Proto-Germanic and Proto-Slavic. The original Slavic word *kъnędzъ can be found in almost all Slavic languages. German was mainly used to convey words in Slavic languages that related to handicraft, politics, agriculture and nutrition. This includes Old High German cihla, Middle High German ziegala, ziegel (brick), that resulted from the sound shift of the Latin tegula. An example of borrowing from Slavic into Germanic usage is the word for border. In Middle High German called Grenize, which is a borrowing of the old Czech word granicĕ or the Polish word granica. City names are also affected by language exchange, sound shifting and the Slavic second palatalization. The city of Regensburg is called Řezno in Czech and *Rezъno in Proto-Slavic. Due to the intensive language contact, idioms were also transmitted. Two examples from Czech and Polish are na vlastní pěst / na własną rękę ('on your own') or ozbrojený po zuby / uzbrojony po zęby ('armed to the teeth'), in Hungarian saját szakállára ('one's own beard') and állig felfegyverzett ('armed to the chin'), with different wording, but with the same meaning.[85][86]

Category English German Polish Czech Slovakian Hungarian
Administration mayor Bürgermeister burmistrz purkmistr richtár / burgmajster polgármester
Administration margrave Markgraf margrabia markrabě markgróf őrgróf
Craft brick Ziegel cegła cihla tehla tégla
Food pretzel Brezel precel preclík praclík perec
Food oil Öl olej olej olej olaj
Agriculture mill Mühle młyn mlýn mlyn malom (mahlen)
Trade (cart-)load Fuhre fura fůra fúra furik
Others flute Flöte flet flétna flauta flóta

Names of localities and settlements Edit

As Slavic and Wendish locality names were widely adopted, they represent, in adapted and further developed form, a very high proportion of East German toponyms and place names. These are recognizable at word endings, such as -ow (Germanized -au, as in Spandau), -vitz or -witz and sometimes -in. Newly created villages were given German names that ended, for example, with -dorf or -hagen in the North, and -rode or -hain in the South. The name of the settler's place of origin (example: Lichtervelde in Flanders) could also become part of the place name. If a German settlement was founded alongside a Wendish settlement, the name of the Wendendorf could also be adopted for the German village, the distinction was then made through additions (for example: Klein- or Wendisch- / Windisch- for Wendendorf, Groß- or Deutsch- for German).[72][87]

In German-speaking areas most inherited surnames were formed only after the Ostsiedlung period, and many German surnames are in fact Germanized Wendish placenames.[citation needed]

The former ethnic variety of German (Deutsch-) and Slavic (Wendisch-, Böhmisch-, Polnisch-) toponyms was discontinued by the Eastern European republics after World War II. Villages and towns were renamed in Slavic only. Memory of the history of German settlement was no longer appreciated.[citation needed]

Family Names Edit

It's estimated that approximately 25% of all German family names are of Slavic origin,[88][89] most of these are Polish.

For most to least common[90]
Name Origin and meaning
Nowak Slavic, now-/nov- ‘new’ (German: Neu) + -ak means "New settlers" (German: Neuansiedler
Noack Sorbian, nowy ‘new’ (German: Neu) + -ak means "New settlers" (German: Neuansiedler)
Kretschmer Czech, krčmář means "Publican"
Mielke Slavic, nickname with mil- "love, dear" (German: Lieb, Teuer) + -ek
Stenzel Polish nickname Stanisław
Kaminski Polish, settlement name- kamień "Stone" (German: Stein) + -ski
Wieczorek Polish, wieczor "evening" (German: Abend) + -ek
Kowalski Polish, settlement name or kowal "Blacksmith" (German: Schmied) + -ski
Grabowski Polish, settlement name + -ski
Jankowski Polish, settlement or the nickname Janek + -owski

End of migration Edit

There is no clear cause nor a definite end point in time of the Ostsiedlung. However, a slowdown in the settlement movement can be observed after the year 1300 and in the 14th century only a few new settlements with the participation of German-speaking settlers were founded. An explanation for the end of the Ostsiedlung must include various factors without being able to clearly weigh or differentiate between them. The deterioration of the climate from around 1300 as the beginning of the "Little Ice Age", the agricultural crisis that began in the mid 14th century. In the wake of the demographic slump caused by the 1347 Plague, profound devastation processes have taken place. If a clear connection could be established here, the end of the Ostsiedlung would be understood as part of the crisis of the 14th century.[91]

Drang nach Osten Edit

In the 19th century, recognition of this complex phenomenon coupled with the rise of nationalism. This led to a largely unhistoric ethnically inspired nationalist reinterpretation of the medieval process. In Germany and some Slavic countries, most notably Poland, the Ostsiedlung was perceived in nationalist circles as a prelude to contemporary expansionism and Germanization efforts, the slogan used for this perception was Drang nach Osten (Drive or Push to the East).[92][93]

The German settlement processes in Pomerania did not follow any kind of ideology, nor did the other migratory movements. Rather, the German settlement in Pomerania was shaped exclusively by practical requirements...The national historiography that established itself around the middle of the 19th century retrospectively constructed a Slavic-Germanic contrast in the Ostsiedlung process of the High Middle Ages. However, that was the ideology of the 19th century, not the Middle Ages...Settlement was to be "cuiuscunque gentis et cuiuscunque artis homines" ('people of whatever origin and whatever craft') which was recorded in numerous documents issued by Pomeranian dukes and Rügish princes. -Buchholz[94]

Legacy Edit

 
Viktor Kress, governor of the Tomsk Oblast, Russia is ethnic German.

The 20th century wars and nationalist policies severely altered the ethnic and cultural composition of Central and Eastern Europe. After World War I, Germans in reconstituted Poland were set under pressure to leave the Polish Corridor, the eastern part of Upper Silesia and Poznań. During World War II, the Nazis initiated the Nazi-Soviet population transfers, wiping out the old settlement areas of the Baltic Germans, the Germans in Bessarabia and others, to resettle them in the future territories in occupied Poland.

Room for them was made during World War II, in line with the Generalplan Ost by expulsion of Poles and enslaving these and other Slavs according to the Nazi's Lebensraum concept. In order to press the territorial claims of Germany and to demonstrate supposed German superiority over non-Germanic peoples, whose cultural, urban and scientific achievements in that era were undermined, rejected, or presented as German.[12][13][14] While further realization of this mega plan, aiming at a total reconstitution of Central and Eastern Europe as a German colony, was prevented by the war's turn, the beginning of the expulsion of 2 million Poles and settlement of Volksdeutsche in the annexed territories yet was implied by 1944.[95]

The Potsdam Conference – the meeting between the leaders of the United States, Great Britain, and the Soviet Union – sanctioned the expulsion of Germans from Czechoslovakia, Poland and Hungary. With the Red Army's advance and Nazi Germany's defeat in 1945, the ethnic make-up of Central and Eastern and East Central Europe was radically changed, as nearly all Germans were expelled not only from all Soviet conquered German settlement areas across Central and Eastern Europe, but also from former territories of the Reich east of the Oder-Neisse line, mainly, the provinces of Silesia, East Prussia, East Brandenburg, and Pomerania. The Soviet-established People's Republic of Poland annexed the majority of the lands while the northern half of East Prussia was taken by the Soviets, becoming the Kaliningrad Oblast, an exclave of the Russian SFSR. The former German settlement areas were resettled by ethnic citizens of the respective succeeding state, (Czechs in the former Sudetenland and Poles in Silesia and Pomerania). However, some areas settled and Germanized in the course of the Ostsiedlung still form the northeastern part of modern Germany, such as the Bundesländer of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Brandenburg, Saxony and east of the limes Saxoniae in Holstein (part of Schleswig-Holstein).[96][97]

The Medieval settlers areas, that constituted the Eastern provinces of the modern German Empire and Austria, were inhabited estimated 30 million Germans at beginning of 20th century. The Westward withdrawal of political boundaries of Germany, first in 1919, but substantially in 1945, was followed by removal of some 15 million people, to resettle within borders of present-day Germany. Only the oldest 12th-century and partially 13th-century colonization areas remained German in language and culture, that are situated within area of the post-1945 Eastern Germany and part of Eastern Austria;[97] in which Eastern Germany is a part of Germany, especially from German reunification on 3 October 1990.

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ "The German settlement was preceded in some areas by military conquest and the ejection of the indigenous population. Elsewhere, however, it was the native princes who invited in settlers and even expelled part of the indigenous popUlation to make way for the newcomers."[7]
  2. ^ "The Slavonic peoples of Central and Eastern Europe were not ignorant of agriculture, as is sometimes maintained. The Germans, however, plainly understood the principles of cereal exploitation and they probably also introduced to the regions of settlement the 'heavy' plough or Pflug and the system of annual three-field rotation."[60]
  3. ^ "The Slavonic peoples of Central and Eastern Europe were not ignorant of agriculture, as is sometimes maintained. The Germans, however, plainly understood the principles of cereal exploitation and they probably also introduced to the regions of settlement the 'heavy' plough or Pflug and the system of annual three-field rotation."[60]

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Sources Edit

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  • Gründer, Horst; Johanek, Peter (2001). Kolonialstädte, europäische Enklaven oder Schmelztiegel der Kulturen?: Europäische Enklaven oder Schmelztiegel der Kulturen? (in German). ISBN 3-8258-3601-0.
  • Reuber, Paul; Strüver, Anke; Wolkersdorfer, Günter (2005). Politische Geographien Europas – Annäherungen an ein umstrittenes Konstrukt: Annäherungen an ein umstrittenes Konstrukt (in German). ISBN 3-8258-6523-1.
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Further reading Edit

  • Charles Higounet (1911–1988) Les allemands en Europe centrale et oriental au moyen age
    • German translation: Die deutsche Ostsiedlung im Mittelalter
    • Japanese translation: ドイツ植民と東欧世界の形成, 彩流社, by Naoki Miyajima
  • Bielfeldt et al., Die Slawen in Deutschland. Ein Handbuch, Hg. Joachim Herrmann, Akademie-Verlag Berlin, 1985


lang, ostsiedlung, this, article, about, medieval, eastward, migrations, germans, general, view, history, german, settlement, central, eastern, europe, ostsiedlung, german, pronunciation, ˈɔstˌziːdlʊŋ, literally, east, settlement, term, early, medieval, high, . This article is about the medieval eastward migrations of Germans For a general view see History of German settlement in Central and Eastern Europe Ostsiedlung German pronunciation ˈɔstˌziːdlʊŋ literally East settlement is the term for the Early Medieval and High Medieval migration of ethnic Germans into the territories in the eastern part of Francia East Francia and the Holy Roman Empire and beyond and the consequences for settlement development and social structures in the areas of settlement Generally sparsely and in some inland areas only relatively recently populated by Slavic Baltic and Finnic peoples the most settled area was known as Germania Slavica Other regions were also settled though not as heavily The Ostsiedlung encompassed multiple modern and historical regions such as Germany east of the Saale and Elbe rivers the states of Lower Austria and Styria in Austria Livonia Poland the Czech Republic Slovakia Slovenia Hungary and Transylvania in Romania 1 2 German movement c 700 CE till 1914 Stages of German eastern settlement in pink and three shades of green the black line represents the border of the Holy Roman Empire Germany according to the 1348 Treaty of NamyslowSince the 1980s historians have interpreted the Ostsiedlung as a part of a civil and social development termed the High Middle Age Land Consolidation German Hochmittelalterlicher Landesausbau In a pan European intensification process from the Carolingian Anglo Saxon core countries to the periphery of the continent societies progressed in culture religion law and administration trade and agriculture 3 The majority of Ostsiedlung settlers moved individually in independent efforts in multiple stages and on different routes Many settlers were encouraged and invited by the local princes and regional lords 4 5 6 who sometimes even expelled the indigenous populations to make room for German settlers a Smaller groups of migrants first moved to the east during the early Middle Ages Larger treks of settlers which included scholars monks missionaries craftsmen and artisans often invited in numbers unverifiable first moved eastwards during the mid 12th century The military territorial conquests and punitive expeditions of the Ottonian and Salian emperors during the 11th and 12th centuries do not form part of the Ostsiedlung as these actions didn t result in any noteworthy settlement establishment east of the Elbe and Saale rivers The Ostsiedlung is considered to have been a purely Medieval event as it ended in the beginning of the 14th century The legal cultural linguistic religious and economic changes caused by the movement had a profound influence on the history of Eastern Central Europe between the Baltic Sea and the Carpathians until the 20th century 8 9 10 In the 20th century accounts of the Ostsiedlung were heavily exploited by German nationalists including the Nazi movement 11 to press the territorial claims of Germany and to demonstrate supposed German superiority over non Germanic peoples whose cultural urban and scientific achievements in that era were undermined rejected or presented as German 12 failed verification 13 14 After World War I 1914 1918 the fact that Germany and Austria lost part of their territories in the East appeared as a counterpoint to Ostsiedlung because some of the Germans in the East became foreign citizens when their homes were no longer part of Germany and Austria The Germans in the East outside Germany and Austria were not expelled and the regions that Germany and Austria lost in the East were dominated by non German peoples so the German loss here was not as severe as after World War II In and after World War II 1944 1950 Germans were driven out and deported to rump Germany from the East and their language and culture were lost in most areas including the German dominated lands which Germany lost after this war in which German people had settled during the Ostsiedlung except part of Eastern Austria and especially Eastern Germany Contents 1 Early medieval Central Europe 1 1 Under Carolingian rule 1 2 East Francia and Holy Roman Empire 1 3 Slavic revolt of 983 1 4 Eastern marches of East Francia and Holy Roman Empire 2 Eastern Saxon Marches 3 Northeastern Germany and Holstein 3 1 Background 3 2 Settlement 4 Bohemia 4 1 Background 4 2 Settlement 4 3 End 5 Prussia and the Baltics 6 Hungary 7 Social and demographic background 8 Technical and agricultural development 8 1 Dutch settlers and hydraulic engineering 8 2 Agricultural implements 8 3 Pottery 8 4 Architecture 9 Population and settlement 9 1 Urban development and city foundations 9 1 1 City laws and grants 9 1 2 Expansion of the German city laws 9 2 Religious changes 9 3 Settlers 10 Assimilation 10 1 Germans 10 2 Treatment involvement and traces of the Wends 10 3 Language exchange 10 4 Names of localities and settlements 10 5 Family Names 11 End of migration 12 Drang nach Osten 13 Legacy 14 See also 15 Notes 16 References 17 Sources 18 Further readingEarly medieval Central Europe EditDuring the 4th and 5th centuries in what is known as the Migration Period Germanic peoples seized control of the decaying Western Roman Empire in the South and established new kingdoms within it Meanwhile formerly Germanic areas in Eastern Europe and present day Eastern Germany were settled by Slavs 15 Under Carolingian rule Edit nbsp The Limes Saxoniae border between the Saxons and the Slavic Obotrites established about 810 nbsp The division of the Carolingian Empire Treaty of Verdun 843Main articles History of Europe Germanic peoples Germania Slavica and Slavs Charlemagne ruler of the Carolingian Empire of Francia which was founded by Franks a Germanic people under whom most of Western and Central continental Europe had been united during the 8th and 9th centuries created numerous border territories so called marches German Marken where a substantial portion of the Ostsiedlung would later take place 16 17 The territories from north to south the Danish March south of the Danevirke fortifications between the Eider and Schlei against the Danes and Jutes 18 the Saxon Eastern March or Nordalbingen March between the Eider and Elbe in what is now Holstein against the Obotrites the Thuringian or Sorbian March on the Saale against the Sorbs dwelling behind the limes sorabicus the Franconian march in what is now Upper Franconia against the Czechs the Avar March between the Enns and the Vienna Woods the later Austrian March against the Avars 19 the March of Pannonia east of Vienna divided into Upper and Lower the Carantanian march the Friulian marchThis was the earliest recorded and planned eastern policy under Charlemagne who wanted to protect the eastern border of the Frankish Empire and also wanted to solidify his position in the east by declaring war on the Obotrites and Wilzes in the North as well as on the Sorbs east of Thuringia and Czech tribal princes However since the goal wasn t to establish an ethnic and linguistic boundary between the Slavs and Germanic tribes Slavic settlement continued in Thuringia and Northern Bavaria with individual Slavs even making it to the Rhine Basin 20 The tribes that populated these marches were generally unreliable allies of the Empire and successor kings led numerous yet not always successful military campaigns to maintain their authority In 843 the Carolingian Empire was partitioned into three independent kingdoms as a result of dissent among Charlemagne s three grandsons over the continuation of the custom of partible inheritance or the introduction of primogeniture 21 East Francia and Holy Roman Empire Edit Louis the German inherited the eastern territories East Francia that included all lands east of the Rhine river and to the north of Italy which roughly corresponded with the territories of the German stem duchies that formed a federation under the first king Henry the Fowler 919 to 936 22 The Slavs living within the reach of East Francia since 962 C E the Holy Roman Empire collectively called Wends or Elbe Slavs seldom formed larger political entities They rather constituted various small tribes settling as far west as to a line from the Eastern Alps and Bohemia to the Saale and Elbe rivers As the East Frankish kingdom expanded various Wendish tribes that were conquered or allied with the Eastern Franks such as the Obotrites aided the Franks in defeating the West Germanic Saxons 23 The Carolingian tradition of setting up marches at the periphery of the empire would be continued by the East Frankish and Holy Roman Empire s kings during the 11th and 12th centuries Under the rule of King Louis the German and Arnulf of Carinthia the first groups of civilian Catholic settlers were led by Franks and Bavarii to the lands of Pannonia present day Burgenland Hungary Slovakia and Slovenia In a series of punitive actions large territories in the northeast between the Elbe Saale Naab rivers in the west and the Oder Bober Kwisa and Vltava rivers in the east were conquered see also Battle on the Raxa and border marches were established in these areas Fortifications were occupied and new castles built reinforced by military units to exert military control and collect tributes No civilian settlers occupied these lands Christianization was limited to the establishment of mission dioceses such as Lubeck Brandenburg or Havelberg The development of a Parish church system only took place after the settlement of German colonists beginning in the 2nd half of the 12th century Control over areas that had already been conquered was repeatedly lost The Slavic revolt of 983 and an uprising of the Obotrites in 1066 had particularly serious consequences 24 25 Slavic revolt of 983 Edit Main article Slavic revolt of 983 In 983 the Polabian Slavs in the Billung and Northern Marches stretching from the Elbe river to the Baltic Sea succeeded in a rebellion against the political rule and Christian mission of the recently established Holy Roman Empire In spite of their new won independence the Obotrites Rani Liutizian and Hevelli tribes were soon faced with internal struggles and warfare as well as raids from the newly constituted and expanding Piast dynasty the early Polish state from the east Denmark from the north and the Empire from the west eager to reestablish her marches The area remained under rule of the Polabian tribes and uncolonized and unchristianized into the 12th century 26 27 Eastern marches of East Francia and Holy Roman Empire Edit The territories from north to south the Billung March on the Baltic Sea stretching approximately from Groswin to Schleswig Marca Geronis march of Gero a precursor of the Saxon Eastern March later divided into smaller marches the Northern March which later was reestablished as Margraviate of Brandenburg the March of Lusatia and the Margravate of Meissen in what is now Saxony the March of Zeitz the March of Merseburg the Milzener March around Bautzen Austrian March marcha Orientalis the Eastern March or Bavarian Eastern March German Ostmark in what is now lower Austria the Carantania or March of Styria the Drau March Maribor and Ptuj the Sann March Celje the Krain or Carniola march also Windic March and White Carniola White March in what is now SloveniaEastern Saxon Marches EditThe Sorbian March east of the Saale river was established in the 9th century King Otto I designated a larger area the Saxon Eastern March in 937 that encompassed the territory between the Elbe the Oder and the Peene rivers Governed by Margrave Gero it is also referred to as Marca Geronis After Gero s death in 965 the march was divided in smaller sectors Northern March Lusatian March Margraviate of Meissen and March of Zeitz The march was populated by various West Slavic tribes the largest being Polabian Slavs tribes in the north and Sorbian tribes in the south The Margravate of Meissen and Transylvania were populated by German settlers beginning in the 12th century From the end of the 12th century onwards monasteries and cities were established in Pomerania Brandenburg Silesia Bohemia Moravia and eastern Austria In the Baltics the Teutonic Order founded a crusader state in the beginning of the 13th century 28 10 Northeastern Germany and Holstein EditSee also Ostsiedlung in Pomerania nbsp West Slavic peoples in Europe until 1125 yellow borders Prussia identified as Pruzzia has not been a Slavic but Baltic land Background Edit See also Wendish Crusade A call for a crusade against the Wends in 1108 probably coming from a Flemish clerk in the circles of the archbishop of Magdeburg which included the prospect of profitable land gains for new settlers had no noticeable effect and resulted in neither a military campaign nor a movement of settlers into the area 29 30 Although the first settlers had already arrived in 1124 being mostly of Flemish and Dutch origin they settled south of the Eider river followed by the conquest of the land of the Wagri in 1139 the founding of Lubeck in 1143 and the call by Count Adolf II of Schauenburg to settle in Eastern Holstein and Pomerania in the same year 31 32 Weakened by ongoing internal conflicts and constant warfare the independent Wendish territories finally lost the capacity to provide effective military resistance From 1119 to 1123 Pomerania invaded and subdued the northeastern parts of the Lutici lands In 1124 and 1128 Wartislaw I Duke of Pomerania at that time a vassal of Poland invited bishop Otto of Bamberg to Christianize the Pomeranians and Liutizians of his duchy 33 34 In 1147 as a campaign of the Northern Crusades the Wendish Crusade was mounted in the Duchy of Saxony to retake the marches lost in 983 The crusaders also headed for Pomeranian Demmin and Szczecin Stettin despite these areas having already been successfully Christianized The Crusade caused widespread devastation and slaughter 35 Settlement Edit This created ideal conditions for German settlement some of the most prominent supporters of settlement included William IV who had purchased small amounts of land on the frontier of Pomerania and Wichmann von Seeburg In 1152 the large numbers of Flemish and Dutch people were introduced to the unoccupied and uncultivated marshlands just east of Magdeburg near the Havel They founded the cities of Flaming and Juterbog Henry the Lion also settled Mecklenburg with a large number of Flems With the formation of the Hanseatic League which allowed further German settlement in coastal towns due to it being the dominant trade republic in the Baltic and North seas 36 After the Wendish crusade Albert the Bear was able to establish and expand the Margraviate of Brandenburg in 1157 on approximately the territory of the former Northern March which since 983 had been controlled by the Hevelli and Lutici tribes The Bishopric of Havelberg that had been occupied by revolting Lutici tribes was reestablished to Christianize the Wends 37 In 1164 after Saxon duke Henry the Lion finally defeated rebellious Obotrites and Pomeranian dukes in the Battle of Verchen The Pomeranian duchies of Demmin and Stettin became Saxon fiefs as well as the Obodrite territories which became Mecklenburg named after the Obotrites residential capital Mecklenburg Castle After Henry the Lion lost his internal struggle with Emperor Frederick I Mecklenburg and Pomerania became fiefs of the Holy Roman Empire in 1181 38 Bohemia EditBackground Edit German influence over Bohemia first started under the reign of Boleslaus I these Germans were primarily trader who dealt in furs salt and especially slaves In 971 AD Pope John XIII authorized the creation of the first Bohemian bishopric the Bishopric of Prague which was created two years later under the reign of the Otto I After that in 993 AD the first monastery in Bohemia the Brevnov Monastery After the founding of the Brevnov Monastery German influence grew rapidly with relics missals manuscripts etc being in German Even the ducal family being largely ethnically German Although due to the invasions of Otto II there was large anti German sentiment among the Bohemian populace Spytihnev not to be confused with Spytihnev II Duke of Bohemia capitalized on this anti German sentiment when Boleslaus III succeeded Boleslaus II in 999 AD Holy Roman Emperor Henry II wanting to defend the Churches and German influence invaded Bohemia with an army of Saxons East Franks Bavarians assembled in Merseberg under the command of Jaromir The son of Boleslaus II This was part of the wider German Polish War during Otto II s reign Bretislav I was feared growing German domination and made an alliance with Hungary who was also scared of German expansionism in the east Henry III still attacked and humiliated Bretislav I at the Diet of Regensburg Bretislav was forced to pay an enormous sum of 8000 Marks allow the building of German military installations in the Upper Palatinate forest and had to return Silesia and Chrobatia to Poland which was Bretislavs main achievement After this Bohemia remained loyal to Germany because of fears of another invasion and Polish and Hungarian expansionism to the North and South On the epoch of the war of investiture in Germany Henry IV decisively fixed German Bohemian relationship by playing off the Polish Bohemian enmity In 1080 Bretislav I fighting under the banner of the Emperor captured the golden lance of the papal counter king Rudolf of Swabia at the battle of Flarchheim Bohemia s reward for this loyalty came six years later in 1086 when Henry IV elevated the Duke to the rank of king 39 Settlement Edit All of this laid the perfect conditions for German settlement and dominance of Bohemia German settlers mainly traders miners farmers and monks The trade fairs of Prague attracted many merchants from all over Europe with many including the Germans settling in Prague and even making up almost a quarter of all people in Prague Bretislav II granted them important privileges notably the right of self government under magistrates of their own election and the right of living under German law 39 During the late 12th and early 13th century German settlement of the mountainous borderland Known as the Sudetenland began It was caused by the successful settlement of modern day Northeastern Germany The mountainous area settled first was the Eger Valley partially due to its southern edges coming under the control of Diepold III who was an ally of Holy Roman Emperor Frederick Barbarossa Furthermore the Monastery of Waldsassen owned extensive land in the Eger Valley The first German villages were Penerit and Neudorf both founded in 1196 Bavarians and Austrians settled the southern edge East Franks the middle edge and Saxon miners the northern edge notably the Erzgebirge Unlike in Mecklenburg Pomerania Brandenburg and Silesia the German settlement was not as heavy nor were many Czechs assimilated like in Eastern Germany As German influence grew with greater numbers of Settlers arriving each year Sobeslav II felt it was necessary to protect the Czechs from Germany asking Henry II Duke of Austria to renounce his claims to certain Bohemian lands this was refused and in the war that followed he was defeated This made Sobeslavs successors Frederick and Conrad II ruling during a period of unrest This allowed for greater settlement during the 13th century where even many Czech towns received so many German settlers they were practically Germanized and became majority Germany 40 Due to the German influence on the nobility many castles and villages names were Germanized such as Zvikov Castle to Burg Klingenberg Under the reign of Vladislaus II various military orders the most prominent of which the Knights Hospitaller were even allowed to bring German settlers into Bohemian land and settle them During this time German settlers were exempt from the local Zupan Laws which included various duties such as the upkeep of local infrastructure In 1219 Litomerice German Leitmeritz was the first German town to be given the privileges of the Magdeburg Laws in Bohemia 41 During the 13th 14th century as much as 1 out of every 6th German settlers was going to Bohemia while this is lower than in Upper Saxony Lusatia and Lower Silesia It s still a substantial number 42 End Edit Eventually during the late 14th and early 15th centuries settlement slowed down due to numerous factors such as the Black Plague in Germany and the Hussite Wars 43 Prussia and the Baltics EditSee also Baltic Germans and State of the Teutonic Order nbsp lands of the Teutonic Order in 1410The Teutonic State was formed in the aftermath of the Livonian Crusade Prussian Crusade and in general the Northern Crusades in the territories of East Prussia Pomeralia and Livonia It was established on February 2 1207 44 as a principality of the Holy Roman Empire 45 and proclaimed by Pope Innocent III in 1215 as a subject to the Holy See 46 The Teutonic State established a comprehensive administrative structure and modernized the old traditional tribal structure of the region An integral part of the Order other than converting Pagans to Christianity was also to encourage Germans to settle the sparsely populated area Most German settlers primarily went to urban cities such as Graudenz Elbing and Riga 47 48 The settlers also established numerous rural settlements known as Vorwerke in German Most of the settlers came from the Rhineland region The Teutonic Order established numerous Castles and other holdings near populated places such as Kaliningrad to consolidate the conquered lands While East Prussia was heavily settled and Germanized Livonia still had a very small German population because there were no attempts to settle inland The Germans in Livonia were mainly employees of the Teutonic Order there for administrative purposes or merchants of the Hanseatic League who settled coastal towns 49 Hungary EditWhile Hungary was never conquered by the Holy Roman Empire and was never in focus of German settlement it still had a sizeable German population During the 11th century Stephen I of Hungary invited German priests abbots and churchmen to found monasteries and promote the conversion of Hungary Eventually these Germans descendants started to fill other occupations becoming merchants clerks and farmers etc and were granted the status of free peasants In 1149 Geza II invited German settlers to Southern Transylvania Written records call them Flamands Teutons and Latins The term Saxons appeared in 1206 and became the official term for local Germans in 1231 The term represented legal status rather than nationality The Transylvanian Saxons have diverse origins their pottery art and liturgy were not uniform In the 12th and 13th centuries more Germans arrived in Hungary living in dispersed villages known as Konigsboden de By the mid 13th century their importance in trade especially in Pozsony Pest and Nagyszombat and gold and silver mining especially in Beszterce and Radna grew significant When Stephen I married Gisela of Bavaria many German knights came to Hungary joining its military They were often rewarded with large estates and entry into the nobility 50 In 1224 Andrew II signed a charter laying out the duties and rights of the Germans in the kingdom The king defined their duties such as the payment of tax military service and housing of the king and his officials In exchange they were able to elect their priests and officials independently and their merchants were exempt from customs duties Their markets were also not taxed No outsider was allowed to receive villages or estates in German land where only the monarch and the Count of Hermannstadt had jurisdiction 51 Social and demographic background EditPolitical and military events were greatly influenced by a massive population increase throughout Europe in the High Middle Ages From the 11th to the 13th centuries the population in the kingdom of Germany increased from about four to twelve million inhabitants 52 53 During this time the High Medieval Landesausbau inland settlement took place when arable land was largely expanded at the expense of forested areas Although new land was won and numerous settlements created demands could not be absorbed 54 Another factor was a surplus of offspring of the nobility who were not entitled to inheritance but after the success of the first crusade took their chances of acquiring new lands in the peripheral regions of the Empire 10 55 There is no doubt that there were rather numerous German settlers in Eastern Central who were responsible for bringing German law in the earliest stages of the colonization Other settlers included Walloons Jews Dutch Flemish and later Poles especially in the territory of modern Ukraine 56 The migration of the Walser in the territory of present day Switzerland to areas that had formerly been inhabited by Romans The Walser settlers left their homes in Valais and founded villages in the uplands of the Alp valleys in the north of Italy and in the Grisons 57 Technical and agricultural development EditThe Medieval Warm Period which began in the 11th century resulted in higher average temperatures in Central Europe Additional technical progress in agriculture for example through the construction of mills Three field farming and increased cultivation of grain graining led to general population increase The new settlers not only brought their customs and language with them but also new technical skills and equipment that were adapted within a few decades especially in agriculture and crafts 58 These included The amount of cultivated land increased as large forested areas were cleared The extent of land increase differed by region In Silesia it had doubled 16 of the total area by the beginning of the 11th century 30 in the 16th century and the highest increase rates in the 14th century the total area of arable land increased seven to twentyfold in many Silesian regions during the Ostsiedlung Parallel to agricultural innovations new forms of farm layout and settlement structuring division and classification of land were introduced Farmland was divided into Hufen English hides and larger villages replaced the previously dominant type of small villages consisting of four to eight farms as a complete transformation of the previous settlement structure occurred The cultural landscape of East Central Europe formed by the medieval settlement processes essentially prevails until today Dutch settlers and hydraulic engineering Edit Flemish and Dutch settlers were among the first to immigrate to Mecklenburg at the beginning of the 12th century In the following years they moved further east to Pomerania and Silesia and in the south to Hungary motivated by the lack of settlement areas in their already largely developed home areas and several flood disasters and famines 59 Experienced and skilled hydraulic engineers they were in high demand at the settlements of the as yet undeveloped areas east of the Elbe The land was drained by creating a network like structure of smaller drainage ditches that drained the water in main ditches Roads connecting the settlers individual farms ran along these main trenches Dutch settlers were recruited by the local rulers in large numbers especially during the second half of the 12th century In 1159 60 for example Albert the Bear granted Dutch settlers the right to take possession of former Slavic settlements The preacher Helmold of Bosau reported on this in his Slavic chronicle Finally when the Slavs were gradually dispersing he Albrecht sent to Utrecht and the Rhine region and also to those who live by the ocean who under the power of the sea had suffered the Dutch Zealanders and Flemings where he attracted a lot of people and let them live in the castles and villages of the Slavs 59 Agricultural implements Edit nbsp Three field system with ridge and furrow fields furlongs The Slavs used ploughs and agricultural implements before the arrival of German settlers The oldest meaningful reference to this can be found in a Slavic chronicle in which the use of a plough as an areal measurement is mentioned Although heavier and useful ploughs were brought by the settlers b 61 In the 12th and 13th century documents the Ard without a mouldboard is mentioned It tear opens the soil and spreads the soil to both sides without turning it It is therefore particularly suitable for light and sandy subsoil In the mid 13th century the Three field system was introduced east of the Elbe This new cultivation method required the use of the heavy mouldboard plough that digs up the earth deeply and turns it around in a single operation c The different modes of operation of the two devices also had an impact on the shape and size of the cultivation areas The fields worked with the ard had about the same field length and width and a square base Long fields with a rectangular base were much more suitable for the mouldboard plough as the heavy implements had to be turned less often Planting and cultivation of oats and rye was promoted and soon these cereals became the most important type of grain Farmers who used mouldboard ploughs were required to pay double tax fees 62 Pottery Edit Potters were among the first group of artisans who also settled in the rural areas Typical Slavic ceramics were the Flat bottom vessels With the influx of western settlers new vessel shapes such as the rounded jar were introduced inclusive hard fired processes that improved ceramics quality This type of ceramics known as Hard Grayware became widespread east of the Elbe by the end of the 12th century It was manufactured extensively in Pomerania by the 13th century when more advanced manufacturing methods such as the tunnel kiln enabled the mass production of ceramic household goods The demand for household goods such as pots jugs jugs and bowls which had previously been made of wood increased steadily and promoted the development of new sales markets During the 13th century glazed ceramics were introduced and the import of stoneware increased The transfer of technology and knowledge affected the way of life of old and new settlers in a variety of ways and in addition to innovations in agriculture and handicrafts also included other areas such as weapons technology documents and coins 63 Architecture Edit nbsp Timber Frame HouseThe Slavic population Sorbs who lived east of the Elbe primarily built log houses which had proven suitable for the regional climates and wood was plentiful in the continental regions The German settlers mainly from Franconia and Thuringia who advanced into the area in the 13th century brought with them the half timbering style which was already known to the Germanic peoples as a wood saving solid and stable construction method that allowed multi storey buildings A combination of the two construction methods was difficult because the horizontally stacked wood of the log room expands differently in height than the vertical posts of the framework The result was the new type of half timbered house with a timber frame around the ground floor block capable to support a second floor which was made of half timber Population and settlement Edit nbsp German eastward expansion 895 1400The Ostsiedlung followed an immediate rapid population growth throughout Central and Eastern Europe During the 12th and 13th centuries the population density increased considerably The increase was due to the influx of settlers on the one hand and an increase in slavic populations after the settlement on the other hand Settlement was the primary reason for the increase e g in the areas east of the Oder the Duchy of Pomerania western Greater Poland Silesia Austria Moravia Prussia and Transylvania while in the larger part of Central and Eastern Europe indigenous populations were responsible for the growth Author Piskorski wrote that insofar as it is possible to draw conclusions from the less than rich medieval source material it appears that at least in some East Central European territories the population increased significantly It is however possible to contest to what extent this was a direct result of migration and how far it was due to increased agricultural productivity and the gathering pace of urbanization 64 In contrast to Western Europe this increased population was largely spared by the 14th century Black Death pandemic 65 With the German settlers new systems of taxation arrived While the existing Wendish tithe was a fixed tax depending on village size the German tithe depended on the actual crop yield Thus higher taxes were collected from the settlers than from the Wends although settlers were partly exempted from tax payments during the first years after settlement establishment 58 10 Urban development and city foundations Edit Main article German town law Examples of Ostsiedlung towns nbsp Poznan German Posen an example of an Ostsiedlung town attached to a preexisting castrum castle with a suburbium The castrum was located on the island with the cathedral the Ostsiedlung town with its rectangular street grid was built on the river s bank 66 nbsp Greifswald in medieval Pomerania is an example of an Ostsiedlung town built in a previously unsettled area 67 Locators organized the settlement and set up rectangular blocks in an oval area with a central market The development of Germania Slavica was also associated with the establishment of towns There already existed Slavic castle towns in which merchant quarters formed suburbs at fortified strongholds grads Wendish Scandinavian merchants founded manufacturing and trading settlements emporia at the Baltic coast Large cities included Szczecin which reached 9 000 inhabitants Krakow which was the capital of the state of Piast Poland and Wroclaw already under civil and religious administration and centers of power However they experienced substantial growth since the end of the 12th century through new settlers and expansion locatio civitatis The foundation of a bishopric for example in Havelberg would lead to the development of a town although cities were also founded out of nowhere such as Neubrandenburg Characteristic of the founding cities are geometrical or rasterized floor plans with main streets intersecting axes and a central market place Different settlement phases are reflected in twin cities names such as New town or Old town 68 69 The towns established during the Ostsiedlung were Free Towns civitates liberae or called New Towns by its contemporaries The rapid increase in the number of towns led to an urbanization of East Central Europe The new towns differed from their predecessors in The introduction of German town law resulting in far reaching administrative and judicial rights for the towns The townspeople were personally free enjoyed far reaching property rights and were subject to the town s own jurisdiction only The privileges granted to the towns were copied sometimes with minor changes from the legal charters of the Lubeck Law in 33 towns 70 at the southern coast of the Baltic Sea the Magdeburg Law in Brandenburg areas of modern Saxony Lusatia Silesia northern Bohemia northern Moravia and the Teutonic Order state the Nuremberg Law in southwestern Bohemia the Brunn Law Brno in Moravia based on the charter of Vienna the Iglau Law Jihlava in Bohemian and Moravian mining areas 71 Besides these basic town laws several adapted town charters 71 The introduction of permanent markets As previously markets were held only periodically townspeople were now free to trade and marketplaces became a central feature of the new towns 72 Layout The new towns were planned towns as their layout was usually rectangular 67 City laws and grants Edit The granting of city rights played an important role in attracting German settlers 73 The town charter privileged the new residents and existing suburban settlements with a market were given formal town charter and then rebuilt or expanded Even small settlements inhabited by native people would eventually be granted these new rights Regardless of existing suburban settlements locators were commissioned to establish completely new cities as the goal was to attract as many people as possible in order to create new flourishing population centers 74 75 Expansion of the German city laws Edit Among the many different German city laws the Magdeburg law and the Lubeck law played the greatest role in the new settlements as they served often in more or less modified form as models for most cities Other city rights that were of regional importance include the Nuremberg law the Mecklenburg law and the Iglau law The Lubeck law of 1188 served in the 13th and 14th centuries as the model for around 100 cities in the entire Baltic Sea trading area Around 350 000 people lived under Lubeck law in the early 15th century The Magdeburg law which has its origins in the privileges granted by Archbishop Wichmann of Magdeburg first spread into Brandenburg Saxony and Lusatia Laws based on the Magdeburg model for example the Kulmer law and Neumarkt law were introduced in Silesia Poland the State of the Teutonic Order Bohemia and Moravia and beyond Religious changes Edit nbsp St Mary of Brandenburg built on top of the pagan Triglav sanctuary by Zacharias Garcaeus 1588The pagan Wends had been the target of Christianization attempts before the beginning of the Ostsiedlung since the government of emperor Otto I and the establishment of dioceses east of the Elbe The Slav uprising of 983 put an end to these efforts for almost 200 years In contrast to the Czechs and Poles who had been Christianized before the turn of the millennium the conversion attempts of the Elbe Slavs initially accompanied by violence The arrival of new settlers from around 1150 on led to a civil Christianization of the areas between the Elbe and Oder The new settlers first built wooden and later field stone parish churches in their villages Some places of worship such as the St Mary in Brandenburg and the Lehnin Abbey were built on pagan shrines The Cistercians who had been assigned a prominent role by church authorities combined the spread of faith and settlement development Their monasteries with extensive international connections played a vital role in the development of the communities 76 Settlers Edit nbsp Sachsenspiegel depicting the Ostsiedlung A Lokator receives the foundation charter from the landlord and acts as village judge Settlers clear forests and build houses nbsp Ethnic Germans in Central Eastern Europe 1925The majority of the settlers were Germans of the Holy Roman Empire Significant numbers of Dutch settlers participated particularly in the early 12th century in the area surrounding the Middle Elbe River 77 To a lesser extent Danes Scots or local Wends and French speaking Walloons participated as well Among the settlers were landless children of noble families who could not inherit property 78 Besides the marches adjacent to the Empire Germans settled in areas farther east such as the Carpathians Transylvania and along the Gulf of Riga Settlers were invited by local secular rulers such as dukes counts margraves princes and only in a few cases due to the weakening central power the king The sovereigns in East Central Europe owned large territories of which only small portions were arable which generated very little income 55 The lords offered considerable privileges to new settlers from the Empire Starting in the border marks the princes invited people from the Empire by granting them land ownership and improved legal status binding duties and the inheritance of the farm The landowners eventually benefited from these rather generous conditions for the farmers and generated income from the land that had previously been fallow 78 Most sovereigns transferred the specific recruitment of settlers the distribution of the land and the establishment of the settlements to so called Lokators allocator of land These men who usually came from the lower nobility or the urban bourgeoisie organized the settlement trains that included advertising equipment and transport land clearing and preparation of the settlements Locator contracts settled rights and obligations of the locators and the new settlers 69 79 Towns were founded and granted German town law The agricultural legal administrative and technical methods of the immigrants as well as their successful Christianization of the native inhabitants led to a gradual transformation of the settlement areas as Slavic communities adopted German culture citation needed German cultural and linguistic influence lasted in some of these areas right up to the present day 1 In the mid 14th century the migration process slowed considerably as a result of the Black Death The population probably decreased by that time and economically marginal settlements were left in particular at the coast of Pomerania and Western Prussia Only a century later local Slavic leaders of Pomerania Western Prussia and Silesia invited German settlers again 80 Assimilation EditSettlement was the pretext for assimilation processes that lasted centuries Assimilation occurred in both directions depending on the region and the majority population Slavic and German settlers mutually assimilated each other Germans Edit nbsp Subcarpathian Malopolska Germans in the 15th centuryThe Polonization process of German settlers in Krakow and Poznan lasted about two centuries The community could only continue its isolated position with a continuation of newcomers from German lands The Sorbs also assimilated German settlers yet at the same time small Sorbic communities were themselves assimilated by the surrounding German speaking population Many Central and Eastern European towns developed into multi ethnic melting pots 81 Treatment involvement and traces of the Wends Edit Although Slavic population density was generally not very high compared to the Empire and had as a result of the extensive warfare during the 10th to 12th centuries even further declined some settlement centers maintained their Wendish populations to varying degrees resisting assimilation for a long time 81 In the territories of Pomerania and Silesia German migrants did not settle in the old Wendish villages and set up new ones on grounds allotted to them by the Slavic nobility and the monastic clergy In the marches west of the Oder the Wends were occasionally driven out and the villages rebuilt by settlers The new villages would nevertheless keep their former Slavic names In the case of the village Bobelin in Mecklenburg the evicted Wendish inhabitants repeatedly invaded their former village hindering a resettlement 82 In the Sorbian March the situation was again different as the area and in particular Upper Lusatia is situated close to Bohemia ruled by a Slavic dynasty a loyal and powerful duchy of the Empire In this environment German feudal lords often cooperated with the Slavic inhabitants Wiprecht of Groitzsch a prominent figure during the early German migration period only acquired local power through the marriage to a Slavic noblewoman and the support of the Bohemian king German Slavic relations were generally good while relations between Slavic governed Bohemia and Slavic governed Poland were marred by constant struggle nbsp Bilingual German Sorbian road signs in Saxony GermanyDiscrimination against the Wends was not a part of the general concept of the Ostsiedlung Rather the Wends were subject to a low taxation mode and thus not as profitable as new settlers Even though the majority of the settlers were Germans Franks and Bavarians in the South and Saxons and Flemings in the North Wends and other tribes also participated in the settlement New settlers were not chosen just because of their ethnicity a concept unknown in the Middle Ages but because of their manpower and agricultural and technical know how 81 Most of the Wends were gradually assimilated However in isolated rural areas where Wends constituted a substantial part of the population they continued their culture These were the Drevani Polabians of the Wendland east of the Luneburg Heath the Jabelheide Drevani of southern Mecklenburg the Slovincians and Kashubs of Eastern Pomerania and the Sorbs of Lusatia Lusatia was inhabited by a large population of Sorbs until the end of the 19th century as linguistic assimilation occurred in a relatively short time Language exchange Edit The Ostsiedlung caused the adoption of loan words foreign words and loan translations among the German and the Slavic languages Direct contact between Germans and Slavs caused direct language exchange of language elements due to the bilingualism of people or the spatial proximity of the speakers of the respective language Remote contact took place during trade travels or political embassies 83 84 The oldest adoption of naming units dates back to Proto Germanic and Proto Slavic The original Slavic word knedz can be found in almost all Slavic languages German was mainly used to convey words in Slavic languages that related to handicraft politics agriculture and nutrition This includes Old High German cihla Middle High German ziegala ziegel brick that resulted from the sound shift of the Latin tegula An example of borrowing from Slavic into Germanic usage is the word for border In Middle High German called Grenize which is a borrowing of the old Czech word granicĕ or the Polish word granica City names are also affected by language exchange sound shifting and the Slavic second palatalization The city of Regensburg is called Rezno in Czech and Rezno in Proto Slavic Due to the intensive language contact idioms were also transmitted Two examples from Czech and Polish are na vlastni pest na wlasna reke on your own or ozbrojeny po zuby uzbrojony po zeby armed to the teeth in Hungarian sajat szakallara one s own beard and allig felfegyverzett armed to the chin with different wording but with the same meaning 85 86 Category English German Polish Czech Slovakian HungarianAdministration mayor Burgermeister burmistrz purkmistr richtar burgmajster polgarmesterAdministration margrave Markgraf margrabia markrabe markgrof orgrofCraft brick Ziegel cegla cihla tehla teglaFood pretzel Brezel precel preclik praclik perecFood oil Ol olej olej olej olajAgriculture mill Muhle mlyn mlyn mlyn malom mahlen Trade cart load Fuhre fura fura fura furikOthers flute Flote flet fletna flauta flotaNames of localities and settlements Edit See also German toponymy As Slavic and Wendish locality names were widely adopted they represent in adapted and further developed form a very high proportion of East German toponyms and place names These are recognizable at word endings such as ow Germanized au as in Spandau vitz or witz and sometimes in Newly created villages were given German names that ended for example with dorf or hagen in the North and rode or hain in the South The name of the settler s place of origin example Lichtervelde in Flanders could also become part of the place name If a German settlement was founded alongside a Wendish settlement the name of the Wendendorf could also be adopted for the German village the distinction was then made through additions for example Klein or Wendisch Windisch for Wendendorf Gross or Deutsch for German 72 87 In German speaking areas most inherited surnames were formed only after the Ostsiedlung period and many German surnames are in fact Germanized Wendish placenames citation needed The former ethnic variety of German Deutsch and Slavic Wendisch Bohmisch Polnisch toponyms was discontinued by the Eastern European republics after World War II Villages and towns were renamed in Slavic only Memory of the history of German settlement was no longer appreciated citation needed Family Names Edit It s estimated that approximately 25 of all German family names are of Slavic origin 88 89 most of these are Polish For most to least common 90 Name Origin and meaningNowak Slavic now nov new German Neu ak means New settlers German NeuansiedlerNoack Sorbian nowy new German Neu ak means New settlers German Neuansiedler Kretschmer Czech krcmar means Publican Mielke Slavic nickname with mil love dear German Lieb Teuer ekStenzel Polish nickname StanislawKaminski Polish settlement name kamien Stone German Stein skiWieczorek Polish wieczor evening German Abend ekKowalski Polish settlement name or kowal Blacksmith German Schmied skiGrabowski Polish settlement name skiJankowski Polish settlement or the nickname Janek owskiEnd of migration EditThere is no clear cause nor a definite end point in time of the Ostsiedlung However a slowdown in the settlement movement can be observed after the year 1300 and in the 14th century only a few new settlements with the participation of German speaking settlers were founded An explanation for the end of the Ostsiedlung must include various factors without being able to clearly weigh or differentiate between them The deterioration of the climate from around 1300 as the beginning of the Little Ice Age the agricultural crisis that began in the mid 14th century In the wake of the demographic slump caused by the 1347 Plague profound devastation processes have taken place If a clear connection could be established here the end of the Ostsiedlung would be understood as part of the crisis of the 14th century 91 Drang nach Osten EditMain article Drang nach Osten In the 19th century recognition of this complex phenomenon coupled with the rise of nationalism This led to a largely unhistoric ethnically inspired nationalist reinterpretation of the medieval process In Germany and some Slavic countries most notably Poland the Ostsiedlung was perceived in nationalist circles as a prelude to contemporary expansionism and Germanization efforts the slogan used for this perception was Drang nach Osten Drive or Push to the East 92 93 The German settlement processes in Pomerania did not follow any kind of ideology nor did the other migratory movements Rather the German settlement in Pomerania was shaped exclusively by practical requirements The national historiography that established itself around the middle of the 19th century retrospectively constructed a Slavic Germanic contrast in the Ostsiedlung process of the High Middle Ages However that was the ideology of the 19th century not the Middle Ages Settlement was to be cuiuscunque gentis et cuiuscunque artis homines people of whatever origin and whatever craft which was recorded in numerous documents issued by Pomeranian dukes and Rugish princes Buchholz 94 Legacy Edit nbsp Viktor Kress governor of the Tomsk Oblast Russia is ethnic German The 20th century wars and nationalist policies severely altered the ethnic and cultural composition of Central and Eastern Europe After World War I Germans in reconstituted Poland were set under pressure to leave the Polish Corridor the eastern part of Upper Silesia and Poznan During World War II the Nazis initiated the Nazi Soviet population transfers wiping out the old settlement areas of the Baltic Germans the Germans in Bessarabia and others to resettle them in the future territories in occupied Poland Room for them was made during World War II in line with the Generalplan Ost by expulsion of Poles and enslaving these and other Slavs according to the Nazi s Lebensraum concept In order to press the territorial claims of Germany and to demonstrate supposed German superiority over non Germanic peoples whose cultural urban and scientific achievements in that era were undermined rejected or presented as German 12 13 14 While further realization of this mega plan aiming at a total reconstitution of Central and Eastern Europe as a German colony was prevented by the war s turn the beginning of the expulsion of 2 million Poles and settlement of Volksdeutsche in the annexed territories yet was implied by 1944 95 The Potsdam Conference the meeting between the leaders of the United States Great Britain and the Soviet Union sanctioned the expulsion of Germans from Czechoslovakia Poland and Hungary With the Red Army s advance and Nazi Germany s defeat in 1945 the ethnic make up of Central and Eastern and East Central Europe was radically changed as nearly all Germans were expelled not only from all Soviet conquered German settlement areas across Central and Eastern Europe but also from former territories of the Reich east of the Oder Neisse line mainly the provinces of Silesia East Prussia East Brandenburg and Pomerania The Soviet established People s Republic of Poland annexed the majority of the lands while the northern half of East Prussia was taken by the Soviets becoming the Kaliningrad Oblast an exclave of the Russian SFSR The former German settlement areas were resettled by ethnic citizens of the respective succeeding state Czechs in the former Sudetenland and Poles in Silesia and Pomerania However some areas settled and Germanized in the course of the Ostsiedlung still form the northeastern part of modern Germany such as the Bundeslander of Mecklenburg Vorpommern Brandenburg Saxony and east of the limes Saxoniae in Holstein part of Schleswig Holstein 96 97 The Medieval settlers areas that constituted the Eastern provinces of the modern German Empire and Austria were inhabited estimated 30 million Germans at beginning of 20th century The Westward withdrawal of political boundaries of Germany first in 1919 but substantially in 1945 was followed by removal of some 15 million people to resettle within borders of present day Germany Only the oldest 12th century and partially 13th century colonization areas remained German in language and culture that are situated within area of the post 1945 Eastern Germany and part of Eastern Austria 97 in which Eastern Germany is a part of Germany especially from German reunification on 3 October 1990 See also EditCultural assimilation German diaspora Zipser Willkur Transylvanian Saxon University Drang nach Osten Limes Saxoniae Barbarian invasions Wends Wendish Crusade Northern Crusades Medieval demography German exonyms Germanization Germanization of Poles during Partitions History of Germans in Russia and the Soviet Union Historical migration Josephine colonization Population transfer in the Soviet Union Polonization Pre modern human migrationNotes Edit The German settlement was preceded in some areas by military conquest and the ejection of the indigenous population Elsewhere however it was the native princes who invited in settlers and even expelled part of the indigenous popUlation to make way for the newcomers 7 The Slavonic peoples of Central and Eastern Europe were not ignorant of agriculture as is sometimes maintained The Germans however plainly understood the principles of cereal exploitation and they probably also introduced to the regions of settlement the heavy plough or Pflug and the system of annual three field rotation 60 The Slavonic peoples of Central and Eastern Europe were not ignorant of agriculture as is sometimes maintained The Germans however plainly understood the principles of cereal exploitation and they probably also introduced to the regions of settlement the heavy plough or Pflug and the system of annual three field rotation 60 References Edit a b Alan V Murray 15 May 2017 The North Eastern Frontiers of Medieval Europe The Expansion of Latin Christendom in the Baltic Lands Taylor amp Francis pp 23 ISBN 978 1 351 88483 9 Nora Berend 15 May 2017 The Expansion of Central Europe in the Middle Ages Taylor amp Francis pp 194 ISBN 978 1 351 89008 3 Christian Lubke Ostkolonisation Ostsiedlung Landesausbau im Mittelalter PDF MGH Archive Retrieved 25 July 2020 Vejas Gabriel Liulevicius 9 December 2010 The German Myth of the East 1800 to the Present p 1 OUP Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 960516 3 Ostsiedlung ein gesamteuropaisches Phanomen GRIN Verlag 25 May 2002 ISBN 978 3 640 04806 9 Retrieved 25 July 2020 Szabo 2008 p 9 Palgrave Macmillan UK 1999 p 11 Bartlett 1998 p 14 Szabo 2008 p 10 a b c d Katalin Szende Iure Theutonico German settlers and legal frameworks for immigration to Hungary in an East Central European perspective Retrieved 28 September 2020 The Slippery Memory of Men The Place of Pomerania in the Medieval Kingdom of Poland East Central and Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages 450 1450 by Paul Milliman Brill Leiden 2013 page 2 There is a huge literature on this topic in Polish and German which was until recently lumped together with a whole host of other topics including the peaceful settlement in East Central Europe of Germans and other western Europeans who had been invited by Slavic lords as the Drang nach Osten Because of this term s associations with nineteenth century nationalism and twentieth century Nazism it has for the most part been scrapped only to be replaced by the deceptively benign Ostsiedlung or the even more problematical Ostkolonisation a b The Slippery Memory of Men East Central and Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages 450 1450 by Paul Milliman page 2 a b Jan M Piskorski The historiography of the so called east colonisation and the current state of research in The Man of Many Devices Who Wandered Full Many Ways Festschrift in Honor of Janos M Bak Hardcover Balazs Nagy Editor Marcell Sebok Editor page 654 655 a b The Holocaust as Colonial Genocide Hitler s Indian Wars in the Wild East page 38 Carroll P Kakel III 2013 Within National Socialist discourse the Nazis purposefully and skillfully presented their eastern colonization project as a continuation of medieval Ostkolonisation eastern colonization celebrated in the language of continuity legacy and colonial grandeur Minahan 2000 pp 288 289 Johannes Fried 10 October 2016 Charlemagne Harvard University Press pp 193 ISBN 978 0 674 73739 6 Jean Denis G G Lepage 20 May 2015 Castles and Fortified Cities of Medieval Europe An Illustrated History McFarland pp 16 ISBN 978 0 7864 6027 4 F Donald Logan 2 October 2012 A History of the Church in the Middle Ages Routledge pp 71 ISBN 978 1 134 78669 5 Kathy Lynne Roper Pearson Nicholas Cook 1999 Conflicting Loyalties in Early Medieval Bavaria A View of Socio political Interaction 680 900 Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 0011 4 Lubke Christian 2008 The Germans and the East West Lafayette Indiana Purdue University Press pp 18 19 ISBN 978 1 55753 443 9 Jenny Benham Treaty of Verdun 843 Retrieved 26 July 2020 Schulman 2002 pp 325 27 Thomas H Greer Gavin Lewis 1992 A Brief History of the Western World Harcourt Brace Jovanovich College Publishers ISBN 978 0 15 505552 0 Timothy Reuter 6 June 2014 Germany in the Early Middle Ages c 800 1056 Taylor amp Francis pp 266 ISBN 978 1 317 87238 2 Alexander Basilevsky 28 March 2016 Early Ukraine A Military and Social History to the Mid 19th Century McFarland pp 146 ISBN 978 0 7864 9714 0 Wolfgang H Fritze 1984 Der slawische Aufstand von 983 eine Schicksalswende in der Geschichte Mitteleuropas The Medieval Elbe Slavs and Germans on the Frontier University of Oregon Retrieved 25 July 2020 James Westfall Thompson 1962 Feudal Germany F Ungar Publishing Company Iben Fonnesberg Schmidt 2007 The Popes and the Baltic Crusades 1147 1254 BRILL pp 29 ISBN 978 90 04 15502 2 Florin Curta 8 July 2019 Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages 500 1300 2 vols BRILL pp 556 ISBN 978 90 04 39519 0 Philippe Dollinger 1999 The German Hansa Psychology Press pp 379 ISBN 978 0 415 19073 2 Jan Klapste 11 November 2011 The Czech Lands in Medieval Transformation BRILL pp 215 ISBN 978 90 04 22646 3 Ebo and Herbordus 1 June 2007 The Life of Otto Apostle of Pomerania 1060 1139 Cosimo Inc pp 4 ISBN 978 1 60206 535 2 Thomas Kantzow 1816 Pomerania oder Ursprunck Altheit und Geschicht der Volcker und Lande Pomern Cassuben Wenden Stettin Rhugen in vierzehn Buchern Auf Kosten des Herausgebers in Commission bey E Mauritins pp 1 Barraclough Geoffrey 1984 The Origins of Modern Germany Norton Paperback W W Norton pp 261 263 ISBN 978 0 393 30153 3 Retrieved 12 July 2023 Barraclough Geoffrey 1984 The Origins of Modern Germany Norton Paperback W W Norton pp 263 266 ISBN 978 0 393 30153 3 Retrieved 12 July 2023 Henryk Baginski 1946 Poland and the Baltic The Problem of Poland s Access to the Sea Polish Institute for Overseas Problems Horst Fuhrmann 9 October 1986 Germany in the High Middle Ages C 1050 1200 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 31980 5 a b Thompson James W 1962 Feudal Germany New York Frederick Ungar Publishing pp 623 631 ISBN 978 1 4094 2245 7 Thompson James W 1962 Feudal Germany New York Frederick Ungar Publishing pp 633 636 ISBN 978 1 4094 2245 7 Thompson James W 1962 Feudal Germany New York Frederick Ungar Publishing pp 636 639 ISBN 978 1 4094 2245 7 Scales Leonard E 2009 At the Margin of Community Germans in Pre Hussite Bohemia Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 9 330 doi 10 2307 3679408 ISSN 0080 4401 via Cambridge University Press Zemlicka Josef 2012 The Expansion of Central Europe in the Middle Ages Routledge pp 237 271 doi 10 4324 9781315239781 9 germans implantation german law among bohemians moravians middle ages josef c5 beemli c4 8dka ISBN 978 1 315 23978 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Bilmanis Alfreds 1944 Latvian Russian relations documents The Latvian legation Herbermann Charles George 1907 The Catholic Encyclopedia Robert Appleton Company Bilmanis Alfreds 1945 The Church in Latvia Drauga vests Selart Anti 2014 Non German Literacy in Medieval Livonia Uses of the Written Word in Medieval Towns Turnhout Brepols Publishers p 38 doi 10 1484 m usml eb 1 101944 ISBN 978 2 503 54960 6 ISSN 2034 9416 Pluskowski A 2013 The Archaeology of the Prussian Crusade Holy War and Colonisation Taylor amp Francis p 89 140 ISBN 978 1 136 16281 7 Retrieved 14 July 2023 Selch Jensen Carsten 2 January 2021 Making Livonia actors and networks in the medieval and early modern Baltic Sea region Journal of Baltic Studies Informa UK Limited 52 1 220 225 doi 10 1080 01629778 2021 1872182 ISSN 0162 9778 Szende 2019 p 362 Berend Nora 15 May 2017 Immigrants and Locals in Medieval Hungary 11th 13th centuries The Expansion of Central Europe in the Middle Ages Routledge p 310 313 doi 10 4324 9781315239781 12 Krzysztof Brzechczyn 2009 Idealization XIII Modeling in History Rodopi pp 235 ISBN 978 90 420 2831 9 Mary Fulbrook Professor of German History Mary Fulbrook 19 February 2004 A Concise History of Germany Cambridge University Press pp 13 ISBN 978 0 521 54071 1 Werner Rosener 1992 Agrarwirtschaft Agrarverfassung und landliche Gesellschaft im Mittelalter p 17 Oldenbourg ISBN 978 3 486 55024 5 a b Bartlett 1998 p 147 The Germans and the East Charles W Ingrao Franz A J Szabo Jan Piskorski Medieval Colonization in Europe pages 31 32 Purdue University Press 2007 The sources leave no doubt that rather numerous German settlers arrived into many areas of East Central Europe and that particularly in the earliest period of eastern colonization the so called German law was introduced above all by immigrants from the German lands This particularly affected the territory between the Elbe and the Oder Western Pomerania Prussia western Poland the Czech lands and especially Moravia Carinthia and Transylvania Anne Lise Head Konig 28 April 2011 Migration in the Swiss Alps and Swiss Jura from the Middle Ages to the mid 20th century Migratory movements and their chronologies 2 Journal of Alpine Research Revue de Geographie Alpine Open Edition 99 1 doi 10 4000 rga 1359 Retrieved 28 September 2020 a b Bal zs Nagy Marcell Seb k 1 January 1999 The Man of Many Devices who Wandered Full Many Ways Festschrift in Honour of J nos M Bak Piskorski Jan Maria The Historiography of the So called East Colonisation and the Current State of Research pp 654 667 Central European University Press ISBN 978 963 9116 67 2 a b Enno Bunz 2008 Ostsiedlung und Landesausbau in Sachsen die Kuhrener Urkunde von 1154 und ihr historisches Umfeld p 95 Leipziger Universitatsverlag ISBN 978 3 86583 165 1 a b Palgrave Macmillan UK 1999 p 12 Bartlett 1998 p 184 Bartlett 1998 p 187 Felix Biermann Gunter Mangelsdorf 2005 Die bauerliche Ostsiedlung des Mittelalters in Nordostdeutschland Untersuchungen zum Landesausbau des 12 bis 14 Jahrhunderts im landlichen Raum Lang ISBN 978 3 631 54117 3 Charles W Ingrao Franz A J Szabo 2008 The Germans and the East Piskorski Jan Maria Medieval Colonization in Europe pp 27 37 Purdue University Press ISBN 978 1 55753 443 9 Werner Trossbach Clemens Zimmermann 2006 Die Geschichte des Dorfes von den Anfangen im Frankenreich zur bundesdeutschen Gegenwart Ulmer ISBN 978 3 8252 8324 7 Brather Sebastian 2001 Archaologie der westlichen Slawen Siedlung Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft im fruh und hochmittelalterlichen Ostmitteleuropa Erganzungsbande zum Reallexikon der germanischen Altertumskunde in German Vol 30 Walter de Gruyter pp 156 159 ISBN 3 11 017061 2 a b Brather Sebastian 2001 Archaologie der westlichen Slawen Siedlung Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft im fruh und hochmittelalterlichen Ostmitteleuropa Erganzungsbande zum Reallexikon der germanischen Altertumskunde in German Vol 30 Walter de Gruyter p 156 ISBN 3 11 017061 2 Anna Paner Jan Iluk Historia Polski Virtual Library of Polish Literature Katedra Kulturoznawstwa Wydzial Filologiczny Uniwersytet Gdanski a b Charles Higounet 1990 Die deutsche Ostsiedlung im Mittelalter Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag ISBN 978 3 423 04540 7 Knefelkamp Ulrich 2002 Das Mittelalter Geschichte im Uberblick UTB Uni Taschenbucher in German Vol 2105 2 ed UTB p 242 ISBN 3 8252 2105 9 a b Brather Sebastian 2001 Archaologie der westlichen Slawen Siedlung Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft im fruh und hochmittelalterlichen Ostmitteleuropa Erganzungsbande zum Reallexikon der germanischen Altertumskunde in German Vol 30 Walter de Gruyter p 155 ISBN 3 11 017061 2 a b Schich 2007 p 217 Bartlett 1998 p 326 Bartlett 1998 p 320 Schich 2007 p 218 Martin Stolzenau 3 February 2019 Er schuf die Grundlage fur die Stadt und Landeshistorie MAZ Retrieved 29 September 2020 Enno Bunz Die Rolle der Niederlander in der Ostsiedlung in Ostsiedlung und Landesausbau in Sachsen 2008 a b Konrad Gundisch Transylvania and the Transylvanian Saxons Retrieved 28 September 2020 Bartlett 1998 p 148 Szabo 2008 p 11 a b c Szabo 2008 p 12 Herbers amp Jaspert 2007 Tomasz Czarnecki V Internationale Germanistische Konferenz Deutsch im Kontakt der Kulturen Schlesien und andere Vergleichsregionen Tomasz Czarnecki Die deutschen Lehnworter im Polnischen und die mittelalterlichen Dialekte des schlesischen Deutsch Doc Player Retrieved 28 September 2020 Tilman Berger Ingrid Hudabiunigg Geschichte des deutsch slawischen Sprachkontaktes im Teschener Schlesie PDF Uni Regensburg Retrieved 28 September 2020 Pavla Kloboukov Germanismy v Bezne Mluve Dneska PDF Masaryk University Philosophy Faculty Retrieved 28 September 2020 Walther Mitzka 1943 Die Ostbewegung der deutschen Sprache Zeitschrift fur Mundartforschung 19 1 4 81 140 JSTOR 40499525 Retrieved 30 September 2020 via Jstor Schwarz Gabriele 1989 Lehrbuch der allgemeinen Geographie Volume 6 Allgemeine Siedlungsgeographie I 4 ed Walter de Gruyter p 189 ISBN 3 11 007895 3 Names and Their Environment Proceedings of the 25th International Congress of Onomastic Sciences Volume 3 Anthroponomastics Glasgow University of Glasgow 2016 p 11 ISBN 978 0 85261 947 6 Bichlmeier Harald 2019 Die wichtigsten Suffixe in slawischen Familiennamen und ihre Eindeutschungsergebnisse ein Uberblick Namenkundliche Informationen 111 123 Nubling Damaris Kunze Konrad 30 January 2023 Kleiner deutscher Familiennamenatlas in German De Gruyter p 138 ISBN 978 3 11 018626 0 Retrieved 9 August 2023 Klaus Fehn Siedlungsforschung Archaologie Geschichte Geographie Band 13 pp 67 77 PDF Verlag Siedlungsforschung Bonn Retrieved 30 September 2020 Wolfgang Wippermann 1981 Der deutsche Drang nach Osten Ideologie und Wirklichkeit eines politischen Schlagwortes Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft ISBN 978 3 534 07556 0 Janusz Gumkowkski Kazimierz Leszczynski Hitler s Plans for Eastern Europe archive Archived from the original on 27 May 2012 Retrieved 29 September 2020 Werner Buchholz 2002 Deutsche Geschichte im Osten Europas Pommern hrsg von Werner Buchholz Siedler ISBN 978 3 88680 771 0 DIETRICH EICHHOLTZ Generalplan Ost zur Versklavungosteuropaischer Volker PDF Archive Archived from the original PDF on 14 March 2016 Retrieved 29 September 2020 WALTER SCHLESINGER DIE GESCHICHTLICHE STELLUNG DER MITTELALTERLICHEN DEUTSCHEN OSTBEWEGUNG De Gruyter Retrieved 29 September 2020 a b STEFFEN PRAUSER ARFON REES The Expulsion of the German Communities from Eastern Europe at the End of the Second World War EUROPEAN UNIVERSITY INSTITUTE FLORENCE Retrieved 29 September 2020 Sources EditBartlett Robert 1998 Die Geburt Europas aus dem Geist der Gewalt Eroberung Kolonisation und kultureller Wandel von 950 bis 1350 English original The Making of Europe conquest colonization and cultural change 950 1350 in German Knaur Munchen ISBN 3 426 60639 9 Kleineberg A Marx Chr Knobloch E Lelgemann D 2010 Germania und die Insel Thule Die Entschlusselung von Ptolemaios Atlas der Oikumene in German WBG ISBN 978 3 534 23757 9 Grunder Horst Johanek Peter 2001 Kolonialstadte europaische Enklaven oder Schmelztiegel der Kulturen Europaische Enklaven oder Schmelztiegel der Kulturen in German ISBN 3 8258 3601 0 Reuber Paul Struver Anke Wolkersdorfer Gunter 2005 Politische Geographien Europas Annaherungen an ein umstrittenes Konstrukt Annaherungen an ein umstrittenes Konstrukt in German ISBN 3 8258 6523 1 Demurger Alain Kaiser Wolfgang 2003 Die Ritter des Herrn Geschichte der Geistlichen Ritterorden in German ISBN 3 406 50282 2 Herbers Klaus Jaspert Nikolas eds 2007 Grenzraume und Grenzuberschreitungen im Vergleich Der Osten und der Westen des mittelalterlichen Lateineuropa in German De Gruyter ISBN 978 3 05 004155 1 Die Slawen in Deutschland Geschichte und Kultur der slawischen Stamme westlich von Oder und Neisse Joachim Herrmann Autorenkollektiv Amazon de Bucher amazon de in German 23 June 2023 Retrieved 12 July 2023 Knefelkamp Ulrich ed 2001 Zisterzienser Norm Kultur Reform 900 Jahre Zisterzienser in German ISBN 3 540 64816 X Minahan James 2000 Germans One Europe Many Nations A Historical Dictionary of European National Groups Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 0 313 30984 1 Retrieved 11 March 2016 Schich Winfried 2007 Wirtschaft und Kulturlandschaft Gesammelte Beitrage 1977 bis 1999 zur Geschichte der Zisterzienser und der Germania Slavica Bibliothek der brandenburgischen und preussischen Geschichte in German Vol 12 BWV Verlag ISBN 978 3 8305 0378 1 Rosener Werner 1988 Agrarwirtschaft Agrarverfassung und landliche Gesellschaft im Mittelalter in German ISBN 3 486 55024 1 Schulman Jana K 2002 The Rise of the Medieval World 500 1300 A Biographical Dictionary Greenwood Press Sommerfeld Wilhelm von 2005 1896 Geschichte der Germanisierung des Herzogtums Pommern oder Slavien bis zum Ablauf des 13 Jahrhunderts in German Adamant Media Corporation ISBN 1 4212 3832 2 unabridged facsimile of the edition published by Duncker amp Humblot Leipzig 1896 Szabo Franz A J 2008 Ingrao Charles W ed The Germans and the East Purdue University Press ISBN 978 1 55753 443 9 The German Lands and Eastern Europe London Palgrave Macmillan UK 1999 doi 10 1007 978 1 349 27094 1 ISBN 978 1 349 27096 5 Szende Katalin 9 May 2019 Iure Theutonico German settlers and legal frameworks for immigration to Hungary in an East Central European perspective Journal of Medieval History Routledge 45 3 360 379 doi 10 1080 03044181 2019 1612195 ISSN 0304 4181 Further reading EditCharles Higounet 1911 1988 Les allemands en Europe centrale et oriental au moyen age German translation Die deutsche Ostsiedlung im Mittelalter Japanese translation ドイツ植民と東欧世界の形成 彩流社 by Naoki Miyajima Bielfeldt et al Die Slawen in Deutschland Ein Handbuch Hg Joachim Herrmann Akademie Verlag Berlin 1985 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ostsiedlung amp oldid 1174096407, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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