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Neumark

The Neumark (listen), also known as the New March (Polish: Nowa Marchia) or as East Brandenburg (German: Ostbrandenburg), was a region of the Margraviate of Brandenburg and its successors located east of the Oder River in territory which became part of Poland in 1945.

Neumark or East Brandenburg
Neumark or Ostbrandenburg (German)
Nowa Marchia (Polish)
Terra trans Oderam (Latin)
Region of the Margraviate of Brandenburg
1252–1945
Coat of arms of Brandenburg, shared by the Neumark

The Margraviate of Brandenburg c. 1320, showing the Neumark as the portion reaching out to the east. Cross-hatched are territories also acquired by the House of Ascania outside of Brandenburg.
CapitalSoldin
Historical era
1252
• Pawned to the Teutonic Knights
1402–1463a
• Partitioned to form Brandenburg-Küstrin
1535–1571
• Electors inherited Duchy of Prussia
1618
• Expanded on abolition of Posen-West Prussia
1938
• Potsdam Agreement awarded most of Neumark to Poland
1 August 1945
1 January 1999
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Today part of
a: Pawned to the Teutonic Knights in 1402, who gained complete control of the territory by 1429. Pawned back to Brandenburg in 1455, whose reacquisition of the territory was completed in 1463.

Called the Lubusz Land while part of medieval Poland, the territory later known as the Neumark gradually became part of the German Margraviate of Brandenburg from the mid-13th century. As Brandenburg-Küstrin the Neumark formed an independent state of the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation from 1535 to 1571; after the death of the margrave John, a younger son of Joachim I Nestor, Elector of Brandenburg, it returned to Elector John George, the margrave's nephew and Joachim I Nestor's grandson. With the rest of the Electorate of Brandenburg, it became part of the Kingdom of Prussia in 1701 and part of the German Empire in 1871 when each of those states first formed. After World War I the entirely ethnic German Neumark remained within the Free State of Prussia, itself part of the Weimar Republic (Germany).

After World War II the Potsdam Conference assigned the majority of the Neumark to Polish administration, and since 1945 has remained part of Poland. Polish settlers largely replaced the expelled German population. Most of the Polish territory became part of the Lubusz Voivodeship, while the northern towns Choszczno (Arnswalde), Myślibórz (Soldin), and Chojna (Königsberg in der Neumark) belong to the West Pomeranian Voivodeship. Some territory near Cottbus, which was administratively part of the Government Region of Frankfurt (coterminous with the Neumark) after the 1815 Congress of Vienna, became part of East Germany in the 1940s, becoming part of Germany after reunification in 1990.

Location edit

The Oder marked the borders of the Neumark in the west and south; in the north it bordered Pomerania, and in the east Greater Poland until the Partitions of Poland in the late 18th century. From the 1772 First Partition of Poland it bordered the Prussian Netze District in the east, which had largely been carved out of the northern part of Greater Poland. After the 1793 Second Partition of Poland the remainder of Greater Poland became part of the Province of South Prussia. In 1807 South Prussia and the southern part of the Netze District (among other areas) became part of the Napoleonic Duchy of Warsaw, while the northern part of the Netze District was merged into the Province of West Prussia; the Neumark shared borders with both.

After 1815 (Congress of Vienna) the Neumark was dissolved, largely becoming part of Regierungsbezirk Frankfurt of the Province of Brandenburg. Most of the eastern border of the Neumark became that of Brandenburg/Frankfurt with West Prussia (Province of Prussia 1829–1878) and the Grand Duchy of Posen (Province of Posen from 1848).

The Warta and Noteć Rivers and their swamp regions dominated the landscape of the region. At the time of the Neumark's greatest territorial extent (at the end of the 17th century), the region included the following later Kreise (districts) and towns:

In the Brandenburgian Region of Frankfurt edit

  • Arnswalde [de; fr; pl] (1818–1945; from 1938 part of Pomeranian Region of Posen-West Prussia), based in Neuwedell (till 1908), thereafter in Arnswalde
  • Crossen (Oder) [de] (1818–1945), based in Crossen upon Oder
  • Friedeberg (1816–1945; from 1938 part of Pomeranian Region of Posen-West Prussia), based in Friedeberg in the New March
  • Königsberg (New March) [de] (1816–15 March 1946, remainder west of the Oder merged into Angermünde [de], Lebus [de] and Oberbarnim districts [de]), based in Königsberg in the New March
  • Landsberg (Warthe) [de] (1818–1945), based in Landsberg upon Warthe
  • Soldin [de] (1818–1945), based in Soldin
  • Sternberg [de], (1816–1873; partitioned into Oststernberg and Weststernberg [de]), based in Zielenzig (till 1852), thereafter in Drossen

In the Pomeranian Region of Köslin edit

  • Dramburg [de] (1816–1945; from 1938 part of Pomeranian Region of Posen-West Prussia), based in Dramburg
  • Schivelbein [de] (1816–1945), based in Schivelbein

History edit

Ancient history edit

In the Bronze Age the area which became the Neumark fell within the area of the Lusatian culture. In the Iron Age the Jastorf culture operated in this region, identified sometimes with Germanic and sometimes with Celtic tribes.

As its inhabitants moved westward, the region became depopulated during the Migration Period.[citation needed] After AD 500 West Slavic tribes gradually repopulated the area, which became a forest borderland between Pomerania and Greater Poland. According to the Bavarian Geographer's description, the Miloxi inhabited the future Neumark region: they had 47 settlements between the Oder and Poznań.

Middle Ages edit

 
Lubusz Land – core of the future Neumark – during the Piast period (marked in yellow)

The region came under the sovereignty of the first Polish state during the 10th-century rule of Mieszko I (died 992) and Bolesław I (ruled 992–1025), Dukes of the Polans.[1] Polish rulers incorporated the future Neumark territory as the Lubusz Land and by the beginning of the 13th century the previously depopulated region had a thinly-spread population of Poles.

Beginning in the 1230s, Low-German–speaking colonists from the Holy Roman Empire began settling north and south of the Warta and Noteć Rivers upon the initiative of Pomeranian and Polish lords (see Ostsiedlung). The lords invited members of the Knights Templar and Knights Hospitaller to establish monasteries, near which settlements began to develop. To fortify the borderland Pomeranian and Polish dukes built castles in the north, around which settlements also grew.

The Ascanian margraves of Brandenburg, starting with Albert the Bear (ruled 1157–1170), aspired to extend their dominion east of the Oder. They had gained a foothold east of the river by 1242 and in 1252 the Margraviate of Brandenburg and the Archbishopric of Magdeburg purchased the Lubusz Land. In 1253 they founded Frankfurt an der Oder as a river-crossing and as a staging-point for further expansion eastward.[2] Through land purchases, marriage pacts, and services to Poland's Piast dynasty, the Ascanians extended their territory eastward to the Drawa River and northward to the Parsęta River. For instance, the Polish castellany of Santok, an important base and crossing point over the Warta near its junction with the Noteć, was sought by Pomerania. To relieve himself of the trouble of maintaining the fortress, Duke Przemysł I of Greater Poland granted the castellany to Margrave Conrad as a dowry for his daughter Konstancja. To safeguard the region Margrave John I founded the town of Landsberg an der Warthe (now Gorzów Wielkopolski) in 1257. The Templars sold Soldin to the Ascanians in 1261, and the town began to become a center for the region.

Most of the colonists who settled in Brandenburg's new eastern territory came from Magdeburg or the Altmark ("Old March"). Unlike in the rest of Brandenburg (where the Ascanians settled knights in open villages) the margraves began constructing castles in their land east of the Oder to guard against Poland.[3] The Slavic inhabitants of the region gradually became Germanized. Because the new Terra trans Oderam, or "land across the Oder", formed an extension of the Margraviate of Brandenburg, it became known as the Neumark ("New March") after the middle of the 15th century.

With the extinction of the Ascanian line in 1320, Brandenburg's interest in the Neumark decreased. Neither the margraves of the Wittelsbach (1323–1373) nor those of the Luxembourg dynasties concerned themselves with developing their easternmost territory further. The political vacuum allowed Poland to reassert its influence in the area, while robber barons terrorized the populace.

Teutonic Knights edit

Brandenburg pawned the Neumark to the Teutonic Knights in 1402, and it passed completely under their control in 1429, although the Order neglected the region as well. After the Teutonic Knights' defeat in the Battle of Grunwald (Tannenberg) in 1410, the future Grand Master Michael Küchmeister von Sternberg used the Neumark as a staging ground for an army of German and Hungarian mercenaries which he later used against the forces of King Władysław II Jagiełło of Poland. This allowed the Order to retain much of its territory in the First Peace of Thorn in 1411.[4]

In 1454/1455 the Knights' mismanagement led to their pawning of the Neumark back to Brandenburg, by then led by Elector Frederick II of the Hohenzollern dynasty (Treaties of Cölln and Mewe). After Frederick completed the re-acquisition of Neumark in 1463 for 40,000 guilders, the region belonged to Brandenburg for the following centuries, with the exception of the time between 1535 and 1571. Frederick II wrote for his successors "that the said land, the New Mark, shall belong to German territory and to the worshipful Electorate of the Mark of Brandenburg, with which it was incorporated at the institution of the Electorate, and shall so remain, and shall never pass to those who speak not the German tongue".[5]

Brandenburg-Küstrin edit

Margraviate of Brandenburg-Küstrin
Markgrafschaft Brandenburg-Küstrin (German)
1535–1571
A groschen of John, Margrave of Brandenburg-Küstrin, 1545
 
StatusMargraviate
Capital
GovernmentPrincipality
Margrave 
Historical eraEarly modern age
• Partitioned from
    Brandenburg
1535
• Reabsorbed into
    Brandenburg
1571
Today part of
  1. Soldin is now the Polish city of Myślibórz.
  2. Küstrin straddled the Oder-Neisse line, so was partitioned after World War II and is now Kostrzyn nad Odrą in Poland and the Küstriner Vorland in Germany.

After the death of Elector Joachim I Nestor in 1535, Brandenburg's territory west of the Oder (the Kurmark) went to his older son Joachim II Hector, while the Neumark went to his younger son John, who began ruling the Neumark as an independent margraviate and consolidated the land. An enthusiastic supporter of the Protestant Reformation, John succeeded in converting the Neumark to Lutheranism and in confiscating church property. He lived frugally and acquired wealth for his treasury through usury and hiring out mercenary companies.

The division of Brandenburg resulted in trade wars between the brothers, as Crossen and Landsberg competed with the Kurmark's Frankfurt for mercantile primacy. The two margraves eventually compromised – at the economic expense of Stettin. (The brothers also reconciled out of concern for their territories during the Schmalkaldic War of 1546–47.)

In 1548 John's administration moved from Soldin to Küstrin. With the death of both brothers within ten days of each other in 1571, the Neumark became reunited with the Kurmark under Joachim II's son, John George.[3]

Brandenburg-Prussia edit

In 1618, East Brandenburg became part of Brandenburg-Prussia after the electors' inheritance of the Duchy of Prussia. During the Thirty Years' War (1618–1648) both Swedish and Imperial troops plundered, ravaged and burnt the land, while plague epidemics in 1626 and 1631 killed much of the populace. While occupied by Swedish troops the region had to contribute 60,000 thalers and 10,000 Wispel of rye.

Kingdom of Prussia edit

 
Districts in the Neumark as of 1873

After the declaration of the Kingdom of Prussia in 1701, the situation in the Neumark began to improve. King Frederick I initiated new waves of colonization. Many French Huguenots, forced to flee from religious persecution in France, arrived as settlers. The textile industry also began to develop in the Neumark. The Seven Years' War caused the region to regress in its development, as high contributions were exacted from the population for the war effort and the Neumark was the setting for battles such as at Kunersdorf. Under Frederick II, increased land reclamation and economic consolidation resulted from the drainage of the Warta and Notec areas.

The reorganization of Prussia after the territorial changes – resulting from the Congress of Vienna in 1815 – changed the political makeup of the Neumark. The districts of Dramburg [de] and Schivelbein [de] and the northern part of the Arnswalde district [de] with the town of Nörenberg became part of the Province of Pomerania. The Neumark's remaining territory was incorporated into the newly created Frankfurt Region of the Province of Brandenburg.

Germany edit

With the formation of the Prussian-led German Empire in 1871 the Neumark — along with the rest of Brandenburg — became part of a unified German state. In the Weimar Republic's National Assembly of 1 November 1919, the majority of the region voted for the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD). The Neumark populace mostly voted for the German National People's Party in the elections for the German Reichstag on 20 May 1928, with a small island of SPD voters. In the Reichstag vote of December 1924 1,900 votes were cast for the Polish People's Party out of a population of 570,000. In 1925 the Neumark had 3,500 Polish speakers.[6] In the Reichstag vote of 6 November 1932, the Nazi Party won the election in the region.[7]

When the Nazi authorities dissolved the province of Posen-West Prussia in 1938, they expanded the Frankfurt Region to include the districts of Schwerin and of Meseritz, although the New Marcher districts of Arnswalde [de] and of Friedeberg were reassigned to Pomerania. According to the 1939 census, the Neumark had a population of 645,000 residents, including 3,000 non-Germans.[6] The dialect spoken in much of the territory was the East Low German Brandenburgisch dialect.

Infrastructure before 1945 edit

The Neumark region long featured agriculture and forestry. The medium-sized towns were mostly Ackerbürgerstädte, or farmer-citizen-towns. The textile industry became prominent in the 19th century. With the construction of modern roadways, of the Fernverkehrstraße 1 (an arterial road from Berlin to Königsberg), and of the Prussian Eastern Railway, the Neumark also began to develop industrially. Such development was primarily geared toward agricultural needs and was concentrated near the cities of Landsberg and Küstrin, and the Neumark did not become nearly as industrialized or densely populated as other German areas such as the Ruhr, Saxony, or Upper Silesia.

World War II edit

Near the end of World War II, the Soviet Red Army reached the Neumark at the end of January 1945. Because the Red Army had advanced so quickly, the civilian population of the region suffered greatly from warfare and occupying troops because they had not prepared to flee in time. More than 40,000 New Marchers were killed in action as soldiers.

Under the terms demanded by the Soviet Union in the Potsdam Agreement, the region was put under Polish administration after the Potsdam Conference and eventually became part of Poland. Germans remaining in the region were expelled. Poles who had themselves been expelled from the Polish areas annexed by the Soviet Union settled the region. A small part of the German population, mostly technicians for the water supply companies, were retained and used for compulsory labour; they were allowed to emigrate to Germany in the 1950s. Older estimates indicated that of the pre-war population of 645,000, only 5,000 of the inhabitants from 1939 remained in the province in 1950.[7][8]

Villages in today's Germany west of the Oder edit

After the regulation of the river Oder in the 18th century the western border of the New March was not adapted to the Oder's new partially more eastern course. Thus the New Marcher villages west of the Oder, now the German-Polish border, remained with post-World War II Germany.

Formerly located within the District of Königsberg in the New March were the villages Adlig Reetz [de], Alt and Neu Bleyen [de], Altglietzen [de], Altreetz [de], Altwustrow [de], Bralitz [de], Croustillier [de], Drewitz Ausbau (a locality of Bleyen), Gabow [de], Güstebieser Loose [de], Hohenwutzen, Karlsbiese [de], Karlshof [de], Königlich Reetz (a locality of Oderaue), Küstrin-Kietz, Neuenhagen in the New March [de], Neuküstrinchen (a locality of Oderaue), Neulietzegöricke [de], Neuranft, Neurüdnitz, Neutornow [de; pl], Neuwustrow [de], Schaumburg in the Oderbruch (a locality of Bleyen), Schiffmühle [de], Zäckericker Loose [de] and Zelliner Loose (a locality of Letschin). The villages of Aurith [de] and Kunitz-Loose (a locality of Wiesenau) formed part of the Weststernberg district.

Poland edit

The Oder-Neisse line delimiting Germany and Poland split several localities of the region into divided cities:

To replace the expelled indigenous German population, Soviet authorities re-settled Neumark with Poles and Ukrainians from territories of Poland annexed by the Soviet Union. From 1975 to 1998 the former Neumark territory was divided between the Voivodeships of Gorzów and Zielona Góra with a small section around Chojna in Szczecin Voivodeship. Since the reorganization of Polish voivodeships on 1 January 1999, almost all of the former Neumark region lies within the Lubusz Voivodeship.

Modern inhabitants edit

During the Polish post-war census of December 1950, data about the pre-war places of residence of the inhabitants as of August 1939 was collected. In case of children born between September 1939 and December 1950, their origin was reported based on the pre-war places of residence of their mothers. Thanks to this data it is possible to reconstruct the pre-war geographical origin of the post-war population. The same area corresponding to 1939 East Brandenburg east of the Oder-Neisse line (which became part of Poland in 1945) was inhabited as of December 1950 by:

1950 population by place of residence back in 1939:[9]
Region (within 1939 borders): Number Percent
Autochthons (1939 DE/FCD citizens) 14,809 3,3%
Polish expellees from Kresy (USSR) 187,298 42,1%
Poles from abroad except the USSR 10,943 2,5%
Resettlers from the City of Warsaw 8,600 1,9%
From Warsaw region (Masovia) 16,926 3,8%
From Białystok region and Sudovia 3,772 0,8%
From pre-war Polish Pomerania 19,191 4,3%
Resettlers from Poznań region 88,427 19,9%
Katowice region (East Upper Silesia) 4,725 1,1%
Resettlers from the City of Łódź 2,377 0,5%
Resettlers from Łódź region 22,954 5,2%
Resettlers from Kielce region 14,203 3,2%
Resettlers from Lublin region 19,250 4,3%
Resettlers from Kraków region 12,587 2,8%
Resettlers from Rzeszów region 13,147 3,0%
place of residence in 1939 unknown 5,720 1,3%
Total pop. in December 1950 444,929 100,0%

Over 95% of the 1950 population were newcomers to the region, with less than 5% residing in German East Brandenburg already back in August 1939 (so called autochthons, who had German citizenship before World War II and were granted Polish citizenship after 1945). The largest group among new inhabitants were Poles expelled from areas of Eastern Poland annexed by the Soviet Union. The second largest group were people from neighbouring pre-war Poznań Voivodeship of Poland (historical Greater Poland region), comprising one-fifth of post-war inhabitants.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Poland.gov. "Mieszko I and Boleslaw Chrobry (Boleslaus the Brave)". Accessed December 3, 2006.
  2. ^ Barraclough, Geoffrey. The Origins of Modern Germany. W. W. Norton. 1984. ISBN 0-393-30153-2
  3. ^ a b Koch, H. W. A History of Prussia. Barnes & Noble Books, 1993. ISBN 0-88029-158-3
  4. ^ Urban, William. The Teutonic Knights. Greenhill Books. 2003. ISBN 1-85367-535-0
  5. ^ Eulenburg, Herbert, translated by M. M. Bozman. The Hohenzollerns. The Century Co. 1929.
  6. ^ a b Zentrum gegen Vertreibungen. "History of the German expellees and their homelands". 2006-10-15 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed 12 May 2006.
  7. ^ a b Westermanns Atlas zur Weltgeschichte. Georg Westermann Verlag. 1963.
  8. ^ Scheuch, Manfred. Historischer Atlas Deutschland: Vom Frankenreich bis zur Wiedervereinigung. Bechtermünz. 2001. ISBN 3-8289-0358-4
  9. ^ Kosiński, Leszek (1960). "Pochodzenie terytorialne ludności Ziem Zachodnich w 1950 r. [Territorial origins of inhabitants of the Western Lands in year 1950]" (PDF). Dokumentacja Geograficzna (in Polish). 2. Warsaw: PAN (Polish Academy of Sciences), Institute of Geography: Tabela 1 (data by county) – via Repozytorium Cyfrowe Instytutów Naukowych.

External links edit

  • 1493 map -Marcha Nova-Neumark
  • Map of the Neumark in the Middle Ages
  • Administrative history (in German)
  • (in German)

50°39′26″N 12°21′19″E / 50.65722°N 12.35528°E / 50.65722; 12.35528

neumark, other, uses, disambiguation, listen, also, known, march, polish, nowa, marchia, east, brandenburg, german, ostbrandenburg, region, margraviate, brandenburg, successors, located, east, oder, river, territory, which, became, part, poland, 1945, east, br. For other uses see Neumark disambiguation The Neumark listen also known as the New March Polish Nowa Marchia or as East Brandenburg German Ostbrandenburg was a region of the Margraviate of Brandenburg and its successors located east of the Oder River in territory which became part of Poland in 1945 Neumark or East BrandenburgNeumark or Ostbrandenburg German Nowa Marchia Polish Terra trans Oderam Latin Region of the Margraviate of Brandenburg1252 1945Coat of arms of Brandenburg shared by the NeumarkThe Margraviate of Brandenburg c 1320 showing the Neumark as the portion reaching out to the east Cross hatched are territories also acquired by the House of Ascania outside of Brandenburg CapitalSoldinHistorical eraMiddle AgesModern era Lubusz Land bought by Mgvt Brandenburg and Abp Magdeburg1252 Pawned to the Teutonic Knights1402 1463a Partitioned to form Brandenburg Kustrin1535 1571 Electors inherited Duchy of Prussia1618 Expanded on abolition of Posen West Prussia1938 Potsdam Agreement awarded most of Neumark to Poland1 August 1945 Reorganised to Lubusz Voivodeship1 January 1999Preceded by Succeeded by Lubusz Land Lubusz VoivodeshipToday part ofPoland Germanya Pawned to the Teutonic Knights in 1402 who gained complete control of the territory by 1429 Pawned back to Brandenburg in 1455 whose reacquisition of the territory was completed in 1463 Called the Lubusz Land while part of medieval Poland the territory later known as the Neumark gradually became part of the German Margraviate of Brandenburg from the mid 13th century As Brandenburg Kustrin the Neumark formed an independent state of the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation from 1535 to 1571 after the death of the margrave John a younger son of Joachim I Nestor Elector of Brandenburg it returned to Elector John George the margrave s nephew and Joachim I Nestor s grandson With the rest of the Electorate of Brandenburg it became part of the Kingdom of Prussia in 1701 and part of the German Empire in 1871 when each of those states first formed After World War I the entirely ethnic German Neumark remained within the Free State of Prussia itself part of the Weimar Republic Germany After World War II the Potsdam Conference assigned the majority of the Neumark to Polish administration and since 1945 has remained part of Poland Polish settlers largely replaced the expelled German population Most of the Polish territory became part of the Lubusz Voivodeship while the northern towns Choszczno Arnswalde Mysliborz Soldin and Chojna Konigsberg in der Neumark belong to the West Pomeranian Voivodeship Some territory near Cottbus which was administratively part of the Government Region of Frankfurt coterminous with the Neumark after the 1815 Congress of Vienna became part of East Germany in the 1940s becoming part of Germany after reunification in 1990 Contents 1 Location 1 1 In the Brandenburgian Region of Frankfurt 1 2 In the Pomeranian Region of Koslin 2 History 2 1 Ancient history 2 2 Middle Ages 2 3 Teutonic Knights 2 4 Brandenburg Kustrin 2 5 Brandenburg Prussia 2 6 Kingdom of Prussia 2 7 Germany 2 7 1 Infrastructure before 1945 2 7 2 World War II 2 7 3 Villages in today s Germany west of the Oder 2 8 Poland 2 8 1 Modern inhabitants 3 See also 4 Notes 5 External linksLocation editThe Oder marked the borders of the Neumark in the west and south in the north it bordered Pomerania and in the east Greater Poland until the Partitions of Poland in the late 18th century From the 1772 First Partition of Poland it bordered the Prussian Netze District in the east which had largely been carved out of the northern part of Greater Poland After the 1793 Second Partition of Poland the remainder of Greater Poland became part of the Province of South Prussia In 1807 South Prussia and the southern part of the Netze District among other areas became part of the Napoleonic Duchy of Warsaw while the northern part of the Netze District was merged into the Province of West Prussia the Neumark shared borders with both After 1815 Congress of Vienna the Neumark was dissolved largely becoming part of Regierungsbezirk Frankfurt of the Province of Brandenburg Most of the eastern border of the Neumark became that of Brandenburg Frankfurt with West Prussia Province of Prussia 1829 1878 and the Grand Duchy of Posen Province of Posen from 1848 The Warta and Notec Rivers and their swamp regions dominated the landscape of the region At the time of the Neumark s greatest territorial extent at the end of the 17th century the region included the following later Kreise districts and towns In the Brandenburgian Region of Frankfurt edit See also Frankfurt region Arnswalde de fr pl 1818 1945 from 1938 part of Pomeranian Region of Posen West Prussia based in Neuwedell till 1908 thereafter in Arnswalde Crossen Oder de 1818 1945 based in Crossen upon Oder Friedeberg 1816 1945 from 1938 part of Pomeranian Region of Posen West Prussia based in Friedeberg in the New March Konigsberg New March de 1816 15 March 1946 remainder west of the Oder merged into Angermunde de Lebus de and Oberbarnim districts de based in Konigsberg in the New March Landsberg Warthe de 1818 1945 based in Landsberg upon Warthe Soldin de 1818 1945 based in Soldin Sternberg de 1816 1873 partitioned into Oststernberg and Weststernberg de based in Zielenzig till 1852 thereafter in Drossen In the Pomeranian Region of Koslin edit See also Koslin region Dramburg de 1816 1945 from 1938 part of Pomeranian Region of Posen West Prussia based in Dramburg Schivelbein de 1816 1945 based in SchivelbeinHistory editAncient history edit In the Bronze Age the area which became the Neumark fell within the area of the Lusatian culture In the Iron Age the Jastorf culture operated in this region identified sometimes with Germanic and sometimes with Celtic tribes As its inhabitants moved westward the region became depopulated during the Migration Period citation needed After AD 500 West Slavic tribes gradually repopulated the area which became a forest borderland between Pomerania and Greater Poland According to the Bavarian Geographer s description the Miloxi inhabited the future Neumark region they had 47 settlements between the Oder and Poznan Middle Ages edit nbsp Lubusz Land core of the future Neumark during the Piast period marked in yellow The region came under the sovereignty of the first Polish state during the 10th century rule of Mieszko I died 992 and Boleslaw I ruled 992 1025 Dukes of the Polans 1 Polish rulers incorporated the future Neumark territory as the Lubusz Land and by the beginning of the 13th century the previously depopulated region had a thinly spread population of Poles Beginning in the 1230s Low German speaking colonists from the Holy Roman Empire began settling north and south of the Warta and Notec Rivers upon the initiative of Pomeranian and Polish lords see Ostsiedlung The lords invited members of the Knights Templar and Knights Hospitaller to establish monasteries near which settlements began to develop To fortify the borderland Pomeranian and Polish dukes built castles in the north around which settlements also grew The Ascanian margraves of Brandenburg starting with Albert the Bear ruled 1157 1170 aspired to extend their dominion east of the Oder They had gained a foothold east of the river by 1242 and in 1252 the Margraviate of Brandenburg and the Archbishopric of Magdeburg purchased the Lubusz Land In 1253 they founded Frankfurt an der Oder as a river crossing and as a staging point for further expansion eastward 2 Through land purchases marriage pacts and services to Poland s Piast dynasty the Ascanians extended their territory eastward to the Drawa River and northward to the Parseta River For instance the Polish castellany of Santok an important base and crossing point over the Warta near its junction with the Notec was sought by Pomerania To relieve himself of the trouble of maintaining the fortress Duke Przemysl I of Greater Poland granted the castellany to Margrave Conrad as a dowry for his daughter Konstancja To safeguard the region Margrave John I founded the town of Landsberg an der Warthe now Gorzow Wielkopolski in 1257 The Templars sold Soldin to the Ascanians in 1261 and the town began to become a center for the region Most of the colonists who settled in Brandenburg s new eastern territory came from Magdeburg or the Altmark Old March Unlike in the rest of Brandenburg where the Ascanians settled knights in open villages the margraves began constructing castles in their land east of the Oder to guard against Poland 3 The Slavic inhabitants of the region gradually became Germanized Because the new Terra trans Oderam or land across the Oder formed an extension of the Margraviate of Brandenburg it became known as the Neumark New March after the middle of the 15th century With the extinction of the Ascanian line in 1320 Brandenburg s interest in the Neumark decreased Neither the margraves of the Wittelsbach 1323 1373 nor those of the Luxembourg dynasties concerned themselves with developing their easternmost territory further The political vacuum allowed Poland to reassert its influence in the area while robber barons terrorized the populace Teutonic Knights edit See also Treaties of Colln and Mewe Brandenburg pawned the Neumark to the Teutonic Knights in 1402 and it passed completely under their control in 1429 although the Order neglected the region as well After the Teutonic Knights defeat in the Battle of Grunwald Tannenberg in 1410 the future Grand Master Michael Kuchmeister von Sternberg used the Neumark as a staging ground for an army of German and Hungarian mercenaries which he later used against the forces of King Wladyslaw II Jagiello of Poland This allowed the Order to retain much of its territory in the First Peace of Thorn in 1411 4 In 1454 1455 the Knights mismanagement led to their pawning of the Neumark back to Brandenburg by then led by Elector Frederick II of the Hohenzollern dynasty Treaties of Colln and Mewe After Frederick completed the re acquisition of Neumark in 1463 for 40 000 guilders the region belonged to Brandenburg for the following centuries with the exception of the time between 1535 and 1571 Frederick II wrote for his successors that the said land the New Mark shall belong to German territory and to the worshipful Electorate of the Mark of Brandenburg with which it was incorporated at the institution of the Electorate and shall so remain and shall never pass to those who speak not the German tongue 5 Brandenburg Kustrin edit Margraviate of Brandenburg KustrinMarkgrafschaft Brandenburg Kustrin German 1535 1571 nbsp Flag of Brandenburg nbsp Coat of arms of BrandenburgA groschen of John Margrave of Brandenburg Kustrin 1545 nbsp StatusMargraviateCapitalSoldin to 1548 aKustrin from 1548 bGovernmentPrincipalityMargrave Historical eraEarly modern age Partitioned from Brandenburg1535 Reabsorbed into Brandenburg1571Preceded by Succeeded by nbsp Margraviate of Brandenburg Margraviate of Brandenburg nbsp Today part ofPolandGermanySoldin is now the Polish city of Mysliborz Kustrin straddled the Oder Neisse line so was partitioned after World War II and is now Kostrzyn nad Odra in Poland and the Kustriner Vorland in Germany After the death of Elector Joachim I Nestor in 1535 Brandenburg s territory west of the Oder the Kurmark went to his older son Joachim II Hector while the Neumark went to his younger son John who began ruling the Neumark as an independent margraviate and consolidated the land An enthusiastic supporter of the Protestant Reformation John succeeded in converting the Neumark to Lutheranism and in confiscating church property He lived frugally and acquired wealth for his treasury through usury and hiring out mercenary companies The division of Brandenburg resulted in trade wars between the brothers as Crossen and Landsberg competed with the Kurmark s Frankfurt for mercantile primacy The two margraves eventually compromised at the economic expense of Stettin The brothers also reconciled out of concern for their territories during the Schmalkaldic War of 1546 47 In 1548 John s administration moved from Soldin to Kustrin With the death of both brothers within ten days of each other in 1571 the Neumark became reunited with the Kurmark under Joachim II s son John George 3 Brandenburg Prussia edit In 1618 East Brandenburg became part of Brandenburg Prussia after the electors inheritance of the Duchy of Prussia During the Thirty Years War 1618 1648 both Swedish and Imperial troops plundered ravaged and burnt the land while plague epidemics in 1626 and 1631 killed much of the populace While occupied by Swedish troops the region had to contribute 60 000 thalers and 10 000 Wispel of rye Kingdom of Prussia edit nbsp Districts in the Neumark as of 1873 After the declaration of the Kingdom of Prussia in 1701 the situation in the Neumark began to improve King Frederick I initiated new waves of colonization Many French Huguenots forced to flee from religious persecution in France arrived as settlers The textile industry also began to develop in the Neumark The Seven Years War caused the region to regress in its development as high contributions were exacted from the population for the war effort and the Neumark was the setting for battles such as at Kunersdorf Under Frederick II increased land reclamation and economic consolidation resulted from the drainage of the Warta and Notec areas The reorganization of Prussia after the territorial changes resulting from the Congress of Vienna in 1815 changed the political makeup of the Neumark The districts of Dramburg de and Schivelbein de and the northern part of the Arnswalde district de with the town of Norenberg became part of the Province of Pomerania The Neumark s remaining territory was incorporated into the newly created Frankfurt Region of the Province of Brandenburg Germany edit With the formation of the Prussian led German Empire in 1871 the Neumark along with the rest of Brandenburg became part of a unified German state In the Weimar Republic s National Assembly of 1 November 1919 the majority of the region voted for the Social Democratic Party of Germany SPD The Neumark populace mostly voted for the German National People s Party in the elections for the German Reichstag on 20 May 1928 with a small island of SPD voters In the Reichstag vote of December 1924 1 900 votes were cast for the Polish People s Party out of a population of 570 000 In 1925 the Neumark had 3 500 Polish speakers 6 In the Reichstag vote of 6 November 1932 the Nazi Party won the election in the region 7 When the Nazi authorities dissolved the province of Posen West Prussia in 1938 they expanded the Frankfurt Region to include the districts of Schwerin and of Meseritz although the New Marcher districts of Arnswalde de and of Friedeberg were reassigned to Pomerania According to the 1939 census the Neumark had a population of 645 000 residents including 3 000 non Germans 6 The dialect spoken in much of the territory was the East Low German Brandenburgisch dialect Infrastructure before 1945 edit The Neumark region long featured agriculture and forestry The medium sized towns were mostly Ackerburgerstadte or farmer citizen towns The textile industry became prominent in the 19th century With the construction of modern roadways of the Fernverkehrstrasse 1 an arterial road from Berlin to Konigsberg and of the Prussian Eastern Railway the Neumark also began to develop industrially Such development was primarily geared toward agricultural needs and was concentrated near the cities of Landsberg and Kustrin and the Neumark did not become nearly as industrialized or densely populated as other German areas such as the Ruhr Saxony or Upper Silesia World War II edit Near the end of World War II the Soviet Red Army reached the Neumark at the end of January 1945 Because the Red Army had advanced so quickly the civilian population of the region suffered greatly from warfare and occupying troops because they had not prepared to flee in time More than 40 000 New Marchers were killed in action as soldiers Under the terms demanded by the Soviet Union in the Potsdam Agreement the region was put under Polish administration after the Potsdam Conference and eventually became part of Poland Germans remaining in the region were expelled Poles who had themselves been expelled from the Polish areas annexed by the Soviet Union settled the region A small part of the German population mostly technicians for the water supply companies were retained and used for compulsory labour they were allowed to emigrate to Germany in the 1950s Older estimates indicated that of the pre war population of 645 000 only 5 000 of the inhabitants from 1939 remained in the province in 1950 7 8 Villages in today s Germany west of the Oder edit After the regulation of the river Oder in the 18th century the western border of the New March was not adapted to the Oder s new partially more eastern course Thus the New Marcher villages west of the Oder now the German Polish border remained with post World War II Germany Formerly located within the District of Konigsberg in the New March were the villages Adlig Reetz de Alt and Neu Bleyen de Altglietzen de Altreetz de Altwustrow de Bralitz de Croustillier de Drewitz Ausbau a locality of Bleyen Gabow de Gustebieser Loose de Hohenwutzen Karlsbiese de Karlshof de Koniglich Reetz a locality of Oderaue Kustrin Kietz Neuenhagen in the New March de Neukustrinchen a locality of Oderaue Neulietzegoricke de Neuranft Neurudnitz Neutornow de pl Neuwustrow de Schaumburg in the Oderbruch a locality of Bleyen Schiffmuhle de Zackericker Loose de and Zelliner Loose a locality of Letschin The villages of Aurith de and Kunitz Loose a locality of Wiesenau formed part of the Weststernberg district Poland edit The Oder Neisse line delimiting Germany and Poland split several localities of the region into divided cities Kustrin was separated into German Kustrin Kietz and Polish Kostrzyn nad Odra Frankfurt an der Oder was split into German Frankfurt Oder and Polish Slubice Guben was divided into German Guben and Polish Gubin Bad Muskau was split into German Bad Muskau and Polish Leknica Forst was divided into German Forst and Polish Zasieki Gorlitz was separated into German Gorlitz and Polish Zgorzelec To replace the expelled indigenous German population Soviet authorities re settled Neumark with Poles and Ukrainians from territories of Poland annexed by the Soviet Union From 1975 to 1998 the former Neumark territory was divided between the Voivodeships of Gorzow and Zielona Gora with a small section around Chojna in Szczecin Voivodeship Since the reorganization of Polish voivodeships on 1 January 1999 almost all of the former Neumark region lies within the Lubusz Voivodeship Modern inhabitants edit During the Polish post war census of December 1950 data about the pre war places of residence of the inhabitants as of August 1939 was collected In case of children born between September 1939 and December 1950 their origin was reported based on the pre war places of residence of their mothers Thanks to this data it is possible to reconstruct the pre war geographical origin of the post war population The same area corresponding to 1939 East Brandenburg east of the Oder Neisse line which became part of Poland in 1945 was inhabited as of December 1950 by 1950 population by place of residence back in 1939 9 Region within 1939 borders Number Percent Autochthons 1939 DE FCD citizens 14 809 3 3 Polish expellees from Kresy USSR 187 298 42 1 Poles from abroad except the USSR 10 943 2 5 Resettlers from the City of Warsaw 8 600 1 9 From Warsaw region Masovia 16 926 3 8 From Bialystok region and Sudovia 3 772 0 8 From pre war Polish Pomerania 19 191 4 3 Resettlers from Poznan region 88 427 19 9 Katowice region East Upper Silesia 4 725 1 1 Resettlers from the City of Lodz 2 377 0 5 Resettlers from Lodz region 22 954 5 2 Resettlers from Kielce region 14 203 3 2 Resettlers from Lublin region 19 250 4 3 Resettlers from Krakow region 12 587 2 8 Resettlers from Rzeszow region 13 147 3 0 place of residence in 1939 unknown 5 720 1 3 Total pop in December 1950 444 929 100 0 Over 95 of the 1950 population were newcomers to the region with less than 5 residing in German East Brandenburg already back in August 1939 so called autochthons who had German citizenship before World War II and were granted Polish citizenship after 1945 The largest group among new inhabitants were Poles expelled from areas of Eastern Poland annexed by the Soviet Union The second largest group were people from neighbouring pre war Poznan Voivodeship of Poland historical Greater Poland region comprising one fifth of post war inhabitants See also editBishopric of Lebus List of cities and towns in the NeumarkNotes edit Poland gov Mieszko I and Boleslaw Chrobry Boleslaus the Brave Accessed December 3 2006 Barraclough Geoffrey The Origins of Modern Germany W W Norton 1984 ISBN 0 393 30153 2 a b Koch H W A History of Prussia Barnes amp Noble Books 1993 ISBN 0 88029 158 3 Urban William The Teutonic Knights Greenhill Books 2003 ISBN 1 85367 535 0 Eulenburg Herbert translated by M M Bozman The Hohenzollerns The Century Co 1929 a b Zentrum gegen Vertreibungen History of the German expellees and their homelands Archived 2006 10 15 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 12 May 2006 a b Westermanns Atlas zur Weltgeschichte Georg Westermann Verlag 1963 Scheuch Manfred Historischer Atlas Deutschland Vom Frankenreich bis zur Wiedervereinigung Bechtermunz 2001 ISBN 3 8289 0358 4 Kosinski Leszek 1960 Pochodzenie terytorialne ludnosci Ziem Zachodnich w 1950 r Territorial origins of inhabitants of the Western Lands in year 1950 PDF Dokumentacja Geograficzna in Polish 2 Warsaw PAN Polish Academy of Sciences Institute of Geography Tabela 1 data by county via Repozytorium Cyfrowe Instytutow Naukowych External links edit1493 map Marcha Nova Neumark Map of the Neumark in the Middle Ages Administrative history in German Genealogical research in German 50 39 26 N 12 21 19 E 50 65722 N 12 35528 E 50 65722 12 35528 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Neumark amp oldid 1216134714 Brandenburg Kustrin, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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