fbpx
Wikipedia

Polish Corridor

The Polish Corridor (German: Polnischer Korridor; Polish: Pomorze, Polski Korytarz), also known as the Danzig Corridor, Corridor to the Sea or Gdańsk Corridor, was a territory located in the region of Pomerelia (Pomeranian Voivodeship, eastern Pomerania, formerly part of West Prussia), which provided the Second Republic of Poland (1920–1939) with access to the Baltic Sea, thus dividing the bulk of Weimar Germany from the province of East Prussia. At its narrowest point, the Polish territory was just 30 km wide.[1] The Free City of Danzig (now the Polish cities of Gdańsk, Sopot and the surrounding areas), situated to the east of the corridor, was a semi-independent German speaking city-state forming part of neither Germany nor Poland, though united with the latter through an imposed union covering customs, mail, foreign policy, railways as well as defence.

The Polish Corridor in 1923–1939
Polish Prussia in 1466–1772
Majority Polish (green) and German areas in the corridor (German 1910 census)
Percentage of Poles living on the former Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth territories, c. 1900

A similar territory, also occasionally referred to as a corridor, was originally connected to the Polish Crown until 1308, and was later reclaimed as part of Royal Prussia during the period 1466–1772.[2][3]

Terminology edit

According to German historian Hartmut Boockmann the term corridor was first used by Polish politicians,[4] while Polish historian Grzegorz Lukomski writes that the word was coined by German nationalist propaganda of the 1920s.[5] Internationally the term was used in English as early as March 1919[6] and whatever its origins, it became a widespread term in English.[7][8][9][10][11][12][13]

The equivalent German term is Polnischer Korridor. Polish names include korytarz polski ('Polish corridor') and korytarz gdański ('Gdańsk corridor'); however, reference to the region as a corridor came to be regarded as offensive by interwar Polish diplomats. Among the harshest critics of the term corridor was Polish Foreign Minister Józef Beck, who in his May 5, 1939 speech in the Sejm (Polish parliament) said: "I am insisting that the term Pomeranian Voivodeship should be used. The word corridor is an artificial idea, as this land has been Polish for centuries, with a small percentage of German settlers".[14] Poles commonly referred to the region as Pomorze Gdańskie ('Gdańsk Pomerania', Pomerelia") or simply Pomorze ('Pomerania'), or as województwo pomorskie ('Pomeranian Voivodeship'), which was the administrative name for the region.

Background edit

History of the area edit

In the 10th century, Pomerelia was settled by Slavic Pomeranians, ancestors of the Kashubians, who were subdued by Bolesław I of Poland. In the 11th century, they created an independent duchy.[15] In 1116/1121, Pomerania was again conquered by Poland. In 1138, following the death of Duke Bolesław III, Poland was fragmented into several semi-independent principalities. The Samborides, principes in Pomerelia, gradually evolved into independent dukes, who ruled the duchy until 1294. Before Pomerelia regained independence in 1227,[15][16] their dukes were vassals of Poland and Denmark. Since 1308–1309, following succession wars between Poland and Brandenburg, Pomerelia was subjugated by the Monastic state of the Teutonic Knights in Prussia. In 1466, with the second Peace of Thorn, Pomerelia became part of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth as a part of autonomous Royal Prussia. After the First Partition of Poland in 1772 it was annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia and named West Prussia, and became a constituent part of the new German Empire in 1871. Thus the Polish Corridor was not an entirely new creation: the territory assigned to Poland had been an integral part of Poland prior to 1772, but with a large degree of autonomy.[17][18][19][20]

Historical population edit

Perhaps the earliest census data on the ethnic and national structure of West Prussia (including areas which later made up the corridor) is from 1819.[21]

Ethnic/national data (Nationalverschiedenheit) for West Prussia in 1819[21]
Ethnic or national group Population (number) Population (percentage)
Poles (Polen) 327,300 52%
Germans (Deutsche) 290,000 46%
Jews (Juden) 12,700 2%
Total 630,077 100%

Karl Andree, in Polen: in geographischer, geschichtlicher und culturhistorischer Hinsicht (Leipzig 1831), gives the total population of West Prussia as 700,000 – including 50% Poles (350,000), 47% Germans (330,000) and 3% Jews (20,000).[22]

Data from the 19th century and early 20th century show the following ethnic changes in four main counties of the corridor (Puck and Wejherowo on the Baltic Sea coast; Kartuzy and Kościerzyna between the Province of Pomerania and Free City of Danzig):

 
The Polish Corridor: map of Puck (77.4%), Wejherowo (54.9%), Kartuzy (77.3%) and Kościerzyna (64.5%) counties, showing percentages of ethnic Poles (including Kashubians) by the end of World War I, according to the Map of Polish population published in 1919 in Warsaw[23]
Percent of Poles and Kashubians (including Polish-German bilinguals) in four main counties of the corridor, 1831–1931
County
Year
Puck (Putzig) Wejherowo (Neustadt) Kartuzy (Karthaus) Kościerzyna (Berent) Source
1831 82% 85% 72% Jan Mordawski's estimate[24]
1831 78% 84% 71% Leszek Belzyt's estimate[25]
1837 77% 84% 71% Volkszählung census[26]
1852 80% 77% 64% Volkszählung[26]
1855 80% 76% 64% Volkszählung[26]
1858 79% 76% 63% Volkszählung[26]
1861 80% 77% 64% Belzyt[25]
1886 75% 64% 66% 57% Schulzählung school census[26]
1890 69% 56% 67% 54% Volkszählung[26]
1890 73% 61% 68% 57% Belzyt[25]
1891 74% 62% 66% 56% Schulzählung[26]
1892 77% 67% 76% 59% Stefan Ramułt's estimate[27][28]
1896 72% 61% 70% 58% Schulzählung[26]
1900 69% 54% 69% 55% Volkszählung[26]
1901 76% 60% 71% 59% Schulzählung[26]
1905 70% 51% 70% 56% Volkszählung[26]
1906 73% 62% 72% 60% Schulzählung[26]
1910 70% 50% 72% 58% Volkszählung[26]
1910 74% 62% 74% 62% Belzyt[25]
1911 74% 63% 74% 63% Schulzählung[26]
1918 77% 55% 77% 65% Map of Polish population[23][29]
1921 89% 92% 81% Polish General Census[30][31]
1931 95% 93% 88% Polish General Census

Allied plans for a corridor after World War I edit

During the First World War, both sides made bids for Polish support, and in turn Polish leaders were active in soliciting support from both sides. Roman Dmowski, a former deputy in the Russian State Duma and the leader of the Endecja movement was especially active in seeking support from the Allies. Dmowski argued that an independent Poland needed access to the sea on demographic, historical and economic grounds as he maintained that a Poland without access to the sea could never be truly independent. After the war Poland was to be re-established as an independent state. Since a Polish state had not existed since the Congress of Vienna, the future republic's territory had to be defined.

Giving Poland access to the sea was one of the guarantees proposed by United States President Woodrow Wilson in his Fourteen Points of January 1918. The thirteenth of Wilson's points was:

An independent Polish state should be erected which should include the territories inhabited by indisputably Polish populations, which should be assured a free and secure access to the sea, and whose political and economic independence and territorial integrity should be guaranteed by international covenant.[32]

The following arguments were behind the creation of the corridor:

Ethnographic reasons edit

The ethnic situation was one of the reasons for returning the area to the restored Poland.[33] The majority of the population in the area was Polish.[34] As the Polish commission report to the Allied Supreme Council noted on 12 March 1919: "Finally the fact must be recognized that 600,000 Poles in West Prussia would under any alternative plan remain under German rule".[35] Also, as David Hunter Miller from president Woodrow Wilson's group of experts and academics (known as The Inquiry) noted in his diary from the Paris Peace Conference: "If Poland does not thus secure access to the sea, 600,000 Poles in West Prussia will remain under German rule and 20,000,000 Poles in Poland proper will probably have but a hampered and precarious commercial outlet".[36] The Prussian census of 1910 showed that there were 528,000 Poles (including West Slavic Kashubians, who had supported the Polish national lists in German elections[37][38][39][40]) in the region, compared with 385,000 Germans (including troops and officials stationed in the area).[41][42] The province of West Prussia as a whole had between 36% and 43% ethnic Poles in 1910, depending on the source (the lower number is based directly on German 1910 census figures, while the higher number is based on calculations according to which a large part of those people counted as Catholic Germans in the official census in fact identified as Poles).[43] The Poles did not want the Polish population to remain under the control of the German state,[44] which had in the past treated the Polish population and other minorities as second-class citizens[45] and had pursued Germanization. As Professor Lewis Bernstein Namier (1888–1960) – born to Jewish parents in Lublin Governorate (Russian Empire, former Congress Poland) and later a British citizen,[46] a former member of the British Intelligence Bureau throughout World War I[47] and the British delegation at the Versailles conference,[48] known for his anti-Polish[49] and anti-German[50][51] attitude – wrote in the Manchester Guardian on November 7, 1933: "The Poles are the Nation of the Vistula, and their settlements extend from the sources of the river to its estuary. ... It is only fair that the claim of the river-basin should prevail against that of the seaboard."[52]

Economic reasons edit

The Poles held the view that without direct access to the Baltic Sea, Poland's economic independence would be illusory.[53] Around 60.5% of Polish import trade and 55.1% of exports went through the area.[54] The report of the Polish Commission presented to the Allied Supreme Council said:

1,600,000 Germans in East Prussia can be adequately protected by securing for them freedom of trade across the corridor, whereas it would be impossible to give an adequate outlet to the inhabitants of the new Polish state (numbering 25,000,000) if this outlet had to be guaranteed across the territory of an alien and probably hostile Power.[55]

The United Kingdom eventually accepted this argument.[53] The suppression of the Polish Corridor would have abolished the economic ability of Poland to resist dependence on Germany.[56] As Lewis Bernstein Namier, Professor of Modern History at the University of Manchester and known for both his "legendary hatred of Germany"[50] and Germanophobia[51] as well as his anti-Polish attitude[49] directed against what he defined as the "aggressive, antisemitic and warmongerily imperialist" part of Poland,[57] wrote in a newspaper article in 1933:

The whole of Poland's transport system ran towards the mouth of the Vistula. ... 90% of Polish exports came from her western provinces.[58] ... Cutting through of the Corridor has meant a minor amputation for Germany; its closing up would mean strangulation for Poland."[59]

By 1938, 77.7% of Polish exports left either through Gdańsk (31.6%) or the newly built port of Gdynia (46.1%)[60]

The Inquiry's opinion edit

David Hunter Miller, in his diary from the Paris Peace Conference, noted that the problem of Polish access to the sea was very difficult because leaving entire Pomerelia under German control meant cutting off millions of Poles from their commercial outlet and leaving several hundred thousand Poles under German rule, while granting such access meant cutting off East Prussia from the rest of Germany. The Inquiry recommended that both the Corridor and Danzig should have been ceded directly to Poland.

It is believed that the lesser of these evils is preferable, and that the Corridor and Danzig should [both] be ceded to Poland, as shown on map 6. East Prussia, though territorially cut off from the rest of Germany, could easily be assured railroad transit across the Polish corridor (a simple matter as compared with assuring port facilities to Poland), and has, in addition, excellent communication via Königsberg and the Baltic Sea. In either case a people is asked to entrust large interests to the League of Nations. In the case of Poland they are vital interests; in the case of Germany, aside from Prussian sentiment, they are quite secondary".[36]

In the end, The Inquiry's recommendations were only partially implemented: most of West Prussia was given to Poland, but Danzig became a Free City.

Incorporation into the Second Polish Republic edit

During World War I, the Central Powers had forced the Imperial Russian troops out of Congress Poland and Galicia, as manifested in the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk on 3 March 1918. Following the military defeat of Austria-Hungary, an independent Polish republic was declared in western Galicia on 3 November 1918, the same day Austria signed the armistice. The collapse of Imperial Germany's Western Front, and the subsequent withdrawal of her remaining occupation forces after the Armistice of Compiègne on 11 November allowed the republic led by Roman Dmowski and Józef Piłsudski to seize control over the former Congress Polish areas. Also in November, the revolution in Germany forced Kaiser Wilhelm II's abdication and gave way to the establishment of the Weimar Republic. Starting in December, the Polish-Ukrainian War expanded the Polish republic's territory to include Volhynia and parts of eastern Galicia, while at the same time the German Province of Posen (where even according to the German made 1910 census 61.5% of the population was Polish) was severed by the Greater Poland uprising, which succeeded in attaching most of the province's territory to Poland by January 1919. This led Weimar's Otto Landsberg and Rudolf Breitscheid to call for an armed force to secure Germany's remaining eastern territories (some of which contained significant Polish minorities, primarily on the former Prussian partition territories). The call was answered by the minister of defence Gustav Noske, who decreed support for raising and deploying volunteer Grenzschutz [de] forces to secure East Prussia, Silesia and the Netze District.[61]

On 18 January, the Paris peace conference opened,[62] resulting in the draft of the Treaty of Versailles 28 June 1919. Articles 27 and 28 of the treaty[63] ruled on the territorial shape of the corridor, while articles 89 to 93 ruled on transit, citizenship and property issues.[64] Per the terms of the Versailles treaty, which was put into effect on 20 January 1920, the corridor was established as Poland's access to the Baltic Sea from 70% of the dissolved province of West Prussia,[65] consisting of a small part of Pomerania with around 140 km of coastline including the Hel Peninsula, and 69 km without it.[66]

The primarily German-speaking seaport of Danzig (Gdańsk), controlling the estuary of the main Polish waterway, the Vistula river, became the Free City of Danzig and was placed under the protection of the League of Nations without a plebiscite.[67] After the dock workers of Danzig harbour went on strike during the Polish–Soviet War, refusing to unload ammunition,[68] the Polish Government decided to build an ammunition depot at Westerplatte, and a seaport at Gdynia in the territory of the Corridor, connected to the Upper Silesian industrial centers by the newly constructed Polish Coal Trunk Line railways.

Exodus of the German population edit

 
A Polish-language poster, illustrating the drop in German population in selected cities of western Poland in the period 1910–1931

The German author Christian Raitz von Frentz writes that after First World War ended, the Polish government tried to reverse the systematic Germanization from former decades.[69] Frederick the Great (King in/of Prussia from 1740 to 1786) settled around 300,000 colonists in the eastern provinces of Prussia and aimed at a removal of the Polish nobility, which he treated with contempt. Frederick also described Poles as "slovenly Polish trash" and compared them to the Iroquois.[70][71] On the other hand, he encouraged administrators and teachers who could speak both German and Polish.[72] Prussia pursued a second colonization aimed at Germanization after 1832.[73] The Prussians passed laws aiming at Germanization of the provinces of Posen and West Prussia in the late 19th century. The Prussian Settlement Commission established a further 154,000 colonists, including locals, in the provinces of Posen and West Prussia before World War I. Military personnel were included in the population census. A number of German civil servants and merchants were introduced to the area, which influenced the population status.[74]

According to Richard Blanke, 421,029 Germans lived in the area in 1910, making up 42.5% of the population.[75] Blanke has been criticized by Christian Raitz von Frentz, who has classified his book as part of a series on the subject that has an anti-Polish bias; additionally Polish professor A. Cienciala has described Blanke's views as sympathetic to Germany.[76] In addition to the military personnel included in the population census, a number of German civil-servants and merchants were introduced to the area, which influenced the population mix, according to Andrzej Chwalba.[74] By 1921 the proportion of Germans had dropped to 18.8% (175,771). Over the next decade, the German population decreased by another 70,000 to a share of 9.6%.[77]

German political scientist Stefan Wolff, Professor at the University of Birmingham, claims that the actions of Polish state officials after the corridor's establishment followed "a course of assimilation and oppression".[78] As a result, a large number of Germans left Poland after 1918: according to Wolff, 800,000 Germans had left Poland by 1923,[78] according to Gotthold Rhode, 575,000 left the former province of Posen and the corridor after the war,[79] according to Herrmann Rauschning, 800,000 Germans had left between 1918 and 1926,[79] contemporary author Alfons Krysinski estimated 800,000 plus 100,000 from East Upper Silesia,[79] the contemporary German statistics say 592,000 Germans had left by 1921,[79] other Polish scholars say that up to a million Germans left.[79] Polish author Władysław Kulski says that a number of them were civil servants with no roots in the province and around 378,000,[clarification needed] and this is to a lesser degree is confirmed by some German sources such as Hermann Rauschning.[80] Lewis Bernstein Namier raised the question as to whether many of the Germans who left were actually settlers without roots in the area - Namier remarked in 1933 "a question must be raised how many of those Germans had originally been planted artificially in that country by the Prussian Government."[81]

The above-mentioned Richard Blanke, in his book Orphans of Versailles, gives several reasons for the exodus of the German population:

  • A number of former settlers from the Prussian Settlement Commission who settled in the area after 1886 in order to Germanize it were in some cases given a month to leave, in other cases they were told to leave at once.[80]
  • Poland found itself under threat during the Polish-Bolshevik war of 1919–1921,[80] and the German population feared that Bolshevik forces would control Poland. Migration to Germany was a way to avoid conscription and participation in the war.
  • State-employed Germans such as judges, prosecutors, teachers and officials left as Poland did not renew their employment contracts. German industrial workers also left due to fear of lower-wage competition. Many Germans had become economically dependent on Prussian state aid as Prussia had fought the "Polish problem" in its provinces.[80]
  • Germans refused to accept living in a Polish state.[80] As Lewis Bernstein Namier said: "Some Germans undoubtedly left because they would not live under the dominion of a race which they had previously oppressed and despised."[82]
  • Germans feared that the Poles would seek reprisals after over a century of harassment and discrimination by the Prussian and German state against the Polish population.[80]
  • Social and linguistic isolation: While the population was mixed, only Poles were required to be bilingual. The Germans usually did not learn Polish. When Polish became the only official language in Polish-majority provinces, their situation became difficult. The Poles shunned Germans, which contributed to their isolation.[80]
  • Lower standards of living. Poland was a much poorer country than Germany.[80]
  • Former Nazi politician and later opponent Hermann Rauschning wrote that 10% of Germans were unwilling to remain in Poland regardless of their treatment, and another 10% were workers from other parts of the German Empire with no roots in the region.[80]

Blanke says that official encouragement by the Polish state played a secondary role in the German exodus.[80] Christian Raitz von Frentz notes "that many of the repressive measures were taken by local and regional Polish authorities in defiance of Acts of Parliament and government decrees, which more often than not conformed with the minorities treaty, the Geneva Convention and their interpretation by the League council – though it is also true that some of the central authorities tacitly tolerated local initiatives against the German population."[69] While there were demonstrations and protests and occasional violence against Germans, they were at a local level, and officials were quick to point out that they were a backlash against former discrimination against Poles.[80] There were other demonstrations when Germans showed disloyalty during the Polish–Soviet War[80] as the Red Army announced the return to the pre-war borders of 1914.[83] Despite popular pressure and occasional local actions, perhaps as many as 80% of Germans emigrated more or less voluntarily.[80]

Helmut Lippelt writes that Germany used the existence of the German minority in Poland for political ends and as part of its revisionist demands, which resulted in Polish countermeasures. Polish Prime Minister Władysław Sikorski stated in 1923 that the de-Germanization of these territories had to be ended by vigorous and quick liquidation of property and eviction of German "Optanten" (Germans who refused to accept Polish citizenship and per the Versailles Treaty were to leave Poland) so that German nationalists would realize that their view of the temporary state of Polish western border was wrong.[84][dubious ][verification needed] To Lippelt this was partially a reaction to the German claims and partially Polish nationalism, urging to exclude the German element. In turn, anti-Polish prejudice fueled German policy.[84]

Impact on the East Prussian plebiscite edit

In the period leading up to the East Prussian plebiscite in July 1920, the Polish authorities tried to prevent traffic through the Corridor, interrupting postal, telegraphic and telephone communication.[85] On March 10, 1920, the British representative on the Marienwerder Plebiscite Commission, H. D. Beaumont, wrote of numerous continuing difficulties being made by Polish officials and added "as a result, the ill-will between Polish and German nationalities and the irritation due to Polish intolerance towards the German inhabitants in the Corridor (now under their rule), far worse than any former German intolerance of the Poles, are growing to such an extent that it is impossible to believe the present settlement (borders) can have any chance of being permanent. ... It can confidently be asserted that not even the most attractive economic advantages would induce any German to vote Polish. If the frontier is unsatisfactory now, it will be far more so when it has to be drawn on this side (of the river) with no natural line to follow, cutting off Germany from the river bank and within a mile or so of Marienwerder, which is certain to vote German. I know of no similar frontier created by any treaty."[85]

Impact on German through-traffic edit

The German Ministry for Transport established the Seedienst Ostpreußen ('Sea Service East Prussia') in 1922 to provide a ferry connection to East Prussia, now a German exclave, so that it would be less dependent on transit through Polish territory.

Connections by train were also possible by sealing the carriages (Korridorzug), i.e. passengers were not forced to apply for an official Polish visa in their passport; however, the rigorous inspections by the Polish authorities before and after the sealing were strongly feared by the passengers.[86]

In May 1925, a train passing through the corridor on its way to East Prussia crashed, because the spikes had been removed from the tracks for a short distance and the fishplates unbolted. 25 persons, including 12 women and 2 children, were killed, some 30 others were injured.[87]

Land reform of 1925 edit

According to Polish historian Andrzej Chwalba, during the rule of the Kingdom of Prussia and the German Empire various means were used to increase the amount of land owned by Germans at the expense of the Polish population. In Prussia, the Polish nobility had its estates confiscated after the Partitions, and handed over to German nobility.[88] The same applied to Catholic monasteries.[88] Later, the German Empire bought up land in an attempt to prevent the restoration of a Polish majority in Polish inhabited areas in its eastern provinces.[89] Christian Raitz von Frentz notes that measures aimed at reversing past Germanization included the liquidation of farms settled by the German government during the war under the 1908 law.[69]

In 1925 the Polish government enacted a land reform program with the aim of expropriating landowners.[90] While only 39% of the agricultural land in the Corridor was owned by Germans,[90] the first annual list of properties to be reformed included 10,800 hectares from 32 German landowners and 950 hectares from seven Poles.[90] The voivode of Pomorze, Wiktor Lamot, stressed that "the part of Pomorze through which the so-called corridor runs must be cleansed of larger German holdings".[90] The coastal region "must be settled with a nationally conscious Polish population. ... Estates belonging to Germans must be taxed more heavily to encourage them voluntarily to turn over land for settlement. Border counties ... particularly a strip of land ten kilometers wide, must be settled with Poles. German estates that lie here must be reduced without concern for their economic value or the views of their owners".[90]

Prominent politicians and members of the German minority were the first to be included on the land reform list and to have their property expropriated.[90]

Weimar German interests edit

The creation of the corridor aroused great resentment in Germany, and all interwar governments of the Weimar Republic refused to recognize the eastern borders agreed at Versailles, and refused to follow Germany's acknowledgment of its western borders in the Locarno Treaties of 1925 with a similar declaration with respect to its eastern borders.[78]

Institutions in Weimar Germany supported and encouraged German minority organizations in Poland, in part radicalized by the Polish policy towards them, in filing close to 10,000 complaints about violations of minority rights to the League of Nations.[78]

Poland in 1931 declared her commitment to peace, but pointed out that any attempt to revise its borders would mean war. Additionally, in conversation with U.S. President Herbert Hoover, Polish delegate Filipowicz noted that any continued provocations by Germany could tempt the Polish side to invade, in order to settle the issue once and for all.[91]

Nazi German and Polish diplomacy edit

The Nazi Party, led by Adolf Hitler, took power in Germany in 1933. Hitler at first ostentatiously pursued a policy of rapprochement with Poland,[92] culminating in the ten-year Polish-German Non-Aggression Pact of 1934. In the years that followed, Germany placed an emphasis on rearmament, as did Poland and other European powers.[93][94] Despite this, the Nazis were able to achieve their immediate goals without provoking armed conflict: firstly, in March 1938 Nazi Germany annexed Austria, and in the late September the Sudetenland after the Munich Agreement; Poland also made an advance against Czechoslovakia and annexed Trans-Olza (1 October 1938).[95] Germany tried to get Poland to join the Anti-Comintern Pact. Poland refused, as the alliance was rapidly becoming a sphere of influence of an increasingly powerful Germany.[96] On 24 October 1938, the German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop asked the Polish ambassador Józef Lipski to have Poland sign the Anti-Comintern Pact.[97] During a visit to Rome on 27–28 October 1938, Ribbentrop told the Italian Foreign Minister Count Galeazzo Ciano that he wanted to turn the Anti-Comintern Pact into a military alliance, and spoke of his desire to have Poland, Yugoslavia, Hungary and Romania sign the Anti-Comintern Pact so "all our energies can be directed against the Western democracies".[97] In a secret speech before a group of 200 German journalists on 10 November 1938, Hitler complained that his peace propaganda stressing that his foreign policy was based upon the peaceful revision of the Treaty of Versailles had been too successful with the German people, and he called for a new propaganda campaign intended to stoke a bellicose mood in Germany.[98] Notably, the enemies Hitler had in mind in his speech was not Poland, but rather France and Britain.[99]

Following negotiations with Hitler on the Munich Agreement, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain reported that, "He told me privately, and last night he repeated publicly, that after this Sudeten German question is settled, that is the end of Germany's territorial claims in Europe".[100] Almost immediately following the agreement, however, Hitler reneged on it. The Nazis increased their requests for the incorporation of the Free City of Danzig into Germany, citing the "protection" of the German majority as a motive.[101] In November 1938, Danzig's district administrator, Albert Forster, reported to the League of Nations that Hitler had told him Polish frontiers would be guaranteed if the Poles were "reasonable like the Czechs." German State Secretary Ernst von Weizsäcker reaffirmed this alleged guarantee in December 1938.[102] In the winter of 1938–1939, Germany placed increasing pressure on Poland and Hungary to sign the Anti-Comintern Pact.[103]

Initially, the main concern of German diplomacy was not Danzig or the Polish Corridor, but rather having Poland sign the Anti-Comintern Pact, which as the American historian Gerhard Weinberg noted was "... a formal gesture of political and diplomatic obeisance to Berlin, separating them from any other past or prospective international ties, and having nothing to do with the Soviet Union at all".[103] In late 1938–early 1939, Hitler had decided upon war with Britain and France, and having Poland sign the Anti-Comintern Pact was intended to protect Germany's eastern border while the Wehrmacht turned west.[103] In November 1938, Hitler ordered his Foreign Minister Ribbentrop to convert the Anti-Comintern Pact, which had been signed with the Empire of Japan in 1936 and joined by Fascist Italy in 1937 into an anti-British military alliance.[103] Starting in October 1938, the main focus on German military planning was for a war against Britain with Hitler ordering the Luftwaffe to start building a strategical bombing force capable of bombing British cities.[104] On 17 January 1939, Hitler approved of the famous Z Plan that called for a gigantic fleet to take on the Royal Navy and on 27 January 1939 he ordered that henceforward the Kriegsmarine was to have first priority for defence spending.[104]

The situation regarding the Free City and the Polish Corridor created a number of headaches for German and Polish customs.[105] The Germans requested the construction of an extra-territorial Reichsautobahn freeway (to complete the Reichsautobahn Berlin-Königsberg) and railway through the Polish Corridor, effectively annexing Polish territory and connecting East Prussia to Danzig and Germany proper, while cutting off Poland from the sea and its main trade route. If Poland agreed, in return they would extend the non-aggression pact for 25 years.[106]

This seemed to conflict with Hitler's plans to turn Poland into a satellite state and with Poland's rejection of the Anti-Comintern Pact, and his desire either to isolate or to gain support against the Soviet Union.[106] German newspapers in Danzig and Nazi Germany played an important role in inciting nationalist sentiment: headlines buzzed about how Poland was misusing its economic rights in Danzig and German Danzigers were increasingly subjugated to the will of the Polish state.[101] At the same time, Hitler also offered Poland additional territory as an enticement, such as the possible annexation of Lithuania, the Memel Territory, Soviet Ukraine and parts of the Czech lands.[107][108] However, Polish leaders continued to fear for the loss of their independence and a fate like that of Czechoslovakia,[108] which had yielded the Sudetenland to Germany in October 1938, only to be invaded by Germany in March 1939. Some felt that the Danzig question was inextricably tied to the problems in the Polish Corridor and any settlement regarding Danzig would be one step towards the eventual loss of Poland's access to the sea.[101] Hitler's credibility outside Germany was very low after the occupation of Czechoslovakia, though some British and French politicians approved of a peaceful revision of the corridor's borders.[109]

In 1939, Nazi Germany made another attempt to renegotiate the status of Danzig;[102][110][111] Poland was to retain a permanent right to use the seaport if the route through the Polish Corridor was to be constructed.[110] However, the Polish administration distrusted Hitler and saw the plan as a threat to Polish sovereignty, practically subordinating Poland to the Axis and the Anti-Comintern Bloc while reducing the country to a state of near-servitude as its entire trade would be dependent on Germany.[112][113] Robert Coulondre, the French ambassador in Berlin in a dispatch to the Foreign Minister Georges Bonnet wrote on 30 April 1939 that Hitler sought: "...a mortgage on Polish foreign policy, while itself retaining complete liberty of action allowing the conclusion of political agreements with other countries. In these circumstances, the new settlement proposed by Germany, which would link the questions of Danzig and of the passage across the Corridor with counterbalancing questions of a political nature, would only serve to aggravate this mortgage and practically subordinate Poland to the Axis and the Anti-Comintern Bloc. Warsaw refused this in order to retain its independence."[112]

Hitler used the issue of the status city as pretext for attacking Poland, while explaining during a high-level meeting of German military officials in May 1939 that his real goal is obtaining Lebensraum for Germany, isolating Poles from their Allies in the West and afterwards attacking Poland, thus avoiding the repeat of the Czech situation, where the Western powers became involved.[114][115][116][117][118]

Ultimatum of 1939 edit

A revised and less favorable proposal came in the form of an ultimatum delivered by the Nazis in late August, after the orders had already been given to attack Poland on September 1, 1939. Nevertheless, at midnight on August 29, von Ribbentrop handed British Ambassador Sir Nevile Henderson a list of terms that would allegedly ensure peace in regard to Poland. Danzig was to return to Germany and there was to be a plebiscite in the Polish Corridor; Poles who had been born or had settled there since 1919 would have no vote, while all Germans born but not living there would. An exchange of minority populations between the two countries was proposed. If Poland accepted these terms, Germany would agree to the British offer of an international guarantee, which would include the Soviet Union. A Polish plenipotentiary, with full powers, was to arrive in Berlin and accept these terms by noon the next day. The British Cabinet viewed the terms as "reasonable," except the demand for a Polish plenipotentiary, which was seen as similar to Czechoslovak President Emil Hácha accepting Hitler's terms in mid-March 1939.

When Ambassador Józef Lipski went to see Ribbentrop on August 30, he was presented with Hitler's demands. However, he did not have the full power to sign and Ribbentrop ended the meeting. News was then broadcast that Poland had rejected Germany's offer.[102]

Nazi German invasion – end of the corridor edit

On September 1, 1939, Germany invaded Poland. The German Fourth Army defeated the Polish Pomorze Army, which had been tasked with the defence of this region, and captured the corridor during the Battle of Tuchola Forest by September 5. The corridor was subsequently directly annexed by Germany until it was recaptured by the Red Army at the end of the war.[119] Other notable battles took place at Westerplatte, the Polish post office in Danzig, Oksywie, and Hel.

Ethnic composition edit

Most of the area was inhabited by Poles, Germans, and Kashubians. The census of 1910 showed that there were 528,000 Poles (including West Slavic Kashubians) compared to 385,000 Germans in the region.[41] The census included German soldiers stationed in the area as well as public officials sent to administer the area. Since 1886, a Settlement Commission was set up by Prussia to enforce German settlement[120] while at the same time Poles, Jews and Germans migrated west during the Ostflucht.[121] In 1921 the proportion of Germans in Pomerania (where the Corridor was located) was 18.8% (175,771). Over the next decade, the German population decreased by another 70,000 to a share of 9.6%.[77] There was also a Jewish minority. in 1905, Kashubians numbered about 72,500.[122] After the occupation by Nazi Germany, a census was made by the German authorities in December 1939. 71% of people declared themselves as Poles, 188,000 people declared Kashubian as their language, 100,000 of those declared themselves Polish.[123]

German population in the Polish Corridor as of 1921, per Blanke 1993[124]
County Total population German population German percentage
Działdowo (Soldau) 23,290 8,187 34.5% (35.2%)
Lubawa (Löbau) 59,765 4,478 7.6%
Brodnica (Strasburg) 61,180 9,599 15.7%
Wąbrzeźno (Briesen) 47,100 14,678 31.1%
Toruń (Thorn) 79,247 16,175 20.4%
Chełmno (Kulm) 46,823 12,872 27.5%
Świecie (Schwetz) 83,138 20,178 24.3%
Grudziądz (Graudenz) 77,031 21,401 27.8%
Tczew (Dirschau) 62,905 7,854 12.5%
Wejherowo (Neustadt) 71,692 7,857 11.0%
Kartuzy (Karthaus) 64,631 5,037 7.8%
Kościerzyna (Berent) 49,935 9,290 18.6%
Starogard Gdański (Preußisch Stargard) 62,400 5,946 9.5%
Chojnice (Konitz) 71,018 13,129 18.5%
Tuchola (Tuchel) 34,445 5,660 16.4%
Sępólno Krajeńskie (Zempelburg) 27,876 13,430 48.2%
Total 935,643
(922,476 when added)
175,771
 
18.8%
(19.1% with 922,476)

After World War II edit

 
The Oder–Neisse line

At the 1945 Potsdam Conference following the German defeat in World War II, Poland's borders were reorganized at the insistence of the Soviet Union, which occupied the entire area. Territories east of the Oder-Neisse line, including Danzig, were put under Polish administration. The conference did not debate about the future of the territories that were part of western Poland before the war, including the corridor. It automatically became part of the reborn state in 1945.

Many German residents were executed,[citation needed] others were expelled to the Soviet occupation zone, which later became East Germany.

The corridor in literature edit

In The Shape of Things to Come, published in 1933, H. G. Wells correctly predicted that the corridor would be the starting point of a future Second World War. He depicted the war as beginning in January 1940 and would involve heavy aerial bombing of civilians, but that it would result in a 10-year trench warfare-esque stalemate between Poland and Germany eventually leading to a worldwide societal collapse in the 1950s.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Польский коридор" in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 1969–1978 (in Russian)
  2. ^ A History of Western Civilization: Then came the acquisition of Prussia (separated from Brandenburg by the "Polish corridor") page 382, author Roland N. Stromberg Dorsey Press 1969.
  3. ^ The Scandinavians in History. "Brandenburg, by the acquisition of Eastern Pomerania besides other territories within the empire was firmly established on the Baltic, though a Polish corridor running between Eastern Pomerania and East Prussia to Danzig denied her all she desired", page 174, author Stanley Mease Toyne. Ayer Publishing 1970
  4. ^ Hartmut Boockmann, Ostpreussen und Westpreussen, Siedler 2002, p. 401, ISBN 3-88680-212-4 [1]
  5. ^ Grzegorz Lukomski, The problem of Corridor in the Polish-German relationships and on the international stage 1918 - 1939. A political study 2012-02-24 at the Wayback Machine (in Polish)
  6. ^ The New York Times: March 18, 1919: Outlines Polish "Corridor"; Paris Paper Sketches Proposed Strip to Danzig.; March 17, 1919: Plan to Give Germany Land Communication Across Polish Corridor to the Baltic
  7. ^ Edmund Jan Osmańczyk, Anthony Mango, Encyclopedia of the United Nations and international agreements, 3rd edition, Taylor & Francis, 2003, p.1818, ISBN 0-415-93921-6: "Polish Corridor: International term for Poland's access to the Baltic in 1919–1939."
  8. ^ Hartmut Boockmann, Ostpreussen und Westpreussen, Siedler 2002, p. 401,ISBN 3-88680-212-4 [2]
  9. ^ e.g.The New York Times: March 18, 1919: POLISH "CORRIDOR."; Paris Paper Sketches Proposed Strip to Danzig.; August 16, 1920: Russians Hoist the German Flag Over Soldau; Say Polish Corridor Will Be Returned to Germany; March 17, 1919: Plan to Give Germany Land Communication Across Polish Corridor to the Baltic; November 16, 1930 Europe Sorest Spot: The Polish Corridor.; The Old German Port of Danzig; August 17, 1932 Germans United On Polish Corridor
  10. ^ Denmark: Salmonsens Konversationsleksikon, e.g., in the article about railways: ("the German railway network was reduced due to [Germany's] territorial concessions following the [first world] war and is cut in two separate parts by the Polish corridor.") [3] (1930) and article about Poland [4] (1924)
  11. ^ "New York Times early 1919" (PDF).
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 9 February 2009.
  13. ^ Barbara Dotts Paul, The Polish-German Borderlands: An Annotated Bibliography, Greenwood Publishing Group, 1994, ISBN 0-313-29162-4: contains an abundant collection of contemporary sources using Polish or Danzig Corridor
  14. ^ Official webpage of Polish Sejm, Chronicle of speeches[permanent dead link]
  15. ^ a b James Minahan, One Europe, Many Nations: A Historical Dictionary of European National Groups, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2000, p. 375, ISBN 0-313-30984-1
  16. ^ W. D. Halsey, L. Shores, Bernard Johnston, Emanuel Friedman, Merit Students Encyclopedia, Macmillan Educational Corporation, 1979, p. 195: Pomerelia, independent in 1227 and thereafter
  17. ^ A Lasting Peace page 127, James Clerk Maxwell Garnett, Heinrich F. Koeppler – 1940
  18. ^ Arms and Policy, 1939–1944 page 40, Hoffman Nickerson – 1945
  19. ^ The Congress of Vienna: A Study in Allied Unity, 1812–1822 page 279, Harold Nicolson. Grove Pres 2000
  20. ^ Urban Societies in East-Central Europe, pages 190–191, Jaroslav Miller 2008
  21. ^ a b Hassel, Georg (1823). Statistischer Umriß der sämmtlichen europäischen und der vornehmsten außereuropäischen Staaten, in Hinsicht ihrer Entwickelung, Größe, Volksmenge, Finanz- und Militärverfassung, tabellarisch dargestellt; Erster Heft: Welcher die beiden großen Mächte Österreich und Preußen und den Deutschen Staatenbund darstellt. Verlag des Geographischen Instituts Weimar. p. 42.
  22. ^ Andree, Karl (1831). Polen: in geographischer, geschichtlicher und culturhistorischer Hinsicht. Verlag von Ludwig Schumann. p. 212.
  23. ^ a b Dura, Lucjusz (1919). "Mapa rozsiedlenia ludności polskiej: z uwzględnieniem spisów władz okupacyjnych w 1916 r. [Map of the distribution of Polish population: taking into account the censuses of 1916]". polona.pl/. Retrieved 31 October 2019.
  24. ^ Mordawski, Jan (2017). (PDF) (in Polish). Gdańsk: Zrzeszenie Kaszubsko-Pomorskie. pp. 35–36. ISBN 978-83-62137-38-1. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 21, 2020.
  25. ^ a b c d Belzyt, Leszek (2017). (PDF). Acta Cassubiana. 19: 233. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-07-03. Retrieved 2019-10-31 – via BazHum MuzHP.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Belzyt, Leszek (2017). (PDF). Acta Cassubiana. 19: 194–235. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-07-03. Retrieved 2019-10-31 – via BazHum MuzHP.
  27. ^ (PDF). kaszebsko.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 September 2021. Retrieved 31 October 2019.
  28. ^ Ramułt, Stefan (1899). Statystyka ludności kaszubskiej (in Polish). Cracow.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  29. ^ Andrzejewski, Czesław (1919). Żywioł niemiecki w zachodniej Polsce. Poznań. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  30. ^ Szczurek, Wiesław (2002). "Liczba i rozmieszczenie ludności niemieckiej na Pomorzu w okresie II Rzeczypospolitej". Państwo i społeczeństwo. 2 (II): 163–175. ISSN 1643-8299 – via Repozytorium eRIKA.
  31. ^ Blanke, Richard (1993). Orphans of Versailles. The Germans in Western Poland 1918–1939. Lexington, KY.: University Press of Kentucky. pp. 244–245. ISBN 978-0813156330.
  32. ^ The text of Woodrow's Fourteen Points Speech 2005-06-22 at the Wayback Machine
  33. ^ The Danzig Dilemma; A Study in Peacemaking by Compromise – "This report was origin of the famous Polish corridor to the Baltic which the Commission proposed on ethnographic grounds as well as to give Poland her promised free and secure access to the sea", John Brown Mason, page 50
  34. ^ Anna M. Cienciala, Natalia Sergeevna Lebedeva, Wojciech Materski, Maia A. Kipp, Katyn: A Crime without Punishment, Yale University Press, 2008, ISBN 0-300-10851-6, Google Print, p.15
  35. ^ The Danzig Dilemma; a Study in Peacemaking by Compromise: A Study in Peacemaking by Compromise. John Brown Mason. page 49
  36. ^ a b Hunter Miller, David (1924). My Diary at Conference of Paris. Vol. IV. New York: Appeal Printing Company. pp. 224–227.
  37. ^ Gdańskie Zeszyty Humanistyczne: Seria pomorzoznawcza Page 17, Wyższa Szkoła Pedagogiczna (Gdańsk). Wydział Humanistyczny, Instytut Bałtycki, Instytut Bałtycki (Poland) – 1967
  38. ^ Położenie mniejszości niemieckiej w Polsce 1918–1938 Page 183, Stanisław Potocki – 1969
  39. ^ Rocznik gdański organ Towarzystwa Przyjaciół Nauki i Sztuki w Gdańsku – page 100, 1983
  40. ^ Do niepodległości 1918, 1944/45, 1989: wizje, drogi, spełnienie page 43, Wojciech Wrzesiński – 1998
  41. ^ a b "Principles and Problems of International Relations" page 608 H. Arthur Steiner – 1940
  42. ^ Blanke, Richard. (Appendix B. German Population of Western Poland by Province and Country). University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0813130417.
  43. ^ Kozicki, Stanislas (1918). The Poles under Prussian rule. London: Polish Press Bur. p. 5.
  44. ^ The Danzig Dilemma a Study in Peacemaking by Compromise by John Brown Mason Stanford University Press 1946, page 49
  45. ^ A History of Modern Germany, 1800–2000 page 130, Martin Kitchen Blackwell Publishing 2006
  46. ^ Albert S. Lindemann (2000). Anti-Semitism before the Holocaust. Pearson. p. 128. ISBN 978-0-582-36964-1. Retrieved 2010-12-21.
    Kelly Boyd (1999). Encyclopedia of historians and historical writing. Fitzroy Dearborn. ISBN 978-1-884964-33-6. Retrieved 2009-07-06.
  47. ^ Gary S. Messinger (1992). British Propaganda and the State in the First World War. Manchester University Press ND. ISBN 978-0-7190-3014-7. Retrieved 2009-07-06.
  48. ^ Christopher Hill, Pamela Beshoff (1994). Two Worlds of International Relations. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-06970-0. Retrieved 2009-07-06.
  49. ^ a b Niepodległość, Tom 21 Pilsudski Institute of America Instytut Józefa Piłsudskiego Poświecony Badaniu Najnowszej Historii Polski., 1988 page 58
  50. ^ a b Wrigley, Chris (2006). A.J.P. Taylor, Radical Historian of Europe. I.B. Tauris. p. 70. ISBN 1-86064-286-1. Namier.
  51. ^ a b Crozier, Andrew J. (1997). The causes of the Second World War. Wiley. ISBN 9780631186014.
  52. ^ In the Margin of History, p. 44 by Lewis Bernstein Namier
  53. ^ a b Out of the Ashes James Thorburn Muirhead 1941, page 54
  54. ^ The Crises of France's East Central European Diplomacy, 1933–1938 – p. 40. Anthony Tihamer Komjathy – 1976
  55. ^ The Danzig dilemma: a study in peacemaking by compromise by John Brown Mason, Stanford University Press, 1946, page 49
  56. ^ Review of Reviews page 67. Albert Shaw, 1931
  57. ^ Chasin, Stephanie (2008). Citizens of Empire: Jews in the Service of the British Empire (1906–1949). University of California. p. 206. ISBN 9781109022278.[permanent dead link]
  58. ^ The New Europe, page 91 - by Bernard Newman, 1942
  59. ^ Namier, Lewis Bernstein (1969). In the Margin of History. Books for Libraries Press. p. 44. ISBN 978-0-8369-0050-7.
  60. ^ Przegląd zachodni: Volume 60, Issues 3–4 Instytut Zachodni - 2004, page 42
  61. ^ T. Hunt Tooley, National identity and Weimar Germany: Upper Silesia and the eastern border, 1918–1922, University of Nebraska Press, 1997, pp. 36–37, ISBN 0-8032-4429-0
  62. ^ T. Hunt Tooley, National identity and Weimar Germany: Upper Silesia and the eastern border, 1918–1922, University of Nebraska Press, 1997, p.38, ISBN 0-8032-4429-0
  63. ^ Treaty of Versailles, §§1–30 [5]
  64. ^ Treaty of Versailles, §§31–117 [6]
  65. ^ "BPB on Poland".
  66. ^ Leśniewski, Andrzej; et al. (1959). Sobański, Wacław (ed.). Western and Northern territories of Poland : Facts and problems. Studies and monographs. Poznań – Warszawa: Wydawnictwo Zachodnie (Publishing House of the Zachodnia Agencja Prasowa). p. 7.
  67. ^ Eberhard Kolb, The Weimar Republic, 2nd edition, Routledge, 2004, p.27, ISBN 0-415-34442-5 [7]
  68. ^ The Danzig dilemma a study in peacemaking by compromise by John Brown Mason Stanford university press 1946, page 116
  69. ^ a b c A Lesson Forgotten: Minority Protection Under the League of Nations: The Case of the German Minority in Poland, 1920-1934 page 8. LIT Verlag Berlin-Hamburg-Münster, 1999
  70. ^ Ritter, Gerhard (1974). Frederick the Great: A Historical Profile. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 179–180. ISBN 0-520-02775-2. It has been estimated that during his reign 300,000 individuals settled in Prussia.... While the commission for colonization established in the Bismarck era could in the course of two decades bring no more than 11,957 families to the eastern territories, Frederick settled a total of 57,475.... It increased the German character of the population in the monarchy's provinces to a very significant degree.... in West Prussia where he wished to drive out the Polish nobility and bring as many of their large estates as possible into German hands.
  71. ^ "In fact from Hitler to Hans we find frequent references and Jews as Indians. This, too, was a long standing trope. It can be traced back to Frederick the Great, who likened the 'slovenly Polish trash' in newly reconquered West Prussia to Iroquois." Localism, Landscape, and the Ambiguities of Place: German-speaking Central Europe, 1860–1930 David Blackbourn, James N. Retallack University of Toronto 2007
  72. ^ Compare: Koch, Hannsjoachim Wolfgang (1978). "6: Frederick the Great". A History of Prussia. London: Routledge (published 2014). p. 136. ISBN 9781317873082. Retrieved 2017-10-20. [...] by 1778 there were 277 Protestant and 58 Catholic teachers employed in the Bromberg region (the present-day Bydgoszcz) with strong preference being given to those who could speak Polish in addition to their native German. Frederick's instruction to his successor to acquire a knowledge of Polish also dates from this period.
  73. ^ Wielka historia Polski t. 4 Polska w czasach walk o niepodległość (1815–1864). Od niewoli do niepodległości (1864 - 1918) Marian Zagórniak, Józef Buszko 2003 page 186.
  74. ^ a b Historia Polski 1795–1918. Andrzej Chwalba. Page 444.
  75. ^ Blanke, Richard. Orphans of Versailles Appendix B. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0813130417.
  76. ^ . Web.ku.edu. Archived from the original on 2013-05-15. Retrieved 2009-05-06.
  77. ^ a b Page 244 (Appendix B. German Population of Western Poland by Province and Country)
  78. ^ a b c d Stefan Wolff, The German Question Since 1919: An Analysis with Key Documents, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2003, p.33, ISBN 0-275-97269-0
  79. ^ a b c d e Blanke, Richard (1993). Orphans of Versailles: the Germans in Western Poland, 1918–1939. University Press of Kentucky. pp. 33–34. ISBN 0-8131-1803-4. Retrieved 2009-09-05.
  80. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Orphans of Versailles: The Germans in Western Poland, 1918–1939. pp. 32–48. Richard Blanke. University Press of Kentucky, 1993
  81. ^ In the Margin of History, page 45 Lewis Bernstein Namier - 1969 303
  82. ^ In the Margin of History, page 45 Lewis Bernstein Namier - (pub. 1969)
  83. ^ Copyright, Leonard Spray (16 August 1920). "NY Times report". The New York Times.
  84. ^ a b Lippelt, Helmut (1971). "Politische Sanierung" Zur deutschen Politik gegenüber Polen 1925/26 (PDF) (in German). Institut für Zeitgeschichte. p. 328.
  85. ^ a b Butler, Rohan, MA., Bury, J.P.T., MA., & Lambert M.E., MA., editors, Documents on British Foreign Policy 1919-1939, 1st Series, Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 1960, vol.x, Chapter VIII, "The Plebiscites in Allenstein and Marienwerder January 21 - September 29, 1920", p.726-7
  86. ^ An impression of the psychological consequences of the train sealing is given through the relevant paragraphs of the booklet Namen, die keiner mehr nennt ('Names, no longer called by anyone'), authored by the liberal German journalist Marion Dönhoff.
  87. ^ . Archived from the original on 9 February 2009.
  88. ^ a b Historia Polski 1795-1918. Andrzej Chwalba. Page 177
  89. ^ Andrzej Chwalba - Historia Polski 1795-1918 page 461-463
  90. ^ a b c d e f Richard Blanke, Orphans of Versailles: The Germans in Western Poland 1918-1939. University of Kentucky Press. 1993. ISBN 978-0-8131-1803-1. Retrieved 2009-06-30.
  91. ^ Neal Pease, Poland, the United States, and the Stabilization of Europe, 1919-1933, Oxford University Press US, 1986, p.146, ISBN 0-19-504050-3:.
  92. ^ Aristotle A. Kallis, Fascist Ideology: Territory and Expansionism in Italy and Germany, 1922-1945, Routledge, 2000, p.144, ISBN 0-415-21612-5 [8]
  93. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-04-29. Retrieved 2006-05-30.
  94. ^ Archived from the original on 2008-05-01. Retrieved 2009-10-10.
  95. ^ Goldstein, Erik; Lukes, Igor (12 October 2012). The Munich Crisis, 1938: Prelude to World War II. Routledge. ISBN 9781136328398.
  96. ^ Keylor, William R. (2001). The twentieth-century world: an ... - Google Books. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-513681-4. Retrieved 2009-06-16.
  97. ^ a b Weinberg, Gerhard Hitler's Foreign Policy, 1933-1939 The Road to World War II, New York: Enigma Books, 2010 p.669
  98. ^ Weinberg, Gerhard Hitler's Foreign Policy, 1933-1939 The Road to World War II, New York: Enigma Books, 2010 p.677-678
  99. ^ Weinberg, Gerhard Hitler's Foreign Policy, 1933-1939 The Road to World War II, New York: Enigma Books, 2010 p.678
  100. ^ Document no. 9 2007-06-07 at the Wayback Machine
  101. ^ a b c "The Polish Resistance and the German Press Campaign (August 1–19)".
  102. ^ a b c Anna M
  103. ^ a b c d Weinberg, Gerhard Hitler's Foreign Policy, 1933-1939 The Road to World War II, New York: Engima Books, 2010 p.668
  104. ^ a b Weinberg, Gerhard Hitler's Foreign Policy, 1933-1939 The Road to World War II, New York: Engima Books, 2010 p.676
  105. ^ "The Polish Resistance and the German Press Campaign (August 1–19)". Ibiblio.org. Retrieved 2009-05-06.
  106. ^ a b Joachim C. Fest, Hitler, Harcourt Trade, 2002, pp.575-577, ISBN 0-15-602754-2 [9][permanent dead link]
  107. ^ "The German-Polish Crisis (March 27-May 9, 1939)".
  108. ^ a b Grenville, John Ashley Soames (2005). A history of the world from the 20th ... - Google Books. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-28955-9. Retrieved 2009-06-16.
  109. ^ John V. Denson, "Reassessing the Presidency" Ludwig van Mises Institut, Auburn Alabama 2001, p.480
  110. ^ a b "The British War Blue Book".
  111. ^ EDWIN L. JAMES, The New York Times May 7, 1939, Sunday, Section: The Week In Review, Page E3 [10]
  112. ^ a b Avalon Project : The French Yellow Book : No. 113 - M. Coulondre, French Ambassador in Berlin, to M. Georges Bonnet, Minister for Foreign Affairs. Berlin, April 30, 1939 August 20, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  113. ^ Prażmowska, Anita J. (12 February 2004). Britain, Poland and the Eastern ... - Google Books. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-52938-9. Retrieved 2009-06-16.
  114. ^ The history of the German resistance, 1933-1945 Peter Hoffmann page 37 McGill-Queen's University Press 1996
  115. ^ Hitler Joachim C. Fest page 586 Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2002
  116. ^ Blitzkrieg w Polsce wrzesien 1939 Richard Hargreaves page 84 Bellona, 2009
  117. ^ A military history of Germany, from the eighteenth century to the present dayMartin Kitchen page 305 Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1975
  118. ^ International history of the twentieth century and beyond Antony Best page 181 Routledge; 2 edition (July 30, 2008)
  119. ^ Weinberg, Gerhard L. (2005-03-28). A World at Arms: A Global History of World War II (2 ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 51. ISBN 978-0-521-61826-7.
  120. ^ Andrzej Chwalba - Historia Polski 1795-1918 page 461
  121. ^ . Dziedzictwo.polska.pl. Archived from the original on 2009-06-09. Retrieved 2009-05-06.
  122. ^ Otto Büsch, Ilja Mieck, Wolfgang Neugebauer, Handbuch der preussischen Geschichte, p.42
  123. ^ . Kki.net.pl. Archived from the original on January 22, 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-06.
  124. ^ Richard Blanke, Orphans of Versailles: The Germans in Western Poland 1918-1939, University of Kentucky Press, 1993, ISBN 0-8131-1803-4 [11]

54°21′N 18°20′E / 54.350°N 18.333°E / 54.350; 18.333

polish, corridor, german, polnischer, korridor, polish, pomorze, polski, korytarz, also, known, danzig, corridor, corridor, gdańsk, corridor, territory, located, region, pomerelia, pomeranian, voivodeship, eastern, pomerania, formerly, part, west, prussia, whi. The Polish Corridor German Polnischer Korridor Polish Pomorze Polski Korytarz also known as the Danzig Corridor Corridor to the Sea or Gdansk Corridor was a territory located in the region of Pomerelia Pomeranian Voivodeship eastern Pomerania formerly part of West Prussia which provided the Second Republic of Poland 1920 1939 with access to the Baltic Sea thus dividing the bulk of Weimar Germany from the province of East Prussia At its narrowest point the Polish territory was just 30 km wide 1 The Free City of Danzig now the Polish cities of Gdansk Sopot and the surrounding areas situated to the east of the corridor was a semi independent German speaking city state forming part of neither Germany nor Poland though united with the latter through an imposed union covering customs mail foreign policy railways as well as defence The Polish Corridor in 1923 1939 Polish Prussia in 1466 1772 Majority Polish green and German areas in the corridor German 1910 census Percentage of Poles living on the former Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth territories c 1900 A similar territory also occasionally referred to as a corridor was originally connected to the Polish Crown until 1308 and was later reclaimed as part of Royal Prussia during the period 1466 1772 2 3 Contents 1 Terminology 2 Background 2 1 History of the area 2 1 1 Historical population 2 2 Allied plans for a corridor after World War I 2 2 1 Ethnographic reasons 2 2 2 Economic reasons 2 2 3 The Inquiry s opinion 3 Incorporation into the Second Polish Republic 4 Exodus of the German population 5 Impact on the East Prussian plebiscite 6 Impact on German through traffic 7 Land reform of 1925 8 Weimar German interests 9 Nazi German and Polish diplomacy 10 Ultimatum of 1939 11 Nazi German invasion end of the corridor 12 Ethnic composition 13 After World War II 14 The corridor in literature 15 See also 16 ReferencesTerminology editAccording to German historian Hartmut Boockmann the term corridor was first used by Polish politicians 4 while Polish historian Grzegorz Lukomski writes that the word was coined by German nationalist propaganda of the 1920s 5 Internationally the term was used in English as early as March 1919 6 and whatever its origins it became a widespread term in English 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 The equivalent German term is Polnischer Korridor Polish names include korytarz polski Polish corridor and korytarz gdanski Gdansk corridor however reference to the region as a corridor came to be regarded as offensive by interwar Polish diplomats Among the harshest critics of the term corridor was Polish Foreign Minister Jozef Beck who in his May 5 1939 speech in the Sejm Polish parliament said I am insisting that the term Pomeranian Voivodeship should be used The word corridor is an artificial idea as this land has been Polish for centuries with a small percentage of German settlers 14 Poles commonly referred to the region as Pomorze Gdanskie Gdansk Pomerania Pomerelia or simply Pomorze Pomerania or as wojewodztwo pomorskie Pomeranian Voivodeship which was the administrative name for the region Background editHistory of the area edit Main article Pomerelia In the 10th century Pomerelia was settled by Slavic Pomeranians ancestors of the Kashubians who were subdued by Boleslaw I of Poland In the 11th century they created an independent duchy 15 In 1116 1121 Pomerania was again conquered by Poland In 1138 following the death of Duke Boleslaw III Poland was fragmented into several semi independent principalities The Samborides principes in Pomerelia gradually evolved into independent dukes who ruled the duchy until 1294 Before Pomerelia regained independence in 1227 15 16 their dukes were vassals of Poland and Denmark Since 1308 1309 following succession wars between Poland and Brandenburg Pomerelia was subjugated by the Monastic state of the Teutonic Knights in Prussia In 1466 with the second Peace of Thorn Pomerelia became part of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth as a part of autonomous Royal Prussia After the First Partition of Poland in 1772 it was annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia and named West Prussia and became a constituent part of the new German Empire in 1871 Thus the Polish Corridor was not an entirely new creation the territory assigned to Poland had been an integral part of Poland prior to 1772 but with a large degree of autonomy 17 18 19 20 Historical population edit Perhaps the earliest census data on the ethnic and national structure of West Prussia including areas which later made up the corridor is from 1819 21 Ethnic national data Nationalverschiedenheit for West Prussia in 1819 21 Ethnic or national group Population number Population percentage Poles Polen 327 300 52 Germans Deutsche 290 000 46 Jews Juden 12 700 2 Total 630 077 100 Karl Andree in Polen in geographischer geschichtlicher und culturhistorischer Hinsicht Leipzig 1831 gives the total population of West Prussia as 700 000 including 50 Poles 350 000 47 Germans 330 000 and 3 Jews 20 000 22 Data from the 19th century and early 20th century show the following ethnic changes in four main counties of the corridor Puck and Wejherowo on the Baltic Sea coast Kartuzy and Koscierzyna between the Province of Pomerania and Free City of Danzig nbsp The Polish Corridor map of Puck 77 4 Wejherowo 54 9 Kartuzy 77 3 and Koscierzyna 64 5 counties showing percentages of ethnic Poles including Kashubians by the end of World War I according to the Map of Polish population published in 1919 in Warsaw 23 Percent of Poles and Kashubians including Polish German bilinguals in four main counties of the corridor 1831 1931 CountyYear Puck Putzig Wejherowo Neustadt Kartuzy Karthaus Koscierzyna Berent Source 1831 82 85 72 Jan Mordawski s estimate 24 1831 78 84 71 Leszek Belzyt s estimate 25 1837 77 84 71 Volkszahlung census 26 1852 80 77 64 Volkszahlung 26 1855 80 76 64 Volkszahlung 26 1858 79 76 63 Volkszahlung 26 1861 80 77 64 Belzyt 25 1886 75 64 66 57 Schulzahlung school census 26 1890 69 56 67 54 Volkszahlung 26 1890 73 61 68 57 Belzyt 25 1891 74 62 66 56 Schulzahlung 26 1892 77 67 76 59 Stefan Ramult s estimate 27 28 1896 72 61 70 58 Schulzahlung 26 1900 69 54 69 55 Volkszahlung 26 1901 76 60 71 59 Schulzahlung 26 1905 70 51 70 56 Volkszahlung 26 1906 73 62 72 60 Schulzahlung 26 1910 70 50 72 58 Volkszahlung 26 1910 74 62 74 62 Belzyt 25 1911 74 63 74 63 Schulzahlung 26 1918 77 55 77 65 Map of Polish population 23 29 1921 89 92 81 Polish General Census 30 31 1931 95 93 88 Polish General Census Allied plans for a corridor after World War I edit During the First World War both sides made bids for Polish support and in turn Polish leaders were active in soliciting support from both sides Roman Dmowski a former deputy in the Russian State Duma and the leader of the Endecja movement was especially active in seeking support from the Allies Dmowski argued that an independent Poland needed access to the sea on demographic historical and economic grounds as he maintained that a Poland without access to the sea could never be truly independent After the war Poland was to be re established as an independent state Since a Polish state had not existed since the Congress of Vienna the future republic s territory had to be defined Giving Poland access to the sea was one of the guarantees proposed by United States President Woodrow Wilson in his Fourteen Points of January 1918 The thirteenth of Wilson s points was An independent Polish state should be erected which should include the territories inhabited by indisputably Polish populations which should be assured a free and secure access to the sea and whose political and economic independence and territorial integrity should be guaranteed by international covenant 32 The following arguments were behind the creation of the corridor Ethnographic reasons edit The ethnic situation was one of the reasons for returning the area to the restored Poland 33 The majority of the population in the area was Polish 34 As the Polish commission report to the Allied Supreme Council noted on 12 March 1919 Finally the fact must be recognized that 600 000 Poles in West Prussia would under any alternative plan remain under German rule 35 Also as David Hunter Miller from president Woodrow Wilson s group of experts and academics known as The Inquiry noted in his diary from the Paris Peace Conference If Poland does not thus secure access to the sea 600 000 Poles in West Prussia will remain under German rule and 20 000 000 Poles in Poland proper will probably have but a hampered and precarious commercial outlet 36 The Prussian census of 1910 showed that there were 528 000 Poles including West Slavic Kashubians who had supported the Polish national lists in German elections 37 38 39 40 in the region compared with 385 000 Germans including troops and officials stationed in the area 41 42 The province of West Prussia as a whole had between 36 and 43 ethnic Poles in 1910 depending on the source the lower number is based directly on German 1910 census figures while the higher number is based on calculations according to which a large part of those people counted as Catholic Germans in the official census in fact identified as Poles 43 The Poles did not want the Polish population to remain under the control of the German state 44 which had in the past treated the Polish population and other minorities as second class citizens 45 and had pursued Germanization As Professor Lewis Bernstein Namier 1888 1960 born to Jewish parents in Lublin Governorate Russian Empire former Congress Poland and later a British citizen 46 a former member of the British Intelligence Bureau throughout World War I 47 and the British delegation at the Versailles conference 48 known for his anti Polish 49 and anti German 50 51 attitude wrote in the Manchester Guardian on November 7 1933 The Poles are the Nation of the Vistula and their settlements extend from the sources of the river to its estuary It is only fair that the claim of the river basin should prevail against that of the seaboard 52 Economic reasons edit The Poles held the view that without direct access to the Baltic Sea Poland s economic independence would be illusory 53 Around 60 5 of Polish import trade and 55 1 of exports went through the area 54 The report of the Polish Commission presented to the Allied Supreme Council said 1 600 000 Germans in East Prussia can be adequately protected by securing for them freedom of trade across the corridor whereas it would be impossible to give an adequate outlet to the inhabitants of the new Polish state numbering 25 000 000 if this outlet had to be guaranteed across the territory of an alien and probably hostile Power 55 The United Kingdom eventually accepted this argument 53 The suppression of the Polish Corridor would have abolished the economic ability of Poland to resist dependence on Germany 56 As Lewis Bernstein Namier Professor of Modern History at the University of Manchester and known for both his legendary hatred of Germany 50 and Germanophobia 51 as well as his anti Polish attitude 49 directed against what he defined as the aggressive antisemitic and warmongerily imperialist part of Poland 57 wrote in a newspaper article in 1933 The whole of Poland s transport system ran towards the mouth of the Vistula 90 of Polish exports came from her western provinces 58 Cutting through of the Corridor has meant a minor amputation for Germany its closing up would mean strangulation for Poland 59 By 1938 77 7 of Polish exports left either through Gdansk 31 6 or the newly built port of Gdynia 46 1 60 The Inquiry s opinion edit David Hunter Miller in his diary from the Paris Peace Conference noted that the problem of Polish access to the sea was very difficult because leaving entire Pomerelia under German control meant cutting off millions of Poles from their commercial outlet and leaving several hundred thousand Poles under German rule while granting such access meant cutting off East Prussia from the rest of Germany The Inquiry recommended that both the Corridor and Danzig should have been ceded directly to Poland It is believed that the lesser of these evils is preferable and that the Corridor and Danzig should both be ceded to Poland as shown on map 6 East Prussia though territorially cut off from the rest of Germany could easily be assured railroad transit across the Polish corridor a simple matter as compared with assuring port facilities to Poland and has in addition excellent communication via Konigsberg and the Baltic Sea In either case a people is asked to entrust large interests to the League of Nations In the case of Poland they are vital interests in the case of Germany aside from Prussian sentiment they are quite secondary 36 In the end The Inquiry s recommendations were only partially implemented most of West Prussia was given to Poland but Danzig became a Free City Incorporation into the Second Polish Republic editDuring World War I the Central Powers had forced the Imperial Russian troops out of Congress Poland and Galicia as manifested in the Treaty of Brest Litovsk on 3 March 1918 Following the military defeat of Austria Hungary an independent Polish republic was declared in western Galicia on 3 November 1918 the same day Austria signed the armistice The collapse of Imperial Germany s Western Front and the subsequent withdrawal of her remaining occupation forces after the Armistice of Compiegne on 11 November allowed the republic led by Roman Dmowski and Jozef Pilsudski to seize control over the former Congress Polish areas Also in November the revolution in Germany forced Kaiser Wilhelm II s abdication and gave way to the establishment of the Weimar Republic Starting in December the Polish Ukrainian War expanded the Polish republic s territory to include Volhynia and parts of eastern Galicia while at the same time the German Province of Posen where even according to the German made 1910 census 61 5 of the population was Polish was severed by the Greater Poland uprising which succeeded in attaching most of the province s territory to Poland by January 1919 This led Weimar s Otto Landsberg and Rudolf Breitscheid to call for an armed force to secure Germany s remaining eastern territories some of which contained significant Polish minorities primarily on the former Prussian partition territories The call was answered by the minister of defence Gustav Noske who decreed support for raising and deploying volunteer Grenzschutz de forces to secure East Prussia Silesia and the Netze District 61 On 18 January the Paris peace conference opened 62 resulting in the draft of the Treaty of Versailles 28 June 1919 Articles 27 and 28 of the treaty 63 ruled on the territorial shape of the corridor while articles 89 to 93 ruled on transit citizenship and property issues 64 Per the terms of the Versailles treaty which was put into effect on 20 January 1920 the corridor was established as Poland s access to the Baltic Sea from 70 of the dissolved province of West Prussia 65 consisting of a small part of Pomerania with around 140 km of coastline including the Hel Peninsula and 69 km without it 66 The primarily German speaking seaport of Danzig Gdansk controlling the estuary of the main Polish waterway the Vistula river became the Free City of Danzig and was placed under the protection of the League of Nations without a plebiscite 67 After the dock workers of Danzig harbour went on strike during the Polish Soviet War refusing to unload ammunition 68 the Polish Government decided to build an ammunition depot at Westerplatte and a seaport at Gdynia in the territory of the Corridor connected to the Upper Silesian industrial centers by the newly constructed Polish Coal Trunk Line railways Exodus of the German population edit nbsp A Polish language poster illustrating the drop in German population in selected cities of western Poland in the period 1910 1931 The German author Christian Raitz von Frentz writes that after First World War ended the Polish government tried to reverse the systematic Germanization from former decades 69 Frederick the Great King in of Prussia from 1740 to 1786 settled around 300 000 colonists in the eastern provinces of Prussia and aimed at a removal of the Polish nobility which he treated with contempt Frederick also described Poles as slovenly Polish trash and compared them to the Iroquois 70 71 On the other hand he encouraged administrators and teachers who could speak both German and Polish 72 Prussia pursued a second colonization aimed at Germanization after 1832 73 The Prussians passed laws aiming at Germanization of the provinces of Posen and West Prussia in the late 19th century The Prussian Settlement Commission established a further 154 000 colonists including locals in the provinces of Posen and West Prussia before World War I Military personnel were included in the population census A number of German civil servants and merchants were introduced to the area which influenced the population status 74 According to Richard Blanke 421 029 Germans lived in the area in 1910 making up 42 5 of the population 75 Blanke has been criticized by Christian Raitz von Frentz who has classified his book as part of a series on the subject that has an anti Polish bias additionally Polish professor A Cienciala has described Blanke s views as sympathetic to Germany 76 In addition to the military personnel included in the population census a number of German civil servants and merchants were introduced to the area which influenced the population mix according to Andrzej Chwalba 74 By 1921 the proportion of Germans had dropped to 18 8 175 771 Over the next decade the German population decreased by another 70 000 to a share of 9 6 77 German political scientist Stefan Wolff Professor at the University of Birmingham claims that the actions of Polish state officials after the corridor s establishment followed a course of assimilation and oppression 78 As a result a large number of Germans left Poland after 1918 according to Wolff 800 000 Germans had left Poland by 1923 78 according to Gotthold Rhode 575 000 left the former province of Posen and the corridor after the war 79 according to Herrmann Rauschning 800 000 Germans had left between 1918 and 1926 79 contemporary author Alfons Krysinski estimated 800 000 plus 100 000 from East Upper Silesia 79 the contemporary German statistics say 592 000 Germans had left by 1921 79 other Polish scholars say that up to a million Germans left 79 Polish author Wladyslaw Kulski says that a number of them were civil servants with no roots in the province and around 378 000 clarification needed and this is to a lesser degree is confirmed by some German sources such as Hermann Rauschning 80 Lewis Bernstein Namier raised the question as to whether many of the Germans who left were actually settlers without roots in the area Namier remarked in 1933 a question must be raised how many of those Germans had originally been planted artificially in that country by the Prussian Government 81 The above mentioned Richard Blanke in his book Orphans of Versailles gives several reasons for the exodus of the German population A number of former settlers from the Prussian Settlement Commission who settled in the area after 1886 in order to Germanize it were in some cases given a month to leave in other cases they were told to leave at once 80 Poland found itself under threat during the Polish Bolshevik war of 1919 1921 80 and the German population feared that Bolshevik forces would control Poland Migration to Germany was a way to avoid conscription and participation in the war State employed Germans such as judges prosecutors teachers and officials left as Poland did not renew their employment contracts German industrial workers also left due to fear of lower wage competition Many Germans had become economically dependent on Prussian state aid as Prussia had fought the Polish problem in its provinces 80 Germans refused to accept living in a Polish state 80 As Lewis Bernstein Namier said Some Germans undoubtedly left because they would not live under the dominion of a race which they had previously oppressed and despised 82 Germans feared that the Poles would seek reprisals after over a century of harassment and discrimination by the Prussian and German state against the Polish population 80 Social and linguistic isolation While the population was mixed only Poles were required to be bilingual The Germans usually did not learn Polish When Polish became the only official language in Polish majority provinces their situation became difficult The Poles shunned Germans which contributed to their isolation 80 Lower standards of living Poland was a much poorer country than Germany 80 Former Nazi politician and later opponent Hermann Rauschning wrote that 10 of Germans were unwilling to remain in Poland regardless of their treatment and another 10 were workers from other parts of the German Empire with no roots in the region 80 Blanke says that official encouragement by the Polish state played a secondary role in the German exodus 80 Christian Raitz von Frentz notes that many of the repressive measures were taken by local and regional Polish authorities in defiance of Acts of Parliament and government decrees which more often than not conformed with the minorities treaty the Geneva Convention and their interpretation by the League council though it is also true that some of the central authorities tacitly tolerated local initiatives against the German population 69 While there were demonstrations and protests and occasional violence against Germans they were at a local level and officials were quick to point out that they were a backlash against former discrimination against Poles 80 There were other demonstrations when Germans showed disloyalty during the Polish Soviet War 80 as the Red Army announced the return to the pre war borders of 1914 83 Despite popular pressure and occasional local actions perhaps as many as 80 of Germans emigrated more or less voluntarily 80 Helmut Lippelt writes that Germany used the existence of the German minority in Poland for political ends and as part of its revisionist demands which resulted in Polish countermeasures Polish Prime Minister Wladyslaw Sikorski stated in 1923 that the de Germanization of these territories had to be ended by vigorous and quick liquidation of property and eviction of German Optanten Germans who refused to accept Polish citizenship and per the Versailles Treaty were to leave Poland so that German nationalists would realize that their view of the temporary state of Polish western border was wrong 84 dubious discuss verification needed To Lippelt this was partially a reaction to the German claims and partially Polish nationalism urging to exclude the German element In turn anti Polish prejudice fueled German policy 84 Impact on the East Prussian plebiscite editIn the period leading up to the East Prussian plebiscite in July 1920 the Polish authorities tried to prevent traffic through the Corridor interrupting postal telegraphic and telephone communication 85 On March 10 1920 the British representative on the Marienwerder Plebiscite Commission H D Beaumont wrote of numerous continuing difficulties being made by Polish officials and added as a result the ill will between Polish and German nationalities and the irritation due to Polish intolerance towards the German inhabitants in the Corridor now under their rule far worse than any former German intolerance of the Poles are growing to such an extent that it is impossible to believe the present settlement borders can have any chance of being permanent It can confidently be asserted that not even the most attractive economic advantages would induce any German to vote Polish If the frontier is unsatisfactory now it will be far more so when it has to be drawn on this side of the river with no natural line to follow cutting off Germany from the river bank and within a mile or so of Marienwerder which is certain to vote German I know of no similar frontier created by any treaty 85 Impact on German through traffic editThe German Ministry for Transport established the Seedienst Ostpreussen Sea Service East Prussia in 1922 to provide a ferry connection to East Prussia now a German exclave so that it would be less dependent on transit through Polish territory Connections by train were also possible by sealing the carriages Korridorzug i e passengers were not forced to apply for an official Polish visa in their passport however the rigorous inspections by the Polish authorities before and after the sealing were strongly feared by the passengers 86 In May 1925 a train passing through the corridor on its way to East Prussia crashed because the spikes had been removed from the tracks for a short distance and the fishplates unbolted 25 persons including 12 women and 2 children were killed some 30 others were injured 87 Land reform of 1925 editAccording to Polish historian Andrzej Chwalba during the rule of the Kingdom of Prussia and the German Empire various means were used to increase the amount of land owned by Germans at the expense of the Polish population In Prussia the Polish nobility had its estates confiscated after the Partitions and handed over to German nobility 88 The same applied to Catholic monasteries 88 Later the German Empire bought up land in an attempt to prevent the restoration of a Polish majority in Polish inhabited areas in its eastern provinces 89 Christian Raitz von Frentz notes that measures aimed at reversing past Germanization included the liquidation of farms settled by the German government during the war under the 1908 law 69 In 1925 the Polish government enacted a land reform program with the aim of expropriating landowners 90 While only 39 of the agricultural land in the Corridor was owned by Germans 90 the first annual list of properties to be reformed included 10 800 hectares from 32 German landowners and 950 hectares from seven Poles 90 The voivode of Pomorze Wiktor Lamot stressed that the part of Pomorze through which the so called corridor runs must be cleansed of larger German holdings 90 The coastal region must be settled with a nationally conscious Polish population Estates belonging to Germans must be taxed more heavily to encourage them voluntarily to turn over land for settlement Border counties particularly a strip of land ten kilometers wide must be settled with Poles German estates that lie here must be reduced without concern for their economic value or the views of their owners 90 Prominent politicians and members of the German minority were the first to be included on the land reform list and to have their property expropriated 90 Weimar German interests editThe creation of the corridor aroused great resentment in Germany and all interwar governments of the Weimar Republic refused to recognize the eastern borders agreed at Versailles and refused to follow Germany s acknowledgment of its western borders in the Locarno Treaties of 1925 with a similar declaration with respect to its eastern borders 78 Institutions in Weimar Germany supported and encouraged German minority organizations in Poland in part radicalized by the Polish policy towards them in filing close to 10 000 complaints about violations of minority rights to the League of Nations 78 Poland in 1931 declared her commitment to peace but pointed out that any attempt to revise its borders would mean war Additionally in conversation with U S President Herbert Hoover Polish delegate Filipowicz noted that any continued provocations by Germany could tempt the Polish side to invade in order to settle the issue once and for all 91 Nazi German and Polish diplomacy editThe Nazi Party led by Adolf Hitler took power in Germany in 1933 Hitler at first ostentatiously pursued a policy of rapprochement with Poland 92 culminating in the ten year Polish German Non Aggression Pact of 1934 In the years that followed Germany placed an emphasis on rearmament as did Poland and other European powers 93 94 Despite this the Nazis were able to achieve their immediate goals without provoking armed conflict firstly in March 1938 Nazi Germany annexed Austria and in the late September the Sudetenland after the Munich Agreement Poland also made an advance against Czechoslovakia and annexed Trans Olza 1 October 1938 95 Germany tried to get Poland to join the Anti Comintern Pact Poland refused as the alliance was rapidly becoming a sphere of influence of an increasingly powerful Germany 96 On 24 October 1938 the German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop asked the Polish ambassador Jozef Lipski to have Poland sign the Anti Comintern Pact 97 During a visit to Rome on 27 28 October 1938 Ribbentrop told the Italian Foreign Minister Count Galeazzo Ciano that he wanted to turn the Anti Comintern Pact into a military alliance and spoke of his desire to have Poland Yugoslavia Hungary and Romania sign the Anti Comintern Pact so all our energies can be directed against the Western democracies 97 In a secret speech before a group of 200 German journalists on 10 November 1938 Hitler complained that his peace propaganda stressing that his foreign policy was based upon the peaceful revision of the Treaty of Versailles had been too successful with the German people and he called for a new propaganda campaign intended to stoke a bellicose mood in Germany 98 Notably the enemies Hitler had in mind in his speech was not Poland but rather France and Britain 99 Following negotiations with Hitler on the Munich Agreement British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain reported that He told me privately and last night he repeated publicly that after this Sudeten German question is settled that is the end of Germany s territorial claims in Europe 100 Almost immediately following the agreement however Hitler reneged on it The Nazis increased their requests for the incorporation of the Free City of Danzig into Germany citing the protection of the German majority as a motive 101 In November 1938 Danzig s district administrator Albert Forster reported to the League of Nations that Hitler had told him Polish frontiers would be guaranteed if the Poles were reasonable like the Czechs German State Secretary Ernst von Weizsacker reaffirmed this alleged guarantee in December 1938 102 In the winter of 1938 1939 Germany placed increasing pressure on Poland and Hungary to sign the Anti Comintern Pact 103 Initially the main concern of German diplomacy was not Danzig or the Polish Corridor but rather having Poland sign the Anti Comintern Pact which as the American historian Gerhard Weinberg noted was a formal gesture of political and diplomatic obeisance to Berlin separating them from any other past or prospective international ties and having nothing to do with the Soviet Union at all 103 In late 1938 early 1939 Hitler had decided upon war with Britain and France and having Poland sign the Anti Comintern Pact was intended to protect Germany s eastern border while the Wehrmacht turned west 103 In November 1938 Hitler ordered his Foreign Minister Ribbentrop to convert the Anti Comintern Pact which had been signed with the Empire of Japan in 1936 and joined by Fascist Italy in 1937 into an anti British military alliance 103 Starting in October 1938 the main focus on German military planning was for a war against Britain with Hitler ordering the Luftwaffe to start building a strategical bombing force capable of bombing British cities 104 On 17 January 1939 Hitler approved of the famous Z Plan that called for a gigantic fleet to take on the Royal Navy and on 27 January 1939 he ordered that henceforward the Kriegsmarine was to have first priority for defence spending 104 The situation regarding the Free City and the Polish Corridor created a number of headaches for German and Polish customs 105 The Germans requested the construction of an extra territorial Reichsautobahn freeway to complete the Reichsautobahn Berlin Konigsberg and railway through the Polish Corridor effectively annexing Polish territory and connecting East Prussia to Danzig and Germany proper while cutting off Poland from the sea and its main trade route If Poland agreed in return they would extend the non aggression pact for 25 years 106 This seemed to conflict with Hitler s plans to turn Poland into a satellite state and with Poland s rejection of the Anti Comintern Pact and his desire either to isolate or to gain support against the Soviet Union 106 German newspapers in Danzig and Nazi Germany played an important role in inciting nationalist sentiment headlines buzzed about how Poland was misusing its economic rights in Danzig and German Danzigers were increasingly subjugated to the will of the Polish state 101 At the same time Hitler also offered Poland additional territory as an enticement such as the possible annexation of Lithuania the Memel Territory Soviet Ukraine and parts of the Czech lands 107 108 However Polish leaders continued to fear for the loss of their independence and a fate like that of Czechoslovakia 108 which had yielded the Sudetenland to Germany in October 1938 only to be invaded by Germany in March 1939 Some felt that the Danzig question was inextricably tied to the problems in the Polish Corridor and any settlement regarding Danzig would be one step towards the eventual loss of Poland s access to the sea 101 Hitler s credibility outside Germany was very low after the occupation of Czechoslovakia though some British and French politicians approved of a peaceful revision of the corridor s borders 109 In 1939 Nazi Germany made another attempt to renegotiate the status of Danzig 102 110 111 Poland was to retain a permanent right to use the seaport if the route through the Polish Corridor was to be constructed 110 However the Polish administration distrusted Hitler and saw the plan as a threat to Polish sovereignty practically subordinating Poland to the Axis and the Anti Comintern Bloc while reducing the country to a state of near servitude as its entire trade would be dependent on Germany 112 113 Robert Coulondre the French ambassador in Berlin in a dispatch to the Foreign Minister Georges Bonnet wrote on 30 April 1939 that Hitler sought a mortgage on Polish foreign policy while itself retaining complete liberty of action allowing the conclusion of political agreements with other countries In these circumstances the new settlement proposed by Germany which would link the questions of Danzig and of the passage across the Corridor with counterbalancing questions of a political nature would only serve to aggravate this mortgage and practically subordinate Poland to the Axis and the Anti Comintern Bloc Warsaw refused this in order to retain its independence 112 Hitler used the issue of the status city as pretext for attacking Poland while explaining during a high level meeting of German military officials in May 1939 that his real goal is obtaining Lebensraum for Germany isolating Poles from their Allies in the West and afterwards attacking Poland thus avoiding the repeat of the Czech situation where the Western powers became involved 114 115 116 117 118 Ultimatum of 1939 editMain article 1939 German ultimatum to Poland A revised and less favorable proposal came in the form of an ultimatum delivered by the Nazis in late August after the orders had already been given to attack Poland on September 1 1939 Nevertheless at midnight on August 29 von Ribbentrop handed British Ambassador Sir Nevile Henderson a list of terms that would allegedly ensure peace in regard to Poland Danzig was to return to Germany and there was to be a plebiscite in the Polish Corridor Poles who had been born or had settled there since 1919 would have no vote while all Germans born but not living there would An exchange of minority populations between the two countries was proposed If Poland accepted these terms Germany would agree to the British offer of an international guarantee which would include the Soviet Union A Polish plenipotentiary with full powers was to arrive in Berlin and accept these terms by noon the next day The British Cabinet viewed the terms as reasonable except the demand for a Polish plenipotentiary which was seen as similar to Czechoslovak President Emil Hacha accepting Hitler s terms in mid March 1939 When Ambassador Jozef Lipski went to see Ribbentrop on August 30 he was presented with Hitler s demands However he did not have the full power to sign and Ribbentrop ended the meeting News was then broadcast that Poland had rejected Germany s offer 102 Nazi German invasion end of the corridor editOn September 1 1939 Germany invaded Poland The German Fourth Army defeated the Polish Pomorze Army which had been tasked with the defence of this region and captured the corridor during the Battle of Tuchola Forest by September 5 The corridor was subsequently directly annexed by Germany until it was recaptured by the Red Army at the end of the war 119 Other notable battles took place at Westerplatte the Polish post office in Danzig Oksywie and Hel Ethnic composition editMost of the area was inhabited by Poles Germans and Kashubians The census of 1910 showed that there were 528 000 Poles including West Slavic Kashubians compared to 385 000 Germans in the region 41 The census included German soldiers stationed in the area as well as public officials sent to administer the area Since 1886 a Settlement Commission was set up by Prussia to enforce German settlement 120 while at the same time Poles Jews and Germans migrated west during the Ostflucht 121 In 1921 the proportion of Germans in Pomerania where the Corridor was located was 18 8 175 771 Over the next decade the German population decreased by another 70 000 to a share of 9 6 77 There was also a Jewish minority in 1905 Kashubians numbered about 72 500 122 After the occupation by Nazi Germany a census was made by the German authorities in December 1939 71 of people declared themselves as Poles 188 000 people declared Kashubian as their language 100 000 of those declared themselves Polish 123 German population in the Polish Corridor as of 1921 per Blanke 1993 124 County Total population German population German percentage Dzialdowo Soldau 23 290 8 187 34 5 35 2 Lubawa Lobau 59 765 4 478 7 6 Brodnica Strasburg 61 180 9 599 15 7 Wabrzezno Briesen 47 100 14 678 31 1 Torun Thorn 79 247 16 175 20 4 Chelmno Kulm 46 823 12 872 27 5 Swiecie Schwetz 83 138 20 178 24 3 Grudziadz Graudenz 77 031 21 401 27 8 Tczew Dirschau 62 905 7 854 12 5 Wejherowo Neustadt 71 692 7 857 11 0 Kartuzy Karthaus 64 631 5 037 7 8 Koscierzyna Berent 49 935 9 290 18 6 Starogard Gdanski Preussisch Stargard 62 400 5 946 9 5 Chojnice Konitz 71 018 13 129 18 5 Tuchola Tuchel 34 445 5 660 16 4 Sepolno Krajenskie Zempelburg 27 876 13 430 48 2 Total 935 643 922 476 when added 175 771 18 8 19 1 with 922 476 After World War II edit nbsp The Oder Neisse line Further information History of Pomerania At the 1945 Potsdam Conference following the German defeat in World War II Poland s borders were reorganized at the insistence of the Soviet Union which occupied the entire area Territories east of the Oder Neisse line including Danzig were put under Polish administration The conference did not debate about the future of the territories that were part of western Poland before the war including the corridor It automatically became part of the reborn state in 1945 Many German residents were executed citation needed others were expelled to the Soviet occupation zone which later became East Germany The corridor in literature editIn The Shape of Things to Come published in 1933 H G Wells correctly predicted that the corridor would be the starting point of a future Second World War He depicted the war as beginning in January 1940 and would involve heavy aerial bombing of civilians but that it would result in a 10 year trench warfare esque stalemate between Poland and Germany eventually leading to a worldwide societal collapse in the 1950s See also editCzech Corridor concept Eilat corridor Israel Jerusalem corridor Israel Antofagasta or Atacama corridor Bolivia Persian Corridor Iran 1941 1946 Lachin corridor Armenia and Azerbaijan Siliguri Corridor India Tin Bigha Corridor Bangladesh Wakhan Corridor Afghanistan created to separate rather than link areas Brcko corridor Republika Srpska Bosnia and Herzegovina Caprivi Strip Namibia connecting the country to the Zambezi RiverReferences edit Polskij koridor in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia 1969 1978 in Russian A History of Western Civilization Then came the acquisition of Prussia separated from Brandenburg by the Polish corridor page 382 author Roland N Stromberg Dorsey Press 1969 The Scandinavians in History Brandenburg by the acquisition of Eastern Pomerania besides other territories within the empire was firmly established on the Baltic though a Polish corridor running between Eastern Pomerania and East Prussia to Danzig denied her all she desired page 174 author Stanley Mease Toyne Ayer Publishing 1970 Hartmut Boockmann Ostpreussen und Westpreussen Siedler 2002 p 401 ISBN 3 88680 212 4 1 Grzegorz Lukomski The problem of Corridor in the Polish German relationships and on the international stage 1918 1939 A political study Archived 2012 02 24 at the Wayback Machine in Polish The New York Times March 18 1919 Outlines Polish Corridor Paris Paper Sketches Proposed Strip to Danzig March 17 1919 Plan to Give Germany Land Communication Across Polish Corridor to the Baltic Edmund Jan Osmanczyk Anthony Mango Encyclopedia of the United Nations and international agreements 3rd edition Taylor amp Francis 2003 p 1818 ISBN 0 415 93921 6 Polish Corridor International term for Poland s access to the Baltic in 1919 1939 Hartmut Boockmann Ostpreussen und Westpreussen Siedler 2002 p 401 ISBN 3 88680 212 4 2 e g The New York Times March 18 1919 POLISH CORRIDOR Paris Paper Sketches Proposed Strip to Danzig August 16 1920 Russians Hoist the German Flag Over Soldau Say Polish Corridor Will Be Returned to Germany March 17 1919 Plan to Give Germany Land Communication Across Polish Corridor to the Baltic November 16 1930 Europe Sorest Spot The Polish Corridor The Old German Port of Danzig August 17 1932 Germans United On Polish Corridor Denmark Salmonsens Konversationsleksikon e g in the article about railways the German railway network was reduced due to Germany s territorial concessions following the first world war and is cut in two separate parts by the Polish corridor 3 1930 and article about Poland 4 1924 New York Times early 1919 PDF Time magazine 1925 Archived from the original on 9 February 2009 Barbara Dotts Paul The Polish German Borderlands An Annotated Bibliography Greenwood Publishing Group 1994 ISBN 0 313 29162 4 contains an abundant collection of contemporary sources using Polish or Danzig Corridor Official webpage of Polish Sejm Chronicle of speeches permanent dead link a b James Minahan One Europe Many Nations A Historical Dictionary of European National Groups Greenwood Publishing Group 2000 p 375 ISBN 0 313 30984 1 W D Halsey L Shores Bernard Johnston Emanuel Friedman Merit Students Encyclopedia Macmillan Educational Corporation 1979 p 195 Pomerelia independent in 1227 and thereafter A Lasting Peace page 127 James Clerk Maxwell Garnett Heinrich F Koeppler 1940 Arms and Policy 1939 1944 page 40 Hoffman Nickerson 1945 The Congress of Vienna A Study in Allied Unity 1812 1822 page 279 Harold Nicolson Grove Pres 2000 Urban Societies in East Central Europe pages 190 191 Jaroslav Miller 2008 a b Hassel Georg 1823 Statistischer Umriss der sammtlichen europaischen und der vornehmsten aussereuropaischen Staaten in Hinsicht ihrer Entwickelung Grosse Volksmenge Finanz und Militarverfassung tabellarisch dargestellt Erster Heft Welcher die beiden grossen Machte Osterreich und Preussen und den Deutschen Staatenbund darstellt Verlag des Geographischen Instituts Weimar p 42 Andree Karl 1831 Polen in geographischer geschichtlicher und culturhistorischer Hinsicht Verlag von Ludwig Schumann p 212 a b Dura Lucjusz 1919 Mapa rozsiedlenia ludnosci polskiej z uwzglednieniem spisow wladz okupacyjnych w 1916 r Map of the distribution of Polish population taking into account the censuses of 1916 polona pl Retrieved 31 October 2019 Mordawski Jan 2017 Atlas dziejow Pomorza i jego mieszkancow Kaszubow PDF in Polish Gdansk Zrzeszenie Kaszubsko Pomorskie pp 35 36 ISBN 978 83 62137 38 1 Archived from the original PDF on June 21 2020 a b c d Belzyt Leszek 2017 Kaszubi w swietle pruskich danych spisowych w latach 1827 1911 Tabela 24 Procentowy udzial Kaszubow w poszczegolnych powiatach wedlug korekty PDF Acta Cassubiana 19 233 Archived from the original PDF on 2019 07 03 Retrieved 2019 10 31 via BazHum MuzHP a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Belzyt Leszek 2017 Kaszubi w swietle pruskich danych spisowych w latach 1827 1911 Kashubians in the light of Prussian census data in years 1827 1911 PDF Acta Cassubiana 19 194 235 Archived from the original PDF on 2019 07 03 Retrieved 2019 10 31 via BazHum MuzHP Temat 19 Kaszubi w statystyce cz I PDF kaszebsko com Archived from the original PDF on 11 September 2021 Retrieved 31 October 2019 Ramult Stefan 1899 Statystyka ludnosci kaszubskiej in Polish Cracow a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Andrzejewski Czeslaw 1919 Zywiol niemiecki w zachodniej Polsce Poznan a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help CS1 maint location missing publisher link Szczurek Wieslaw 2002 Liczba i rozmieszczenie ludnosci niemieckiej na Pomorzu w okresie II Rzeczypospolitej Panstwo i spoleczenstwo 2 II 163 175 ISSN 1643 8299 via Repozytorium eRIKA Blanke Richard 1993 Orphans of Versailles The Germans in Western Poland 1918 1939 Lexington KY University Press of Kentucky pp 244 245 ISBN 978 0813156330 The text of Woodrow s Fourteen Points Speech Archived 2005 06 22 at the Wayback Machine The Danzig Dilemma A Study in Peacemaking by Compromise This report was origin of the famous Polish corridor to the Baltic which the Commission proposed on ethnographic grounds as well as to give Poland her promised free and secure access to the sea John Brown Mason page 50 Anna M Cienciala Natalia Sergeevna Lebedeva Wojciech Materski Maia A Kipp Katyn A Crime without Punishment Yale University Press 2008 ISBN 0 300 10851 6 Google Print p 15 The Danzig Dilemma a Study in Peacemaking by Compromise A Study in Peacemaking by Compromise John Brown Mason page 49 a b Hunter Miller David 1924 My Diary at Conference of Paris Vol IV New York Appeal Printing Company pp 224 227 Gdanskie Zeszyty Humanistyczne Seria pomorzoznawcza Page 17 Wyzsza Szkola Pedagogiczna Gdansk Wydzial Humanistyczny Instytut Baltycki Instytut Baltycki Poland 1967 Polozenie mniejszosci niemieckiej w Polsce 1918 1938 Page 183 Stanislaw Potocki 1969 Rocznik gdanski organ Towarzystwa Przyjaciol Nauki i Sztuki w Gdansku page 100 1983 Do niepodleglosci 1918 1944 45 1989 wizje drogi spelnienie page 43 Wojciech Wrzesinski 1998 a b Principles and Problems of International Relations page 608 H Arthur Steiner 1940 Blanke Richard Appendix B German Population of Western Poland by Province and Country University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0813130417 Kozicki Stanislas 1918 The Poles under Prussian rule London Polish Press Bur p 5 The Danzig Dilemma a Study in Peacemaking by Compromise by John Brown Mason Stanford University Press 1946 page 49 A History of Modern Germany 1800 2000 page 130 Martin Kitchen Blackwell Publishing 2006 Albert S Lindemann 2000 Anti Semitism before the Holocaust Pearson p 128 ISBN 978 0 582 36964 1 Retrieved 2010 12 21 Kelly Boyd 1999 Encyclopedia of historians and historical writing Fitzroy Dearborn ISBN 978 1 884964 33 6 Retrieved 2009 07 06 Gary S Messinger 1992 British Propaganda and the State in the First World War Manchester University Press ND ISBN 978 0 7190 3014 7 Retrieved 2009 07 06 Christopher Hill Pamela Beshoff 1994 Two Worlds of International Relations Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 06970 0 Retrieved 2009 07 06 a b Niepodleglosc Tom 21 Pilsudski Institute of America Instytut Jozefa Pilsudskiego Poswiecony Badaniu Najnowszej Historii Polski 1988 page 58 a b Wrigley Chris 2006 A J P Taylor Radical Historian of Europe I B Tauris p 70 ISBN 1 86064 286 1 Namier a b Crozier Andrew J 1997 The causes of the Second World War Wiley ISBN 9780631186014 In the Margin of History p 44 by Lewis Bernstein Namier a b Out of the Ashes James Thorburn Muirhead 1941 page 54 The Crises of France s East Central European Diplomacy 1933 1938 p 40 Anthony Tihamer Komjathy 1976 The Danzig dilemma a study in peacemaking by compromise by John Brown Mason Stanford University Press 1946 page 49 Review of Reviews page 67 Albert Shaw 1931 Chasin Stephanie 2008 Citizens of Empire Jews in the Service of the British Empire 1906 1949 University of California p 206 ISBN 9781109022278 permanent dead link The New Europe page 91 by Bernard Newman 1942 Namier Lewis Bernstein 1969 In the Margin of History Books for Libraries Press p 44 ISBN 978 0 8369 0050 7 Przeglad zachodni Volume 60 Issues 3 4 Instytut Zachodni 2004 page 42 T Hunt Tooley National identity and Weimar Germany Upper Silesia and the eastern border 1918 1922 University of Nebraska Press 1997 pp 36 37 ISBN 0 8032 4429 0 T Hunt Tooley National identity and Weimar Germany Upper Silesia and the eastern border 1918 1922 University of Nebraska Press 1997 p 38 ISBN 0 8032 4429 0 Treaty of Versailles 1 30 5 Treaty of Versailles 31 117 6 BPB on Poland Lesniewski Andrzej et al 1959 Sobanski Waclaw ed Western and Northern territories of Poland Facts and problems Studies and monographs Poznan Warszawa Wydawnictwo Zachodnie Publishing House of the Zachodnia Agencja Prasowa p 7 Eberhard Kolb The Weimar Republic 2nd edition Routledge 2004 p 27 ISBN 0 415 34442 5 7 The Danzig dilemma a study in peacemaking by compromise by John Brown Mason Stanford university press 1946 page 116 a b c A Lesson Forgotten Minority Protection Under the League of Nations The Case of the German Minority in Poland 1920 1934 page 8 LIT Verlag Berlin Hamburg Munster 1999 Ritter Gerhard 1974 Frederick the Great A Historical Profile Berkeley University of California Press pp 179 180 ISBN 0 520 02775 2 It has been estimated that during his reign 300 000 individuals settled in Prussia While the commission for colonization established in the Bismarck era could in the course of two decades bring no more than 11 957 families to the eastern territories Frederick settled a total of 57 475 It increased the German character of the population in the monarchy s provinces to a very significant degree in West Prussia where he wished to drive out the Polish nobility and bring as many of their large estates as possible into German hands In fact from Hitler to Hans we find frequent references and Jews as Indians This too was a long standing trope It can be traced back to Frederick the Great who likened the slovenly Polish trash in newly reconquered West Prussia to Iroquois Localism Landscape and the Ambiguities of Place German speaking Central Europe 1860 1930 David Blackbourn James N Retallack University of Toronto 2007 Compare Koch Hannsjoachim Wolfgang 1978 6 Frederick the Great A History of Prussia London Routledge published 2014 p 136 ISBN 9781317873082 Retrieved 2017 10 20 by 1778 there were 277 Protestant and 58 Catholic teachers employed in the Bromberg region the present day Bydgoszcz with strong preference being given to those who could speak Polish in addition to their native German Frederick s instruction to his successor to acquire a knowledge of Polish also dates from this period Wielka historia Polski t 4 Polska w czasach walk o niepodleglosc 1815 1864 Od niewoli do niepodleglosci 1864 1918 Marian Zagorniak Jozef Buszko 2003 page 186 a b Historia Polski 1795 1918 Andrzej Chwalba Page 444 Blanke Richard Orphans of Versailles Appendix B University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0813130417 Anna M Web ku edu Archived from the original on 2013 05 15 Retrieved 2009 05 06 a b Page 244 Appendix B German Population of Western Poland by Province and Country a b c d Stefan Wolff The German Question Since 1919 An Analysis with Key Documents Greenwood Publishing Group 2003 p 33 ISBN 0 275 97269 0 a b c d e Blanke Richard 1993 Orphans of Versailles the Germans in Western Poland 1918 1939 University Press of Kentucky pp 33 34 ISBN 0 8131 1803 4 Retrieved 2009 09 05 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Orphans of Versailles The Germans in Western Poland 1918 1939 pp 32 48 Richard Blanke University Press of Kentucky 1993 In the Margin of History page 45 Lewis Bernstein Namier 1969 303 In the Margin of History page 45 Lewis Bernstein Namier pub 1969 Copyright Leonard Spray 16 August 1920 NY Times report The New York Times a b Lippelt Helmut 1971 Politische Sanierung Zur deutschen Politik gegenuber Polen 1925 26 PDF in German Institut fur Zeitgeschichte p 328 a b Butler Rohan MA Bury J P T MA amp Lambert M E MA editors Documents on British Foreign Policy 1919 1939 1st Series Her Majesty s Stationery Office London 1960 vol x Chapter VIII The Plebiscites in Allenstein and Marienwerder January 21 September 29 1920 p 726 7 An impression of the psychological consequences of the train sealing is given through the relevant paragraphs of the booklet Namen die keiner mehr nennt Names no longer called by anyone authored by the liberal German journalist Marion Donhoff time com May 11 1925 Archived from the original on 9 February 2009 a b Historia Polski 1795 1918 Andrzej Chwalba Page 177 Andrzej Chwalba Historia Polski 1795 1918 page 461 463 a b c d e f Richard Blanke Orphans of Versailles The Germans in Western Poland 1918 1939 University of Kentucky Press 1993 ISBN 978 0 8131 1803 1 Retrieved 2009 06 30 Neal Pease Poland the United States and the Stabilization of Europe 1919 1933 Oxford University Press US 1986 p 146 ISBN 0 19 504050 3 Aristotle A Kallis Fascist Ideology Territory and Expansionism in Italy and Germany 1922 1945 Routledge 2000 p 144 ISBN 0 415 21612 5 8 Marching Toward War Poland Archived from the original on 2008 04 29 Retrieved 2006 05 30 The Five Year Plans and Economic Distress Archived from the original on 2008 05 01 Retrieved 2009 10 10 Goldstein Erik Lukes Igor 12 October 2012 The Munich Crisis 1938 Prelude to World War II Routledge ISBN 9781136328398 Keylor William R 2001 The twentieth century world an Google Books Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 513681 4 Retrieved 2009 06 16 a b Weinberg Gerhard Hitler s Foreign Policy 1933 1939 The Road to World War II New York Enigma Books 2010 p 669 Weinberg Gerhard Hitler s Foreign Policy 1933 1939 The Road to World War II New York Enigma Books 2010 p 677 678 Weinberg Gerhard Hitler s Foreign Policy 1933 1939 The Road to World War II New York Enigma Books 2010 p 678 Document no 9 Archived 2007 06 07 at the Wayback Machine a b c The Polish Resistance and the German Press Campaign August 1 19 a b c Anna M a b c d Weinberg Gerhard Hitler s Foreign Policy 1933 1939 The Road to World War II New York Engima Books 2010 p 668 a b Weinberg Gerhard Hitler s Foreign Policy 1933 1939 The Road to World War II New York Engima Books 2010 p 676 The Polish Resistance and the German Press Campaign August 1 19 Ibiblio org Retrieved 2009 05 06 a b Joachim C Fest Hitler Harcourt Trade 2002 pp 575 577 ISBN 0 15 602754 2 9 permanent dead link The German Polish Crisis March 27 May 9 1939 a b Grenville John Ashley Soames 2005 A history of the world from the 20th Google Books Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 28955 9 Retrieved 2009 06 16 John V Denson Reassessing the Presidency Ludwig van Mises Institut Auburn Alabama 2001 p 480 a b The British War Blue Book EDWIN L JAMES The New York Times May 7 1939 Sunday Section The Week In Review Page E3 10 a b Avalon Project The French Yellow Book No 113 M Coulondre French Ambassador in Berlin to M Georges Bonnet Minister for Foreign Affairs Berlin April 30 1939 Archived August 20 2016 at the Wayback Machine Prazmowska Anita J 12 February 2004 Britain Poland and the Eastern Google Books Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 52938 9 Retrieved 2009 06 16 The history of the German resistance 1933 1945 Peter Hoffmann page 37 McGill Queen s University Press 1996 Hitler Joachim C Fest page 586 Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2002 Blitzkrieg w Polsce wrzesien 1939 Richard Hargreaves page 84 Bellona 2009 A military history of Germany from the eighteenth century to the present dayMartin Kitchen page 305 Weidenfeld and Nicolson 1975 International history of the twentieth century and beyond Antony Best page 181 Routledge 2 edition July 30 2008 Weinberg Gerhard L 2005 03 28 A World at Arms A Global History of World War II 2 ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 51 ISBN 978 0 521 61826 7 Andrzej Chwalba Historia Polski 1795 1918 page 461 Pokwitowanie dotyczace zakupu wozu mieszkalnego dla Michala Drzymaly z 1908 roku Katalog Skarbow Skarby Dziedzictwa Narodowego Polska pl Dziedzictwo polska pl Archived from the original on 2009 06 09 Retrieved 2009 05 06 Otto Busch Ilja Mieck Wolfgang Neugebauer Handbuch der preussischen Geschichte p 42 Strona w trakcie tworzenia Kki net pl Archived from the original on January 22 2009 Retrieved 2009 05 06 Richard Blanke Orphans of Versailles The Germans in Western Poland 1918 1939 University of Kentucky Press 1993 ISBN 0 8131 1803 4 11 54 21 N 18 20 E 54 350 N 18 333 E 54 350 18 333 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Polish Corridor amp oldid 1211668267, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.