fbpx
Wikipedia

State of the Teutonic Order

The State of the Teutonic Order (German: Staat des Deutschen Ordens, pronounced [ˈʃtaːt dɛs ˌdɔʏtʃn̩ ˈʔɔʁdn̩s] ; Latin: Civitas Ordinis Theutonici; Lithuanian: Vokiečių ordino valstybė; Polish: Państwo zakonu krzyżackiego), also called Deutschordensstaat (pronounced [ˈdɔʏtʃʔɔʁdn̩sˌʃtaːt] ) or Ordensstaat (pronounced [ˈɔʁdn̩sˌʃtaːt] ),[3] was a medieval Crusader state, located in Central Europe along the southeastern shore of the Baltic Sea. It was formed by the knights of the Teutonic Order during the 13th century Northern Crusades in the region of Prussia. The Livonian Brothers of the Sword merged in 1237 with the Teutonic Order of Prussia and became known as its branch, the Livonian Order, while their state (Terra Mariana) became a part of the Teutonic Order State. At its greatest territorial extent, in the early 15th century, it encompassed Chełmno Land, Courland, Gotland, Livonia, Neumark, Pomerelia (Gdańsk Pomerania), Prussia and Samogitia, i.e. territories nowadays located in Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Germany, Poland, Russia, and Sweden.

State of the Teutonic Order
Staat des Deutschen Ordens (German)
Civitas Ordinis Theutonici (Latin)
1226–1561
Flag
Coat of arms
The State of the Teutonic Order in 1422
StatusSovereign state (1230–1466)
Fief and part
(Prussia only) of
Poland[1] (1226–1230, 1466–1525)
CapitalMarienburg (1308–1454)
Königsberg (1454–1525)
Common languagesOld Prussian language (popular), Low German, Latin, Baltic languages, Estonian, Livonian, Polish
Religion
Roman Catholic
Demonym(s)Teuton
GovernmentTheocratic elective monarchy
Grand Master (until 1308);
Grand Master and Land Master of Prussia (until 1525);
Land Master of Livonia (until 1561)
 
• 1226–1239
Hermann (first reigning Grand Master)
• 1510–1525
Albert (last reigning Grand Master and Land Master of Prussia)
• 1559–1561
Gotthard (last reigning Land Master of Livonia (Terra Mariana)
LegislatureEstates[2]
Historical eraMiddle Ages
March 1226
08 November 1308
15 July 1410
1454–1466
19 October 1466
1519–1521
• Prussian Homage (end of the Prussian branch)
10 April 1525
• Treaty of Vilnius (1561) (end of the Livonian branch)
28 November 1561
CurrencyMark

Following the battles of Grunwald in 1410 and Wilkomierz in 1435, the State fell into decline. After losing extensive territory in the imposed Peace of Thorn in 1466, the extant territory of its Prussian branch became known as Monastic Prussia (Polish: Prusy zakonne) or Teutonic Prussia (Polish: Prusy krzyżackie) and existed until 1525 as a part and fiefdom of the Kingdom of Poland.[1] The Livonian branch joined the Livonian Confederation and continued to exist as part of it until 1561.

Overview edit

Established in Prussia and the Polish Masovian Chełmno Land in the 13th century, the state expanded mostly as a result of the 13th-century Prussian Crusade against the pagan Baltic Prussians and the 14th-century invasions of neighboring Christian countries of Poland and Lithuania.[4] The conquests were followed by German and Polish colonization.[5] In addition, the Livonian Brothers of the Sword controlling Terra Mariana were incorporated into the Teutonic Order as its autonomous branch, the Livonian Order in 1237.[6] In 1346, the Duchy of Estonia was sold by the King of Denmark for 19,000 Cologne marks to the Teutonic Order. The shift of sovereignty from Denmark to the Teutonic Order took place on 1 November 1346.[7] At the turn of the 14th and 15th centuries, the Teutonic Order temporarily acquired the territories of Gotland and Neumark, which, however, it sold in the following decades.

Throughout its history, the Teutonic state waged numerous wars with Poland[4] and Lithuania, encouraging the two countries to form a close alliance and personal union, which eventually led to the creation of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in the 16th century. Following its defeat in the Battle of Grunwald in 1410 the Teutonic Order fell into decline, the region of Samogitia was restored to Lithuania.[8]

The Prussian branch of the Teutonic Order returned Pomerelia (the previously Polish regions of Chełmno Land and Gdańsk Pomerania) and ceded the western part of Prussia (Warmia, as well as parts of Pomesania and Pogesania) to Poland after the Peace of Thorn in 1466.[9] The territories ceded to the Kingdom of Poland formed the Polish province of Royal Prussia, while the eastern part remained under Teutonic Order rule,[10] known thereafter as the Monastic Prussia (Polish: Prusy zakonne) or Teutonic Prussia (Polish: Prusy krzyżackie), as a feudal fief and integral part of the Kingdom of Poland.[1] The monastic state of the Order's main (Prussian) branch was secularized in 1525 during the Protestant Reformation to become the Duchy of Prussia ruled by the House of Hohenzollern, remaining a fiefdom of the Polish Crown and later the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.

The Livonian branch continued as part of the Livonian Confederation established in 1422–1435, which became a protectorate of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in 1559, and was finally secularised and split into the Duchy of Courland and Semigalia, as well as the Duchy of Livonia in 1561, both duchies being fiefs of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.

Background edit

Poles in Old Prussia edit

The Old Prussians withstood many attempts at conquest preceding that of the Teutonic Knights. Bolesław I of Poland began the series of unsuccessful conquests when he sent Adalbert of Prague in 997. In 1147, Bolesław IV of Poland attacked Prussia with the aid of Kievan Rus', but was unable to conquer it. Numerous other attempts followed, and, under Duke Konrad I of Masovia, were intensified, with large battles and crusades in 1209, 1219, 1220 and 1222.[11]

The West-Baltic Prussians successfully repelled most of the campaigns and managed to strike Konrad in retaliation. However, the Prussians and Yotvingians in the south had their territory conquered. The land of the Yotvingians was situated in the area of what is today the Podlaskie Voivodeship of Poland. The Prussians attempted to oust Polish or Masovian forces from Yotvingia, which by now was partially conquered, devastated and almost totally depopulated.

Papal edicts edit

Konrad of Masovia had already called a crusade against the Old Prussians in 1208, but it was not successful. Konrad, acting on the advice of Christian, first bishop of Prussia, established the Order of Dobrzyń, a small group of 15 knights. The Order, however, was soon defeated and, in reaction, Konrad called on the Pope for yet another crusade and for help from the Teutonic Knights. As a result, several edicts called for crusades against the Old Prussians. The crusades, involving many of Europe's knights, lasted for sixty years.

In 1211, Andrew II of Hungary enfeoffed the Teutonic Knights with the Burzenland. In 1225, Andrew II expelled the Teutonic Knights from Transylvania, and they had to transfer to the Baltic Sea.

Early in 1224, Emperor Frederick II announced at Catania that Livonia, Prussia with Sambia, and a number of neighboring provinces were under imperial immediacy. This decree subordinated the provinces directly to the Roman Catholic Church and the Holy Roman Emperor as opposed to being under the jurisdiction of local rulers.

At the end of 1224, Pope Honorius III announced to all Christendom his appointment of Bishop William of Modena as the Papal Legate for Livonia, Prussia, and other countries.

As a result of the Golden Bull of Rimini in 1226 and the Papal Bull of Rieti of 1234, Prussia came into the Teutonic Order's possession. The Knights began the Prussian Crusade in 1230. Under their governance, woodlands were cleared and marshlands made arable, upon which many cities and villages were founded, including Marienburg (Malbork) and Königsberg (Kaliningrad).

Cities founded edit

Unlike newly founded cities between the rivers Elbe and Oder the cities founded by the Teutonic Order had a much more regular, rectangular sketch of streets, indicating their character as planned foundations.[12] The cities were heavily fortified, accounting for the long lasting conflicts with the resistive native Old Prussians, with armed forces under command of the knights.[12] Most cities were prevailingly populated with immigrants from Middle Germany and Silesia, where many knights of the order had their homelands.[13]

The cities were usually given Magdeburg law town privileges, with the one exception of Elbing (Elbląg), which was founded with the support of Lübeckers and thus was awarded Lübeck law.[12] While the Lübeckers provided the Order important logistic support with their ships, they were otherwise, with the exception of Elbing, rather uninvolved in the establishment of the Monastic State.[12]

History edit

13th century edit

In 1234, the Teutonic Order assimilated the remaining members of the Order of Dobrzyń and, in 1237, the Order of the Livonian Brothers of the Sword. The assimilation of the Livonian Brothers of the Sword (established in Livonia in 1202) increased the Teutonic Order's lands with the addition of the territories known today as Latvia and Estonia.

In 1243, the Papal legate William of Modena divided Prussia into four bishoprics: Culm (Chełmno), Pomesania, Ermland (Warmia) and Samland (Sambia). The bishoprics became suffragans to the Archbishopric of Riga under the mother city of Visby on Gotland. Each diocese was fiscally and administratively divided into one-third reserved for the maintenance of the capitular canons, and two-thirds were where the Order collected the dues. The cathedral capitular canons of Culm, Pomesania and Samland were simultaneously members of the Teutonic Order since the 1280s, ensuring a strong influence by the Order. Only Warmia's diocesan chapter maintained independence, enabling to establish its autonomous rule in the capitular third of Warmia's diocesan territory (Prince-Bishopric of Warmia).

 
Teutonic state in 1260

14th century edit

Danzig and the Hansa edit

At the beginning of the 14th century, the Duchy of Pomerania, a neighboring region, plunged into war with Poland and the Margraviate of Brandenburg to the west. The Teutonic Knights seized the Polish port city of Gdańsk in November 1308. The Order had been called by King Władysław I of Poland to help repel a Brandenburgian invasion; however, the Teutonic Knights themselves began to occupy the city and the region. The Teutonic Knights then carried out a massacre of the inhabitants of the city, killing up to 10,000 people according to medieval sources, although the exact number of victims is a subject of disputes. In September 1309, Margrave Waldemar of Brandenburg-Stendal sold his claim to the territory to the Teutonic Order for the sum of 10,000 Marks in the Treaty of Soldin. This marked the beginning of a series of conflicts between Poland and the Teutonic Knights as the Order continued incorporating territories into its domains. While the Order promoted the Prussian cities by granting them extended surrounding territory and privileges, establishing courts, civil and commercial law, it allowed the cities less outward independence than free imperial cities enjoyed within the Holy Roman Empire.[13][14]

The members of the Hanseatic League did consider merchants from Prussian cities as their like, but also accepted the Grand Master[15] of the Order as the sole territorial ruler representing Prussia at their Hanseatic Diets.[12] Thus Prussian merchants, along with those from Ditmarsh, were the only beneficiaries of a quasi membership within the Hansa, although lacking the background of citizenship in a fully autonomous or free city.[16] Only merchants from the six Prussian Hanseatic cities of Braunsberg (Braniewo), Culm (Chełmno), Danzig (Gdańsk), Elbing, Königsberg and Thorn (Toruń) were considered fully fledged members of the league, while merchants from other Prussian cities had a lesser status.[17]

 
The Battle of Płowce (1331) was a major battle of the Second Polish–Teutonic War (19th-century painting by Juliusz Kossak)

The Teutonic Order's annexation and possession of Gdańsk (Danzig) and the surrounding region was consistently disputed by the Polish kings Władysław I and Casimir III the Great—claims that led to the Polish–Teutonic War (1326–1332) and, eventually, lawsuits in the papal court in 1320 and 1333, which ruled in favor of Poland, however, the Teutonic Knights did not comply and continued to occupy the annexed Polish territories.[4] The Teutonic Knights even invaded Poland further and briefly occupied the regions of Kuyavia and Dobrzyń Land.[4] A peace was concluded at Kalisz in 1343, Kuyavia and Dobrzyń Land were restored to Poland, and the Teutonic Order agreed that Poland should rule Pomerelia as a fief and Polish kings, therefore, retained the right to the title Duke of Pomerania. The title referred to the Duchy of Pomerelia. Unlike in English, German, Latin or Lithuanian language Polish uses the term Pomorze for Pomerania (a fief of Poland, Saxony and Denmark in the High Middle Ages, and first briefly in 1181, but since 1227 a permanent fief within the Holy Roman Empire) and Pomerelia alike. Both duchies were earlier ruled by related dynasties, thus the semantic title was Duke of Pomerania rather than Duke of Pomerelia, as it was referred to in other languages.

Second Danish-Hanseatic War edit

In the conflict between the Hanse and Denmark on the trade in the Baltic, King Valdemar IV of Denmark had held the Hanseatic city of Visby to ransom in 1361.[18] However, the members of the Hanseatic league were undecided whether to unite against him.[19] But when Valdemar IV then captured Prussian merchant ships in the Øresund on their way to England, Grand Master Winrich of Kniprode travelled to Lübeck to propose a war alliance against Denmark, accepted with some reluctance only by the important cities forming the Wendish-Saxon third of the Hanse.[20]

Since Valdemar IV had also attacked ships of the Dutch city of Kampen and other destinations in the Zuiderzee, Prussia and Dutch cities, such as Kampen, Elburg and Harderwijk, allied themselves against Denmark.[20] This resulted in the Hansa calling up a diet in Cologne in 1367 and convening the afore-mentioned non-member cities including Amsterdam and Brielle. The upshot was the founding of the Cologne Federation as a war alliance to counter the Danish threat.[21] More cities, from the Lower Rhine area in the west to Livonia in the east, joined.[21]

Of the major players only Bremen and Hamburg refused to send forces, but contributed financially.[22] Besides Prussia, three more territorial partners, Henry II of Schauenburg and Holstein-Rendsburg, Albert II of Mecklenburg, and the latter's son Albert of Sweden, joined the alliance, attacking via land and sea, forcing Denmark to sign the Treaty of Stralsund in 1370.[22] Several Danish castles and fortresses were then taken by Hansa forces for fifteen years in order to secure the implementation of the peace conditions.

English Merchant Adventurers edit

The invasions of the Teutonic Order from Livonia to Pskov in 1367 had caused the Russians to recoup themselves on Hansa merchants in Novgorod, which again made the Order block exports of salt and herring into Russia.[23] While the relations had eased by 1371 so that trade resumed, they soured again until 1388.[24]

During the Lithuanian crusade of 1369/1370, ending with the Teutonic victory in the Battle of Rudau, Prussia enjoyed considerable support from English knights.[25] The Order welcomed English Merchant Adventurers, starting to cruise in the Baltic, competing with Dutch, Saxon and Wendish Hanseatic merchants, and allowed them to open outposts in its cities of Danzig and Elbing.[26] This necessarily brought about a conflict with the rest of the Hansa, which was in a heavy argument with Richard II of England, over levies of higher dues. The Merchants struggled to achieve an unsatisfactory compromise.[25]

Dissatisfied Richard II's navy suddenly attacked six Prussian ships in May 1385 – and those of more Hanse members – in the Zwin,[27] Grand Master Conrad Zöllner von Rothenstein immediately terminated all trade with England.[27] When in the same year the Hansa evacuated all their Danish castles in fulfillment of the Treaty of Stralsund, Prussia argued in favour of a renewal of the Cologne Federation for the deeply concerned about the ensuing conflict with England, but could not prevail.[28]

The cities preferred to negotiate and take retaliatory actions, such as counter-confiscation of English merchandise.[27] So when in 1388 Richard II finally reconfirmed the Hanseatic trade privileges, Prussia once again permitted merchant adventurers, granting permissions to remain; for this action they were renounced once again by the Grand Master Conrad of Jungingen in 1398.[27]

In the conflict with the Burgundian Philip the Bold on the Hansa privileges in the Flemish cities the positions of the Hanseatic cities and Prussia were again reversed. Here the majority of the Hansa members decided in the Hanseatic Diet on 1 May 1388 for an embargo against the Flemish cities. Meanwhile, Prussia could not prevail with its plea for further negotiations.[29]

Trading edit

The Order's Großschäffer was one of the leading functionaries of the order. The word translates roughly as "chief sales and buying officer" with procuration. This officer was in charge of the considerable commerce, import, export, crediting, real estate investment etc., which the Order carried out, using its network of bailiwicks and agencies which spanned much of Central, Western and Southern Europe as well as the Holy Land. The other Großschäffer in Marienburg had the grain export monopoly. As to imports, neither was bound to any particular merchandise. From Königsberg, holding the monopoly in amber export, achieved the exceptional permission to continue amber exports to Flanders and textile imports in return.[30] On the occasion of the ban on Flemish trade, the Hansa urged Prussia and Livonia again to interrupt the exchange with Novgorod as well, but with both blockades Russian and Flemish commodities could not reach their final destinations.[24] In 1392 it was Grand Master Conrad of Wallenrode who supported the Flemish to achieve an acceptable agreement with the Hansa resuming the bilateral trade;[30] while a Hanseatic delegation under Johann Niebur reopened trade with Novgorod in the same year, after reconfirmation of the previous mutual privileges.[24]

Since the late 1380s grave piracy by privateers, promoted by Albert of Sweden and Mecklenburg actually directed against Margaret I of Denmark, blocked seafaring to the herring supplies at the Scania Market; thus fish prices tripled in Prussia.[31] The Saxon Hansa cities urged Prussia to intervene, but Conrad of Jungingen was more worried about a Danish victory.[31] So only after the cities, led by Lübeck's burgomaster Hinrich Westhof, had liaised[clarification needed] the Treaty of Skanör (1395), Albert's defeat manifested[clarification needed], so that Prussia finally sent out its ships, led by Danzig's city councillor Conrad Letzkau.[32][33] Until 1400 the united Teutonic-Hanseatic flotilla then thoroughly cleared the Baltic Sea of pirates, the Victual Brothers, and even took the island of Gotland in 1398.[32][33]

Commodity selling prices of Teutonic Order in Prussian Marks, 1400[34]
[This is meaningless without stating the quantity of these commodities that could be bought for these prices.]
Saffron 7040 Hungarian iron 21
Ginger 1040 Trave salt
[clarification needed]
12.5
Pepper 640 Herring 12
Wax 237.5 Flemish salt 8
French wine 109.5 Wismar beer 7.5
Rice 80 Flour 7.5
Steel 75 Wheat 7
Rhenish wine 66 Rye 5.75
Oil 60 Barley 4.2
Honey 35 Ash woad 4.75
Butter 30

15th century edit

 
Teutonic state in 1410

Konrad von Jungingen edit

At the beginning of the 15th century, the State of the Teutonic Order stood at the height of its power under Konrad (Conrad) von Jungingen. The Teutonic navy ruled the Baltic Sea from bases in Prussia and Gotland, and the Prussian cities provided tax revenues sufficient to maintain a significant standing force composed of Teutonic Knights proper, their retinues, Prussian peasant levies, and German mercenaries.

In 1402, the Luxembourg dynasty, which ruled the Margraviate of Brandenburg, reached an agreement with Poland in Kraków, according to which Poland was to purchase and re-incorporate the region of New March (Neumark).[35] Later that year, however, the Luxembourgs gave the region in pawn to the Teutonic Order despite prior arrangements with Poland, and the Order kept it until Brandenburg redeemed it again in 1454 and 1455, respectively, by the Treaties of Cölln and Mewe. Though the possession of this territory by the Order strengthened ties between the Order and their secular counterparts in northern Germany, it exacerbated the already hostile relationship between the Order and Polish–Lithuanian union.

In March 1407, Konrad died from complications caused by gallstones and was succeeded by his younger brother, Ulrich von Jungingen. Under Ulrich, the Teutonic State fell from its precarious height and became mired in internal political strife, near-constant war with Polish–Lithuanian union, and crippling war debts.

Losses to Poland, Polish suzerainty edit

 
The Battle of Grunwald (1410) marked the start of decline of the State of the Teutonic Order (19th-century painting by Jan Matejko)

In 1408, Conrad Letzkau served as a diplomat to Queen Margaret I and arranged that the Order sell Gotland to Denmark.[32] In 1409, the Teutonic Order invaded Poland's Dobrzyń Land again, and the Polish–Lithuanian–Teutonic War broke out,[4] in which the Teutonic Knights were supported by the Duchy of Pomerania, and the Polish-Lithuanian alliance was supported by Ruthenian, Tatar and Moldavian allies and auxiliary forces. Poland and Lithuania triumphed following a victory at the Battle of Grunwald (Tannenberg), which marked the start of the decline of the State of the Teutonic Order, and the rise of the Polish–Lithuanian union as a major power in Central and Eastern Europe.[36]

The Order assigned Heinrich von Plauen to defend Teutonic-held Eastern Pomerania (Pomerelia), who moved rapidly to bolster the defence of Marienburg Castle in Pomesania. Heinrich von Plauen was elected vice-grand master and led the Teutonic Knights through the Siege of Marienburg in 1410. Eventually von Plauen was promoted to Grand Master and, in 1411, concluded the First Treaty of Thorn with King Władysław II Jagiełło of Poland.

The next major Polish–Teutonic war was fought in 1431–1435, after the Teutonic Knights invaded Poland again, and was ended in the Peace of Brześć Kujawski, which was favorable for Poland.[4]

In March 1440, gentry (mainly from Culmerland) and the Hanseatic cities of Danzig, Elbing, Kneiphof, Thorn and other Prussian cities founded the Prussian Confederation to free themselves from the overlordship of the Teutonic Knights. Due to the heavy losses and costs after the war against Poland and Lithuania, the Teutonic Order collected taxes at steep rates. Furthermore, the cities were not allowed due representation by the Teutonic Order.

 
The Polish–Teutonic peace treaty of 1466 made the Teutonic state a fief of the Kingdom of Poland

In February 1454, the Prussian Confederation asked King Casimir IV of Poland to support their revolt and to incorporate the region to the Kingdom of Poland. King Casimir IV agreed and signed the act of incorporation in Kraków on 6 March 1454.[37] The Thirteen Years' War, the longest of the Polish–Teutonic wars, (also known as the War of the Cities) broke out. Various cities of the region pledged allegiance to the Polish King in 1454.[38]

The Second Peace of Thorn in October 1466 ended the war and provided for the Teutonic Order's cession of its rights over the western half of its territories to the Polish Kingdom,[9] which became the Polish province of Royal Prussia and the remaining part of the Order's land became a fief and protectorate of Poland, considered part of one and indivisible Kingdom of Poland.[1] In accordance to the peace treaty, from now on, every Grand Master was obliged to swear an oath of allegiance to the reigning Polish king within six months of taking office, and any new territorial acquisitions by the Teutonic Order, also outside Prussia, would also be incorporated into Poland.[39] The Grand Master of the Teutonic Order became a prince and counselor of the Polish king and the Kingdom of Poland.[40]

 
Teutonic state in 1466

Formation of a new nobility edit

While the Knights of the Teutonic Order formed a thin ruling class by themselves, they extensively used mercenaries, mostly German, from the Holy Roman Empire, to whom they granted lands in return. This gradually created a new class of landed nobility. Due to several factors, among which was the high rate of early death in battle, these lands became concentrated over time in the hands of a relatively small number of noblemen each having a vast estate. This nobility would evolve to what is known as the Prussian Junker nobility.[41]

16th century and aftermath edit

Transformation to Ducal Prussia edit

During the Protestant Reformation, endemic religious upheavals and wars occurred across the region. In 1525, during the aftermath of the Polish-Teutonic War (1519–1521), Sigismund I the Old, King of Poland, and his nephew, the last Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights, Albert of Brandenburg-Ansbach, a member of a cadet branch of the House of Hohenzollern, agreed that the latter would resign his position, adopt Lutheran faith and assume the title of Duke of Prussia. Thereafter referred to as Ducal Prussia (German: Herzogliches Preußen, Preußen Herzoglichen Anteils; Polish: Prusy Książęce), remaining a Polish fief.

 
The Prussian Homage of 1525 established Ducal Prussia as a vassal duchy of the Kingdom of Poland, in place of the State of the Teutonic Order

Thus in a deal partially brokered by Martin Luther, Roman Catholic Teutonic Prussia was transformed into the Duchy of Prussia, the first Protestant state. Sigismund's consent was bound to Albert's submission to Poland, which became known as the Prussian Homage. On 10 December 1525 at their session in Königsberg the Prussian estates established the Lutheran Church in Ducal Prussia by deciding the Church Order.[42]

The Habsburg-led Holy Roman Empire continued to hold its claim to Prussia and furnished grand masters of the Teutonic Order, who were merely titular administrators of Prussia, but managed to retain many of the Teutonic holdings elsewhere outside of Prussia

Archaeology edit

Fortifications of the Ordensstaat have been examined through archaeological excavation since the end of World War II, especially those built or expanded during the fourteenth century. Fortifications are generally the best preserved material legacy of the Order's presence in the Baltic today, and timber and earth, as well as brick examples, are attested in the archaeological record. The earliest castles in the Ordensstaat consisted of simple buildings attached to a fortified enclosure and, whilst the quadrangular red-brick structure would come to typify convent buildings, single-wing castles would continue to be built alongside timber towers.[43] Where they followed the conventional layout, castles included a connected set of communal spaces such as a dormitory, refectory, kitchen, chapter house, a chapel or church, an infirmary, and tower projecting over the moat.

Marienburg fort edit

Construction began on Marienburg during the third quarter of the thirteenth century, and work continued on it until the middle of the fifteenth century. A settlement developed alongside the castle, which together enclosed 25 hectares. Granted town rights in 1286, its castle is larger than any other built by the Order. Since 1997 the outer bailey has been thoroughly excavated, dating to the mid-1350s. Preserved at Marienburg was a polychrome statue of Mary about eight meters in height, made of artificial stone and originally decorated with mosaic tiles. Mary was the most important patron of the knights and central to the liturgy of the Teutonic Order, so it is not surprising to find such striking representations of her at their most prominent castle.

Coins edit

Coins were minted from the late 1250s. These were often simple in design, stamped with the cross of the Order on one side, but support the notion that crusading, colonisation, and a supporting infrastructure went hand in hand from the earliest years of the Prussian Crusade.[44]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d Górski 1949, pp. 96–97, 214–215.
  2. ^ Stone, Daniel (2001). A History of Central Europe. University of Washington Press. pp. 18–19. ISBN 0295980931.
  3. ^ France, John (2005). The Crusades and the Expansion of Catholic Christendom, 1000–1714. New York: Routledge. p. 380. ISBN 0415371287.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "wojny polsko-krzyżackie". Encyklopedia PWN (in Polish). Retrieved 7 November 2020.
  5. ^ Bieszk, Janusz (2010). Zamki Państwa Krzyżackiego (in Polish). Warszawa: Bellona. p. 76. ISBN 978-8311118089.
  6. ^ Frucht, Richard C. (2005). Eastern Europe: An Introduction to the People, Lands, and Culture. ABC-CLIO. p. 69. ISBN 1576078000.
  7. ^ Skyum-Nielsen, Niels (1981). Danish Medieval History & Saxo Grammaticus. Museum Tusculanum Press. p. 129. ISBN 8788073300.
  8. ^ Housley, Norman (1992). The later Crusades, 1274–1580. p. 371. ISBN 0198221363.
  9. ^ a b Górski 1949, pp. 88–92, 206–210.
  10. ^ Górski 1949, pp. 93–94, 212.
  11. ^ Lewinski Corwin, Edward Henry (1917). The Political History of Poland. The Polish Book Importing Company. p. 45. lizard union.
  12. ^ a b c d e Philippe Dollinger, Die Hanse [La Hanse (XIIe-XVIIe siècles); German], see references for bibliographical details, p. 55. ISBN 3-520-37105-7.
  13. ^ a b Philippe Dollinger, Die Hanse [La Hanse (XIIe-XVIIe siècles); German], see references for bibliographical details, p. 54. ISBN 3-520-37105-7.
  14. ^ Philippe Dollinger, Die Hanse [La Hanse (XIIe–XVIIe siècles); German], see references for bibliographical details, p. 123. ISBN 3-520-37105-7.
  15. ^ in German: Hochmeister, literally "High Master".
  16. ^ Philippe Dollinger, Die Hanse [La Hanse (XIIe–XVIIe siècles); German], see references for bibliographical details, p. 124. ISBN 3-520-37105-7.
  17. ^ Cf. Philippe Dollinger, Die Hanse [La Hanse (XIIe–XVIIe siècles); German], see references for bibliographical details, p. 123. ISBN 3-520-37105-7.
  18. ^ Philippe Dollinger, Die Hanse [La Hanse (XIIe–XVIIe siècles); German], see references for bibliographical details, p. 96. ISBN 3-520-37105-7.
  19. ^ Philippe Dollinger, Die Hanse [La Hanse (XIIe–XVIIe siècles); German], see references for bibliographical details, p. 97. ISBN 3-520-37105-7.
  20. ^ a b Philippe Dollinger, Die Hanse [La Hanse (XIIe–XVIIe siècles); German], see references for bibliographical details, p. 98. ISBN 3-520-37105-7.
  21. ^ a b Philippe Dollinger, Die Hanse [La Hanse (XIIe–XVIIe siècles); German], see references for bibliographical details, p. 99. ISBN 3-520-37105-7.
  22. ^ a b Philippe Dollinger, Die Hanse [La Hanse (XIIe–XVIIe siècles); German], see references for bibliographical details, p. 100. ISBN 3-520-37105-7.
  23. ^ Philippe Dollinger, Die Hanse [La Hanse (XIIe–XVIIe siècles); German], see references for bibliographical details, pp. 109 seq. ISBN 3-520-37105-7.
  24. ^ a b c Philippe Dollinger, Die Hanse [La Hanse (XIIe–XVIIe siècles); German], see references for bibliographical details, p. 110. ISBN 3-520-37105-7.
  25. ^ a b Philippe Dollinger, Die Hanse [La Hanse (XIIe–XVIIe siècles); German], see references for bibliographical details, p. 104. ISBN 3-520-37105-7.
  26. ^ Philippe Dollinger, Die Hanse [La Hanse (XIIe–XVIIe siècles); German], see references for bibliographical details, pp. 103 seq. ISBN 3-520-37105-7.
  27. ^ a b c d Philippe Dollinger, Die Hanse [La Hanse (XIIe–XVIIe siècles); German], see references for bibliographical details, p. 105. ISBN 3-520-37105-7.
  28. ^ Philippe Dollinger, Die Hanse [La Hanse (XIIe–XVIIe siècles); German], see references for bibliographical details, p. 102. ISBN 3-520-37105-7.
  29. ^ Philippe Dollinger, Die Hanse [La Hanse (XIIe–XVIIe siècles); German], see references for bibliographical details, p. 107. ISBN 3-520-37105-7.
  30. ^ a b Philippe Dollinger, Die Hanse [La Hanse (XIIe–XVIIe siècles); German], see references for bibliographical details, p. 108. ISBN 3-520-37105-7.
  31. ^ a b Philippe Dollinger, Die Hanse [La Hanse (XIIe–XVIIe siècles); German], see references for bibliographical details, p. 113. ISBN 3-520-37105-7.
  32. ^ a b c Natalia Borzestowska and Waldemar Borzestowski, "Dlaczego zginął burmistrz", 17 October 2005, retrieved on 8 September 2011.
  33. ^ a b Philippe Dollinger, Die Hanse [La Hanse (XIIe–XVIIe siècles); German], see references for bibliographical details, p. 114. ISBN 3-520-37105-7.
  34. ^ W.Bonhke, Der Binnenhandel des Deutschen Ordens in Preusen, in Hansische Geschichtsblatter, 80 (1962), pp. 51–53
  35. ^ Rogalski, Leon (1846). Dzieje Krzyżaków oraz ich stosunki z Polską, Litwą i Prussami, poprzedzone rysem dziejów wojen krzyżowych (in Polish). Vol. II. Warszawa. pp. 59–60.
  36. ^ Ekdahl, Sven (2008), "The Battle of Tannenberg-Grunwald-Žalgiris (1410) as reflected in Twentieth-Century monuments", in Victor Mallia-Milanes (ed.), The Military Orders: History and Heritage, vol. 3, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., p. 175, ISBN 978-0-7546-6290-7
  37. ^ Górski 1949, p. 54.
  38. ^ Górski 1949, pp. 71–72, 76, 79.
  39. ^ Górski 1949, pp. 96–97, 215.
  40. ^ Górski 1949, pp. 96, 103, 214, 221.
  41. ^ Rosenberg, H. (1943). "The Rise of the Junkers in Brandenburg-Prussia, 1410–1653: Part 1." The American Historical Review, 49(1), 1–22.
  42. ^ Albertas Juška, Mažosios Lietuvos Bažnyčia XVI–XX amžiuje, Klaipėda: 1997, pp. 742–771, here after the German translation Die Kirche in Klein Litauen (section: 2. Reformatorische Anfänge; (in German)) on: Lietuvos Evangelikų Liuteronų Bažnyčia, retrieved on 28 August 2011.
  43. ^ Pluskowski, Aleksander (2013). The Archaeology of the Prussian Crusade: Holy War and Colonization. Routledge. p. 149.
  44. ^ Pluskowski, Aleksander (2013). The Archaeology of the Prussian Crusade: Holy War and Colonization. Routledge. p. 110.

References edit

  • Dollinger, Philippe (1998) [1966]. Hans Krabusch and Marga Krabusch (trls.) (ed.). Die Hanse (La Hanse (XIIe–XVIIe siècles, Paris, Aubier, 1964) (in German). Vol. 371. Stuttgart: Kröner: Kröners Taschenbuchausgabe. ISBN 3-520-37105-7.
  • Pluskowski, Aleksander. The Archaeology of the Prussian Crusade: Holy War and Colonization. London: Routledge, 2013. ISBN 0415691710
  • Górski, Karol (1949). Związek Pruski i poddanie się Prus Polsce: zbiór tekstów źródłowych (in Polish and Latin). Poznań: Instytut Zachodni.

External links edit

  Media related to State of the Teutonic Order at Wikimedia Commons

  • Ordensland.de: cities, castles and landscapes of the Teutonic Knights (in German)
  • Teutonic Order (at worldstatesmen)

54°43′N 20°31′E / 54.717°N 20.517°E / 54.717; 20.517

state, teutonic, order, german, staat, deutschen, ordens, pronounced, ˈʃtaːt, dɛs, ˌdɔʏtʃn, ˈʔɔʁdn, latin, civitas, ordinis, theutonici, lithuanian, vokiečių, ordino, valstybė, polish, państwo, zakonu, krzyżackiego, also, called, deutschordensstaat, pronounced. The State of the Teutonic Order German Staat des Deutschen Ordens pronounced ˈʃtaːt dɛs ˌdɔʏtʃn ˈʔɔʁdn s Latin Civitas Ordinis Theutonici Lithuanian Vokieciu ordino valstybe Polish Panstwo zakonu krzyzackiego also called Deutschordensstaat pronounced ˈdɔʏtʃʔɔʁdn sˌʃtaːt or Ordensstaat pronounced ˈɔʁdn sˌʃtaːt 3 was a medieval Crusader state located in Central Europe along the southeastern shore of the Baltic Sea It was formed by the knights of the Teutonic Order during the 13th century Northern Crusades in the region of Prussia The Livonian Brothers of the Sword merged in 1237 with the Teutonic Order of Prussia and became known as its branch the Livonian Order while their state Terra Mariana became a part of the Teutonic Order State At its greatest territorial extent in the early 15th century it encompassed Chelmno Land Courland Gotland Livonia Neumark Pomerelia Gdansk Pomerania Prussia and Samogitia i e territories nowadays located in Estonia Latvia Lithuania Germany Poland Russia and Sweden State of the Teutonic OrderStaat des Deutschen Ordens German Civitas Ordinis Theutonici Latin 1226 1561Flag Coat of armsThe State of the Teutonic Order in 1422StatusSovereign state 1230 1466 Fief and part Prussia only of Poland 1 1226 1230 1466 1525 CapitalMarienburg 1308 1454 Konigsberg 1454 1525 Common languagesOld Prussian language popular Low German Latin Baltic languages Estonian Livonian PolishReligionRoman CatholicDemonym s TeutonGovernmentTheocratic elective monarchyGrand Master until 1308 Grand Master and Land Master of Prussia until 1525 Land Master of Livonia until 1561 1226 1239Hermann first reigning Grand Master 1510 1525Albert last reigning Grand Master and Land Master of Prussia 1559 1561Gotthard last reigning Land Master of Livonia Terra Mariana LegislatureEstates 2 Historical eraMiddle Ages Golden Bull of RiminiMarch 1226 Teutonic takeover of Gdansk08 November 1308 Battle of Grunwald15 July 1410 Thirteen Years War1454 1466 Second Peace of Thorn19 October 1466 Polish Teutonic War1519 1521 Prussian Homage end of the Prussian branch 10 April 1525 Treaty of Vilnius 1561 end of the Livonian branch 28 November 1561CurrencyMarkPreceded by Succeeded byOld PrussiansDuchy of EstoniaYotvingians Duchy of PrussiaDuchy of Courland and SemigalliaDuchy of LivoniaSwedish EstoniaRoyal PrussiaFollowing the battles of Grunwald in 1410 and Wilkomierz in 1435 the State fell into decline After losing extensive territory in the imposed Peace of Thorn in 1466 the extant territory of its Prussian branch became known as Monastic Prussia Polish Prusy zakonne or Teutonic Prussia Polish Prusy krzyzackie and existed until 1525 as a part and fiefdom of the Kingdom of Poland 1 The Livonian branch joined the Livonian Confederation and continued to exist as part of it until 1561 Contents 1 Overview 2 Background 2 1 Poles in Old Prussia 2 2 Papal edicts 2 3 Cities founded 3 History 3 1 13th century 3 2 14th century 3 2 1 Danzig and the Hansa 3 2 2 Second Danish Hanseatic War 3 2 3 English Merchant Adventurers 3 2 4 Trading 3 3 15th century 3 3 1 Konrad von Jungingen 3 3 2 Losses to Poland Polish suzerainty 3 3 3 Formation of a new nobility 3 4 16th century and aftermath 3 4 1 Transformation to Ducal Prussia 4 Archaeology 4 1 Marienburg fort 4 2 Coins 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksOverview editEstablished in Prussia and the Polish Masovian Chelmno Land in the 13th century the state expanded mostly as a result of the 13th century Prussian Crusade against the pagan Baltic Prussians and the 14th century invasions of neighboring Christian countries of Poland and Lithuania 4 The conquests were followed by German and Polish colonization 5 In addition the Livonian Brothers of the Sword controlling Terra Mariana were incorporated into the Teutonic Order as its autonomous branch the Livonian Order in 1237 6 In 1346 the Duchy of Estonia was sold by the King of Denmark for 19 000 Cologne marks to the Teutonic Order The shift of sovereignty from Denmark to the Teutonic Order took place on 1 November 1346 7 At the turn of the 14th and 15th centuries the Teutonic Order temporarily acquired the territories of Gotland and Neumark which however it sold in the following decades Throughout its history the Teutonic state waged numerous wars with Poland 4 and Lithuania encouraging the two countries to form a close alliance and personal union which eventually led to the creation of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth in the 16th century Following its defeat in the Battle of Grunwald in 1410 the Teutonic Order fell into decline the region of Samogitia was restored to Lithuania 8 The Prussian branch of the Teutonic Order returned Pomerelia the previously Polish regions of Chelmno Land and Gdansk Pomerania and ceded the western part of Prussia Warmia as well as parts of Pomesania and Pogesania to Poland after the Peace of Thorn in 1466 9 The territories ceded to the Kingdom of Poland formed the Polish province of Royal Prussia while the eastern part remained under Teutonic Order rule 10 known thereafter as the Monastic Prussia Polish Prusy zakonne or Teutonic Prussia Polish Prusy krzyzackie as a feudal fief and integral part of the Kingdom of Poland 1 The monastic state of the Order s main Prussian branch was secularized in 1525 during the Protestant Reformation to become the Duchy of Prussia ruled by the House of Hohenzollern remaining a fiefdom of the Polish Crown and later the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth The Livonian branch continued as part of the Livonian Confederation established in 1422 1435 which became a protectorate of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in 1559 and was finally secularised and split into the Duchy of Courland and Semigalia as well as the Duchy of Livonia in 1561 both duchies being fiefs of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania Background editPoles in Old Prussia edit The Old Prussians withstood many attempts at conquest preceding that of the Teutonic Knights Boleslaw I of Poland began the series of unsuccessful conquests when he sent Adalbert of Prague in 997 In 1147 Boleslaw IV of Poland attacked Prussia with the aid of Kievan Rus but was unable to conquer it Numerous other attempts followed and under Duke Konrad I of Masovia were intensified with large battles and crusades in 1209 1219 1220 and 1222 11 The West Baltic Prussians successfully repelled most of the campaigns and managed to strike Konrad in retaliation However the Prussians and Yotvingians in the south had their territory conquered The land of the Yotvingians was situated in the area of what is today the Podlaskie Voivodeship of Poland The Prussians attempted to oust Polish or Masovian forces from Yotvingia which by now was partially conquered devastated and almost totally depopulated Papal edicts edit Konrad of Masovia had already called a crusade against the Old Prussians in 1208 but it was not successful Konrad acting on the advice of Christian first bishop of Prussia established the Order of Dobrzyn a small group of 15 knights The Order however was soon defeated and in reaction Konrad called on the Pope for yet another crusade and for help from the Teutonic Knights As a result several edicts called for crusades against the Old Prussians The crusades involving many of Europe s knights lasted for sixty years In 1211 Andrew II of Hungary enfeoffed the Teutonic Knights with the Burzenland In 1225 Andrew II expelled the Teutonic Knights from Transylvania and they had to transfer to the Baltic Sea Early in 1224 Emperor Frederick II announced at Catania that Livonia Prussia with Sambia and a number of neighboring provinces were under imperial immediacy This decree subordinated the provinces directly to the Roman Catholic Church and the Holy Roman Emperor as opposed to being under the jurisdiction of local rulers At the end of 1224 Pope Honorius III announced to all Christendom his appointment of Bishop William of Modena as the Papal Legate for Livonia Prussia and other countries As a result of the Golden Bull of Rimini in 1226 and the Papal Bull of Rieti of 1234 Prussia came into the Teutonic Order s possession The Knights began the Prussian Crusade in 1230 Under their governance woodlands were cleared and marshlands made arable upon which many cities and villages were founded including Marienburg Malbork and Konigsberg Kaliningrad Cities founded edit Unlike newly founded cities between the rivers Elbe and Oder the cities founded by the Teutonic Order had a much more regular rectangular sketch of streets indicating their character as planned foundations 12 The cities were heavily fortified accounting for the long lasting conflicts with the resistive native Old Prussians with armed forces under command of the knights 12 Most cities were prevailingly populated with immigrants from Middle Germany and Silesia where many knights of the order had their homelands 13 The cities were usually given Magdeburg law town privileges with the one exception of Elbing Elblag which was founded with the support of Lubeckers and thus was awarded Lubeck law 12 While the Lubeckers provided the Order important logistic support with their ships they were otherwise with the exception of Elbing rather uninvolved in the establishment of the Monastic State 12 History editSee also Terra Mariana History 13th century edit In 1234 the Teutonic Order assimilated the remaining members of the Order of Dobrzyn and in 1237 the Order of the Livonian Brothers of the Sword The assimilation of the Livonian Brothers of the Sword established in Livonia in 1202 increased the Teutonic Order s lands with the addition of the territories known today as Latvia and Estonia In 1243 the Papal legate William of Modena divided Prussia into four bishoprics Culm Chelmno Pomesania Ermland Warmia and Samland Sambia The bishoprics became suffragans to the Archbishopric of Riga under the mother city of Visby on Gotland Each diocese was fiscally and administratively divided into one third reserved for the maintenance of the capitular canons and two thirds were where the Order collected the dues The cathedral capitular canons of Culm Pomesania and Samland were simultaneously members of the Teutonic Order since the 1280s ensuring a strong influence by the Order Only Warmia s diocesan chapter maintained independence enabling to establish its autonomous rule in the capitular third of Warmia s diocesan territory Prince Bishopric of Warmia nbsp Teutonic state in 126014th century edit Danzig and the Hansa edit At the beginning of the 14th century the Duchy of Pomerania a neighboring region plunged into war with Poland and the Margraviate of Brandenburg to the west The Teutonic Knights seized the Polish port city of Gdansk in November 1308 The Order had been called by King Wladyslaw I of Poland to help repel a Brandenburgian invasion however the Teutonic Knights themselves began to occupy the city and the region The Teutonic Knights then carried out a massacre of the inhabitants of the city killing up to 10 000 people according to medieval sources although the exact number of victims is a subject of disputes In September 1309 Margrave Waldemar of Brandenburg Stendal sold his claim to the territory to the Teutonic Order for the sum of 10 000 Marks in the Treaty of Soldin This marked the beginning of a series of conflicts between Poland and the Teutonic Knights as the Order continued incorporating territories into its domains While the Order promoted the Prussian cities by granting them extended surrounding territory and privileges establishing courts civil and commercial law it allowed the cities less outward independence than free imperial cities enjoyed within the Holy Roman Empire 13 14 The members of the Hanseatic League did consider merchants from Prussian cities as their like but also accepted the Grand Master 15 of the Order as the sole territorial ruler representing Prussia at their Hanseatic Diets 12 Thus Prussian merchants along with those from Ditmarsh were the only beneficiaries of a quasi membership within the Hansa although lacking the background of citizenship in a fully autonomous or free city 16 Only merchants from the six Prussian Hanseatic cities of Braunsberg Braniewo Culm Chelmno Danzig Gdansk Elbing Konigsberg and Thorn Torun were considered fully fledged members of the league while merchants from other Prussian cities had a lesser status 17 nbsp The Battle of Plowce 1331 was a major battle of the Second Polish Teutonic War 19th century painting by Juliusz Kossak The Teutonic Order s annexation and possession of Gdansk Danzig and the surrounding region was consistently disputed by the Polish kings Wladyslaw I and Casimir III the Great claims that led to the Polish Teutonic War 1326 1332 and eventually lawsuits in the papal court in 1320 and 1333 which ruled in favor of Poland however the Teutonic Knights did not comply and continued to occupy the annexed Polish territories 4 The Teutonic Knights even invaded Poland further and briefly occupied the regions of Kuyavia and Dobrzyn Land 4 A peace was concluded at Kalisz in 1343 Kuyavia and Dobrzyn Land were restored to Poland and the Teutonic Order agreed that Poland should rule Pomerelia as a fief and Polish kings therefore retained the right to the title Duke of Pomerania The title referred to the Duchy of Pomerelia Unlike in English German Latin or Lithuanian language Polish uses the term Pomorze for Pomerania a fief of Poland Saxony and Denmark in the High Middle Ages and first briefly in 1181 but since 1227 a permanent fief within the Holy Roman Empire and Pomerelia alike Both duchies were earlier ruled by related dynasties thus the semantic title was Duke of Pomerania rather than Duke of Pomerelia as it was referred to in other languages Second Danish Hanseatic War edit In the conflict between the Hanse and Denmark on the trade in the Baltic King Valdemar IV of Denmark had held the Hanseatic city of Visby to ransom in 1361 18 However the members of the Hanseatic league were undecided whether to unite against him 19 But when Valdemar IV then captured Prussian merchant ships in the Oresund on their way to England Grand Master Winrich of Kniprode travelled to Lubeck to propose a war alliance against Denmark accepted with some reluctance only by the important cities forming the Wendish Saxon third of the Hanse 20 Since Valdemar IV had also attacked ships of the Dutch city of Kampen and other destinations in the Zuiderzee Prussia and Dutch cities such as Kampen Elburg and Harderwijk allied themselves against Denmark 20 This resulted in the Hansa calling up a diet in Cologne in 1367 and convening the afore mentioned non member cities including Amsterdam and Brielle The upshot was the founding of the Cologne Federation as a war alliance to counter the Danish threat 21 More cities from the Lower Rhine area in the west to Livonia in the east joined 21 Of the major players only Bremen and Hamburg refused to send forces but contributed financially 22 Besides Prussia three more territorial partners Henry II of Schauenburg and Holstein Rendsburg Albert II of Mecklenburg and the latter s son Albert of Sweden joined the alliance attacking via land and sea forcing Denmark to sign the Treaty of Stralsund in 1370 22 Several Danish castles and fortresses were then taken by Hansa forces for fifteen years in order to secure the implementation of the peace conditions English Merchant Adventurers edit The invasions of the Teutonic Order from Livonia to Pskov in 1367 had caused the Russians to recoup themselves on Hansa merchants in Novgorod which again made the Order block exports of salt and herring into Russia 23 While the relations had eased by 1371 so that trade resumed they soured again until 1388 24 During the Lithuanian crusade of 1369 1370 ending with the Teutonic victory in the Battle of Rudau Prussia enjoyed considerable support from English knights 25 The Order welcomed English Merchant Adventurers starting to cruise in the Baltic competing with Dutch Saxon and Wendish Hanseatic merchants and allowed them to open outposts in its cities of Danzig and Elbing 26 This necessarily brought about a conflict with the rest of the Hansa which was in a heavy argument with Richard II of England over levies of higher dues The Merchants struggled to achieve an unsatisfactory compromise 25 Dissatisfied Richard II s navy suddenly attacked six Prussian ships in May 1385 and those of more Hanse members in the Zwin 27 Grand Master Conrad Zollner von Rothenstein immediately terminated all trade with England 27 When in the same year the Hansa evacuated all their Danish castles in fulfillment of the Treaty of Stralsund Prussia argued in favour of a renewal of the Cologne Federation for the deeply concerned about the ensuing conflict with England but could not prevail 28 The cities preferred to negotiate and take retaliatory actions such as counter confiscation of English merchandise 27 So when in 1388 Richard II finally reconfirmed the Hanseatic trade privileges Prussia once again permitted merchant adventurers granting permissions to remain for this action they were renounced once again by the Grand Master Conrad of Jungingen in 1398 27 In the conflict with the Burgundian Philip the Bold on the Hansa privileges in the Flemish cities the positions of the Hanseatic cities and Prussia were again reversed Here the majority of the Hansa members decided in the Hanseatic Diet on 1 May 1388 for an embargo against the Flemish cities Meanwhile Prussia could not prevail with its plea for further negotiations 29 Trading edit The Order s Grossschaffer was one of the leading functionaries of the order The word translates roughly as chief sales and buying officer with procuration This officer was in charge of the considerable commerce import export crediting real estate investment etc which the Order carried out using its network of bailiwicks and agencies which spanned much of Central Western and Southern Europe as well as the Holy Land The other Grossschaffer in Marienburg had the grain export monopoly As to imports neither was bound to any particular merchandise From Konigsberg holding the monopoly in amber export achieved the exceptional permission to continue amber exports to Flanders and textile imports in return 30 On the occasion of the ban on Flemish trade the Hansa urged Prussia and Livonia again to interrupt the exchange with Novgorod as well but with both blockades Russian and Flemish commodities could not reach their final destinations 24 In 1392 it was Grand Master Conrad of Wallenrode who supported the Flemish to achieve an acceptable agreement with the Hansa resuming the bilateral trade 30 while a Hanseatic delegation under Johann Niebur reopened trade with Novgorod in the same year after reconfirmation of the previous mutual privileges 24 Since the late 1380s grave piracy by privateers promoted by Albert of Sweden and Mecklenburg actually directed against Margaret I of Denmark blocked seafaring to the herring supplies at the Scania Market thus fish prices tripled in Prussia 31 The Saxon Hansa cities urged Prussia to intervene but Conrad of Jungingen was more worried about a Danish victory 31 So only after the cities led by Lubeck s burgomaster Hinrich Westhof had liaised clarification needed the Treaty of Skanor 1395 Albert s defeat manifested clarification needed so that Prussia finally sent out its ships led by Danzig s city councillor Conrad Letzkau 32 33 Until 1400 the united Teutonic Hanseatic flotilla then thoroughly cleared the Baltic Sea of pirates the Victual Brothers and even took the island of Gotland in 1398 32 33 Commodity selling prices of Teutonic Order in Prussian Marks 1400 34 This is meaningless without stating the quantity of these commodities that could be bought for these prices Saffron 7040 Hungarian iron 21Ginger 1040 Trave salt clarification needed 12 5Pepper 640 Herring 12Wax 237 5 Flemish salt 8French wine 109 5 Wismar beer 7 5Rice 80 Flour 7 5Steel 75 Wheat 7Rhenish wine 66 Rye 5 75Oil 60 Barley 4 2Honey 35 Ash woad 4 75Butter 3015th century edit nbsp Teutonic state in 1410Konrad von Jungingen edit At the beginning of the 15th century the State of the Teutonic Order stood at the height of its power under Konrad Conrad von Jungingen The Teutonic navy ruled the Baltic Sea from bases in Prussia and Gotland and the Prussian cities provided tax revenues sufficient to maintain a significant standing force composed of Teutonic Knights proper their retinues Prussian peasant levies and German mercenaries In 1402 the Luxembourg dynasty which ruled the Margraviate of Brandenburg reached an agreement with Poland in Krakow according to which Poland was to purchase and re incorporate the region of New March Neumark 35 Later that year however the Luxembourgs gave the region in pawn to the Teutonic Order despite prior arrangements with Poland and the Order kept it until Brandenburg redeemed it again in 1454 and 1455 respectively by the Treaties of Colln and Mewe Though the possession of this territory by the Order strengthened ties between the Order and their secular counterparts in northern Germany it exacerbated the already hostile relationship between the Order and Polish Lithuanian union In March 1407 Konrad died from complications caused by gallstones and was succeeded by his younger brother Ulrich von Jungingen Under Ulrich the Teutonic State fell from its precarious height and became mired in internal political strife near constant war with Polish Lithuanian union and crippling war debts Losses to Poland Polish suzerainty edit nbsp The Battle of Grunwald 1410 marked the start of decline of the State of the Teutonic Order 19th century painting by Jan Matejko In 1408 Conrad Letzkau served as a diplomat to Queen Margaret I and arranged that the Order sell Gotland to Denmark 32 In 1409 the Teutonic Order invaded Poland s Dobrzyn Land again and the Polish Lithuanian Teutonic War broke out 4 in which the Teutonic Knights were supported by the Duchy of Pomerania and the Polish Lithuanian alliance was supported by Ruthenian Tatar and Moldavian allies and auxiliary forces Poland and Lithuania triumphed following a victory at the Battle of Grunwald Tannenberg which marked the start of the decline of the State of the Teutonic Order and the rise of the Polish Lithuanian union as a major power in Central and Eastern Europe 36 The Order assigned Heinrich von Plauen to defend Teutonic held Eastern Pomerania Pomerelia who moved rapidly to bolster the defence of Marienburg Castle in Pomesania Heinrich von Plauen was elected vice grand master and led the Teutonic Knights through the Siege of Marienburg in 1410 Eventually von Plauen was promoted to Grand Master and in 1411 concluded the First Treaty of Thorn with King Wladyslaw II Jagiello of Poland The next major Polish Teutonic war was fought in 1431 1435 after the Teutonic Knights invaded Poland again and was ended in the Peace of Brzesc Kujawski which was favorable for Poland 4 In March 1440 gentry mainly from Culmerland and the Hanseatic cities of Danzig Elbing Kneiphof Thorn and other Prussian cities founded the Prussian Confederation to free themselves from the overlordship of the Teutonic Knights Due to the heavy losses and costs after the war against Poland and Lithuania the Teutonic Order collected taxes at steep rates Furthermore the cities were not allowed due representation by the Teutonic Order nbsp The Polish Teutonic peace treaty of 1466 made the Teutonic state a fief of the Kingdom of PolandIn February 1454 the Prussian Confederation asked King Casimir IV of Poland to support their revolt and to incorporate the region to the Kingdom of Poland King Casimir IV agreed and signed the act of incorporation in Krakow on 6 March 1454 37 The Thirteen Years War the longest of the Polish Teutonic wars also known as the War of the Cities broke out Various cities of the region pledged allegiance to the Polish King in 1454 38 The Second Peace of Thorn in October 1466 ended the war and provided for the Teutonic Order s cession of its rights over the western half of its territories to the Polish Kingdom 9 which became the Polish province of Royal Prussia and the remaining part of the Order s land became a fief and protectorate of Poland considered part of one and indivisible Kingdom of Poland 1 In accordance to the peace treaty from now on every Grand Master was obliged to swear an oath of allegiance to the reigning Polish king within six months of taking office and any new territorial acquisitions by the Teutonic Order also outside Prussia would also be incorporated into Poland 39 The Grand Master of the Teutonic Order became a prince and counselor of the Polish king and the Kingdom of Poland 40 nbsp Teutonic state in 1466Formation of a new nobility edit While the Knights of the Teutonic Order formed a thin ruling class by themselves they extensively used mercenaries mostly German from the Holy Roman Empire to whom they granted lands in return This gradually created a new class of landed nobility Due to several factors among which was the high rate of early death in battle these lands became concentrated over time in the hands of a relatively small number of noblemen each having a vast estate This nobility would evolve to what is known as the Prussian Junker nobility 41 16th century and aftermath edit Transformation to Ducal Prussia edit During the Protestant Reformation endemic religious upheavals and wars occurred across the region In 1525 during the aftermath of the Polish Teutonic War 1519 1521 Sigismund I the Old King of Poland and his nephew the last Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights Albert of Brandenburg Ansbach a member of a cadet branch of the House of Hohenzollern agreed that the latter would resign his position adopt Lutheran faith and assume the title of Duke of Prussia Thereafter referred to as Ducal Prussia German Herzogliches Preussen Preussen Herzoglichen Anteils Polish Prusy Ksiazece remaining a Polish fief nbsp The Prussian Homage of 1525 established Ducal Prussia as a vassal duchy of the Kingdom of Poland in place of the State of the Teutonic OrderThus in a deal partially brokered by Martin Luther Roman Catholic Teutonic Prussia was transformed into the Duchy of Prussia the first Protestant state Sigismund s consent was bound to Albert s submission to Poland which became known as the Prussian Homage On 10 December 1525 at their session in Konigsberg the Prussian estates established the Lutheran Church in Ducal Prussia by deciding the Church Order 42 The Habsburg led Holy Roman Empire continued to hold its claim to Prussia and furnished grand masters of the Teutonic Order who were merely titular administrators of Prussia but managed to retain many of the Teutonic holdings elsewhere outside of PrussiaArchaeology editFortifications of the Ordensstaat have been examined through archaeological excavation since the end of World War II especially those built or expanded during the fourteenth century Fortifications are generally the best preserved material legacy of the Order s presence in the Baltic today and timber and earth as well as brick examples are attested in the archaeological record The earliest castles in the Ordensstaat consisted of simple buildings attached to a fortified enclosure and whilst the quadrangular red brick structure would come to typify convent buildings single wing castles would continue to be built alongside timber towers 43 Where they followed the conventional layout castles included a connected set of communal spaces such as a dormitory refectory kitchen chapter house a chapel or church an infirmary and tower projecting over the moat Marienburg fort edit Construction began on Marienburg during the third quarter of the thirteenth century and work continued on it until the middle of the fifteenth century A settlement developed alongside the castle which together enclosed 25 hectares Granted town rights in 1286 its castle is larger than any other built by the Order Since 1997 the outer bailey has been thoroughly excavated dating to the mid 1350s Preserved at Marienburg was a polychrome statue of Mary about eight meters in height made of artificial stone and originally decorated with mosaic tiles Mary was the most important patron of the knights and central to the liturgy of the Teutonic Order so it is not surprising to find such striking representations of her at their most prominent castle Coins edit Coins were minted from the late 1250s These were often simple in design stamped with the cross of the Order on one side but support the notion that crusading colonisation and a supporting infrastructure went hand in hand from the earliest years of the Prussian Crusade 44 See also editOstsiedlung Prussia War of the Priests Poland Notes edit a b c d Gorski 1949 pp 96 97 214 215 Stone Daniel 2001 A History of Central Europe University of Washington Press pp 18 19 ISBN 0295980931 France John 2005 The Crusades and the Expansion of Catholic Christendom 1000 1714 New York Routledge p 380 ISBN 0415371287 a b c d e f wojny polsko krzyzackie Encyklopedia PWN in Polish Retrieved 7 November 2020 Bieszk Janusz 2010 Zamki Panstwa Krzyzackiego in Polish Warszawa Bellona p 76 ISBN 978 8311118089 Frucht Richard C 2005 Eastern Europe An Introduction to the People Lands and Culture ABC CLIO p 69 ISBN 1576078000 Skyum Nielsen Niels 1981 Danish Medieval History amp Saxo Grammaticus Museum Tusculanum Press p 129 ISBN 8788073300 Housley Norman 1992 The later Crusades 1274 1580 p 371 ISBN 0198221363 a b Gorski 1949 pp 88 92 206 210 Gorski 1949 pp 93 94 212 Lewinski Corwin Edward Henry 1917 The Political History of Poland The Polish Book Importing Company p 45 lizard union a b c d e Philippe Dollinger Die Hanse La Hanse XIIe XVIIe siecles German see references for bibliographical details p 55 ISBN 3 520 37105 7 a b Philippe Dollinger Die Hanse La Hanse XIIe XVIIe siecles German see references for bibliographical details p 54 ISBN 3 520 37105 7 Philippe Dollinger Die Hanse La Hanse XIIe XVIIe siecles German see references for bibliographical details p 123 ISBN 3 520 37105 7 in German Hochmeister literally High Master Philippe Dollinger Die Hanse La Hanse XIIe XVIIe siecles German see references for bibliographical details p 124 ISBN 3 520 37105 7 Cf Philippe Dollinger Die Hanse La Hanse XIIe XVIIe siecles German see references for bibliographical details p 123 ISBN 3 520 37105 7 Philippe Dollinger Die Hanse La Hanse XIIe XVIIe siecles German see references for bibliographical details p 96 ISBN 3 520 37105 7 Philippe Dollinger Die Hanse La Hanse XIIe XVIIe siecles German see references for bibliographical details p 97 ISBN 3 520 37105 7 a b Philippe Dollinger Die Hanse La Hanse XIIe XVIIe siecles German see references for bibliographical details p 98 ISBN 3 520 37105 7 a b Philippe Dollinger Die Hanse La Hanse XIIe XVIIe siecles German see references for bibliographical details p 99 ISBN 3 520 37105 7 a b Philippe Dollinger Die Hanse La Hanse XIIe XVIIe siecles German see references for bibliographical details p 100 ISBN 3 520 37105 7 Philippe Dollinger Die Hanse La Hanse XIIe XVIIe siecles German see references for bibliographical details pp 109 seq ISBN 3 520 37105 7 a b c Philippe Dollinger Die Hanse La Hanse XIIe XVIIe siecles German see references for bibliographical details p 110 ISBN 3 520 37105 7 a b Philippe Dollinger Die Hanse La Hanse XIIe XVIIe siecles German see references for bibliographical details p 104 ISBN 3 520 37105 7 Philippe Dollinger Die Hanse La Hanse XIIe XVIIe siecles German see references for bibliographical details pp 103 seq ISBN 3 520 37105 7 a b c d Philippe Dollinger Die Hanse La Hanse XIIe XVIIe siecles German see references for bibliographical details p 105 ISBN 3 520 37105 7 Philippe Dollinger Die Hanse La Hanse XIIe XVIIe siecles German see references for bibliographical details p 102 ISBN 3 520 37105 7 Philippe Dollinger Die Hanse La Hanse XIIe XVIIe siecles German see references for bibliographical details p 107 ISBN 3 520 37105 7 a b Philippe Dollinger Die Hanse La Hanse XIIe XVIIe siecles German see references for bibliographical details p 108 ISBN 3 520 37105 7 a b Philippe Dollinger Die Hanse La Hanse XIIe XVIIe siecles German see references for bibliographical details p 113 ISBN 3 520 37105 7 a b c Natalia Borzestowska and Waldemar Borzestowski Dlaczego zginal burmistrz 17 October 2005 retrieved on 8 September 2011 a b Philippe Dollinger Die Hanse La Hanse XIIe XVIIe siecles German see references for bibliographical details p 114 ISBN 3 520 37105 7 W Bonhke Der Binnenhandel des Deutschen Ordens in Preusen in Hansische Geschichtsblatter 80 1962 pp 51 53 Rogalski Leon 1846 Dzieje Krzyzakow oraz ich stosunki z Polska Litwa i Prussami poprzedzone rysem dziejow wojen krzyzowych in Polish Vol II Warszawa pp 59 60 Ekdahl Sven 2008 The Battle of Tannenberg Grunwald Zalgiris 1410 as reflected in Twentieth Century monuments in Victor Mallia Milanes ed The Military Orders History and Heritage vol 3 Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 175 ISBN 978 0 7546 6290 7 Gorski 1949 p 54 Gorski 1949 pp 71 72 76 79 Gorski 1949 pp 96 97 215 Gorski 1949 pp 96 103 214 221 Rosenberg H 1943 The Rise of the Junkers in Brandenburg Prussia 1410 1653 Part 1 The American Historical Review 49 1 1 22 Albertas Juska Mazosios Lietuvos Baznycia XVI XX amziuje Klaipeda 1997 pp 742 771 here after the German translation Die Kirche in Klein Litauen section 2 Reformatorische Anfange in German on Lietuvos Evangeliku Liuteronu Baznycia retrieved on 28 August 2011 Pluskowski Aleksander 2013 The Archaeology of the Prussian Crusade Holy War and Colonization Routledge p 149 Pluskowski Aleksander 2013 The Archaeology of the Prussian Crusade Holy War and Colonization Routledge p 110 References editDollinger Philippe 1998 1966 Hans Krabusch and Marga Krabusch trls ed Die Hanse La Hanse XIIe XVIIe siecles Paris Aubier 1964 in German Vol 371 Stuttgart Kroner Kroners Taschenbuchausgabe ISBN 3 520 37105 7 Pluskowski Aleksander The Archaeology of the Prussian Crusade Holy War and Colonization London Routledge 2013 ISBN 0415691710 Gorski Karol 1949 Zwiazek Pruski i poddanie sie Prus Polsce zbior tekstow zrodlowych in Polish and Latin Poznan Instytut Zachodni External links edit nbsp Media related to State of the Teutonic Order at Wikimedia Commons Ordensland de cities castles and landscapes of the Teutonic Knights in German Teutonic Order at worldstatesmen 54 43 N 20 31 E 54 717 N 20 517 E 54 717 20 517 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title State of the Teutonic Order amp oldid 1180506795, 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.