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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > German Political Geography > Prussia
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Prussia, German Political Geography

Related Category: German Political Geography


Prussia[prush´u] Pronunciation Key, Ger. Preussen, former state, the largest and most important of the German states. Berlin was the capital. The chief member of the German Empire (1871–1918) and a state of the Weimar Republic (1919–33), Prussia occupied more than half of all Germany and the major part of N Germany. Before 1919 it consisted of 13 provinces: Berlin, Brandenburg, East Prussia (separated after 1919 from the rest of Prussia by the Polish Corridor), Hanover, Hesse-Nassau (see Hesse), Hohenzollern (a Prussian enclave between WUrttemberg and Baden in SW Germany), Pomerania, Rhine Province, Saxony, Schleswig-Holstein, Upper Silesia and Lower Silesia, and Westphalia. (Grenzmark Posen–West Prussia was sometimes considered a 14th province.) Prussia surrounded several smaller German states and stretched from the borders of the Netherlands, Belgium, and Luxembourg in the west to those of Lithuania and Poland in the east, and from the Baltic Sea, Denmark, and the North Sea in the north to the Main River, the Thuringian Forest, and the Sudetes Mts. in the south.

The region that was Prussia is made up mainly of low-lying land, drained by several rivers, notably the Rhine; the Weser; the Oder; and the Elbe, which divided the state into roughly equal eastern and western parts. After Berlin, the largest cities of the area were Cologne, Breslau (Wroclaw), Essen, Frankfurt, DUsseldorf, Hanover, Dortmund, Magdeburg, and KOnigsberg (Kaliningrad). The region also included the gigantic industrial Ruhr district.

Industrially and politically the most prominent state of Germany prior to World War II, Prussia was partitioned among the four Allied occupation zones after 1945. In 1947 the Allied Control Council for Germany formally abolished the state of Prussia. This action not only confirmed an accomplished fact; it was also intended as a blow against the spirit of German militarism and aggression, long held to be connected with Prussia. Most of the former Prussian provinces became part of the new states of the Federal Republic of Germany and of the German Democratic Republic (now reunified). The USSR annexed the northern part of East Prussia; Poland acquired the rest of East Prussia, as well as all Prussian territory E of the Oder and Neisse rivers.

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The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press.
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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Albert of Brandenburg
Austrian Succession, War of the
Austro-Prussian War
Berlin, city, Germany
Otto von Bismarck
Brandenburg, state, Germany
Cleves, duchy of
Johann Gustav Droysen
East Prussia
Ermeland
Franco-Prussian War
Frankfurt Parliament
Frederick I, king of Prussia
Frederick II, king of Prussia
Frederick William, elector of Brandenburg
Frederick William I
Frederick William II
Frederick William III
Frederick William IV
French Revolutionary Wars
Gdansk
German Confederation
Germany
Gneisenau, August, Graf Neithardt von
Hanover, former kingdom and province, Germany
Hardenberg, Karl August, FUrst von
Hesse
Hohenzollern, former province, Germany
Holy Alliance
Holy Roman Empire
Humboldt, Wilhelm, Freiherr von
Kulturkampf
Napoleon I
North German Confederation
Northern War
Oliva, Peace of
Olomouc
Franz von Papen
Poland, partitions of
Polish Corridor
Pomerania
Leopold von Ranke
Rhine Province
Ruhr
Saxony
Gerhard Johann David von Scharnhorst
Schleswig-Holstein
Seven Years War
Silesia
Stein, Karl, Freiherr vom und zum
Teutonic Knights
Heinrich von Treitschke
Westphalia
West Prussia
William I, emperor of Germany and king of Prussia
Yorck von Wartenburg, Ludwig, Graf
Zollverein

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