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The title of this article contains the
character ö. Where it is
unavailable or not desired, the name may be represented as
Koenigsberg.
Königsberg
pronunciation (help·info) (Lithuanian: Karaliaučius; Low German: Königsbarg; Polish: Królewiec; the Latinised
name of the city is Regimontium Prussorum; see also other names) was the capital
of eastern Prussia
from the Late
Middle Ages until 1945. It was founded by the Teutonic
Knights just south of the Sambian peninsula in the year 1255 AD during the Northern
Crusades and named for King (German:König) Ottokar
II of Bohemia. The city
successively became the capital of their monastic state, the Duchy of
Prussia, and East Prussia. The Baltic port developed into a German cultural center, being
the residence of, among others, Richard Wagner, Immanuel Kant, E. T. A.
Hoffmann, and David Hilbert.
Königsberg was heavily damaged by Allied bombing in
1944 during World War
II and was subsequently conquered by the Red Army after the Battle of Königsberg in 1945. The
city was annexed by the Soviet Union according to the Potsdam
Agreement and largely repopulated with Russians. Briefly Russified as Кёнигсберг (Kyonigsberg), it
was renamed Kaliningrad in 1946 after Soviet
leader Mikhail
Kalinin. The city is now the capital of Russia's Kaliningrad Oblast.
History
Teutonic
Order
The later location of Königsberg was preceded by an Old Prussian fort
known as Twangste (Tuwangste, Tvankste)
as well as several Prussian settlements. During the conquest of the
Prussian Sambians by the
Teutonic
Knights in 1255, Twangste was destroyed and replaced with a new
fortress known as Conigsberg. Its name meant "King's
Mountain" (Latin: castrum Koningsberg, Mons Regius,
Regiomonti), honoring King Ottokar
II of Bohemia, who paid for the erection of the first fortress
there during the Prussian Crusade.[1][2] Near
this new Königsberg Castle arose the towns of
Altstadt (Old Town), Kneiphof, and Löbenicht along the Pregel River, roughly 4.5
miles from the Vistula Lagoon.[3]
Altstadt was founded in 1256 on the Steindamm (now Leninprospekt),
while Kneiphof developed on an island of the same name (now Kant
Island) in the Pregel. To the east of the other two towns was
Löbenicht, lying between the Schlossteich and the new Pregel.
The Teutonic Order used Königsberg to fortify their conquests in
Samland and as a base for campaigns against pagan Lithuania. Under
siege during the Prussian uprisings in 1262–63,
Königsberg was relieved by the Master of the Livonian
Order.[4][5]
Altstadt was destroyed by the Prussians during the rebellion and
rebuilt in the valley below the castle hill. Altstadt received Culm rights in 1286, while
Kneiphof received its charter in 1327.
Within the monastic state of the Teutonic Knights,
Königsberg was the residence of the marshal, one of the chief
administrators of the military order.[6] The
city was also the seat of the Bishopric of Samland, one of the
four dioceses into which Prussia had
been divided in 1243 by the papal legate, William of Modena. Adalbert of
Prague became the main patron saint of Königsberg Cathedral, a landmark
of the city located in Kneiphof.
Königsberg joined the Hanseatic League in 1340 and developed
into an important port for the southeastern Baltic region, trading
goods throughout Prussia, the Kingdom of Poland, and
the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. The
chronicler Peter of Dusburg probably wrote his
Chronicon terrae Prussiae in Königsberg from
1324–1330.[7]
After the Teutonic Order's victory over pagan Lithuanians in the 1348 Battle of Strawen, Grand Master Winrich
von Kniprode established a Cistercian
nunnery in the city.[8]
Aspiring students were educated in Königsberg before continuing on
to higher education elsewhere, such as Prague or Leipzig.[7]
Although the knights suffered a crippling defeat in the Battle of
Grunwald (Tannenberg), Königsberg remained under the control of
the Teutonic Knights throughout the Polish-Lithuanian-Teutonic War. Livonian
knights replaced the Prussian branch's garrison at Königsberg,
allowing them to participate in the recovery of towns occupied by
Jogaila's troops.[9]
The Prussian Confederation rebelled
against the Teutonic Knights in 1454 and sought the assistance of
Poland. Kneiphof supported the rebellion, although the rest of
Königsberg reaffirmed its loyalty to the order. Grand Master Ludwig von Erlichshausen fled
from the crusaders' capital at Castle Marienburg
to Königsberg in 1457; the city's magistrate presented
Erlichshausen with a barrel of beer out of compassion.[10] When
western Prussia
was transferred to victorious Poland in the Second Peace of Thorn
(1466), which ended the Thirteen Years' War, Königsberg
became the new capital of the reduced monastic state, which became
a fief of the Crown of
the Polish Kingdom.[11] The
grand masters took over the quarters of the marshal. During the Polish-Teutonic War (1519–1521), Königsberg
was unsuccessfully[12]
besieged by Polish forces led by Grand Crown Hetman Mikołaj Firlej.
Duchy of
Prussia
Through the preachings of the Bishop of Samland, Georg von
Polenz, Königsberg became predominantly Lutheran during the Protestant Reformation.[13] After
summoning a quorum of knights
to Königsberg, Grand Master Albert of Brandenburg from the
Hohenzollern dynasty secularised
the Teutonic Knights' remaining territories in Prussia in 1525 and
converted to Lutheranism.[14] By
paying feudal
homage to his uncle, King Sigismund I of
Poland, Albert became the first duke of the new Duchy of
Prussia, a fief of Poland. While the Prussian estates quickly
allied with the duke, the Prussian peasantry would only swear
allegiance to Albert in person at Königsberg, seeking the duke's
support against oppressive nobility. After convincing the rebels to
lay down their arms, Albert had several of their leaders
executed.[15]
Königsberg, the capital of the duchy, became one of the biggest
cities and ports of Prussia, having considerable autonomy, a
separate parliament
and currency, and with German as its dominant language. The
city flourished through the export of wheat, timber, hemp, and furs,[16] as
well as pitch,
tar, and ash.[17]
Königsberg was one of the few Baltic ports regularly visited by
more than one hundred ships annually in the latter 16th century,
the others being Danzig
and Riga.[18] The
University of Königsberg,
founded by Albert in 1544, became a center of Protestant
teachings.
The capable Duke Albert was succeeded by his feeble minded son,
Albert Frederick.
Anna, daughter of Albert Frederick, married Elector John Sigismund
of Brandenburg, who was granted
the right of succession to Prussia on Albert
Frederick's death in 1618. From this time the Duchy of Prussia and
Königsberg were ruled by the Electors of
Brandenburg, the rulers of Brandenburg-Prussia.
Brandenburg-Prussia
Map of Königsberg from 1651.
Because Brandenburg was overrun by Sweden during the Thirty Years'
War, the Hohenzollern court fled to Königsberg. On 1 November
1641, Elector Frederick William persuaded the Prussian
diet to accept an excise tax.[19] In
the Treaty of Königsberg of January
1656, the elector recognized his Duchy of Prussia as a fief of
Sweden. In the Treaty of Wehlau in 1657, however, he
negotiated the release of Prussia from Polish
sovereignty in return for an alliance with Poland. The 1660 Treaty of Oliva
confirmed Prussian independence from both Poland and Sweden.
In 1661 Frederick William informed the Prussian diet he
possessed jus supremi et absoluti domini, and that the Prussian Landtag could only be convened
with his permission. The Königsberg burghers, led by Hieronymus
Roth of Kneiphof, opposed "the Great Elector's" absolutist claims, but
Frederick William succeeded in imposing his authority after
arriving with 2,000 troops in October 1661. Refusing to request
mercy, Roth was imprisoned in Peitz until his death in 1678.
The Prussian estates, which swore fealty to Frederick William in
Königsberg on October 18, 1663,[20]
refused the elector's requests for military funding, and Colonel Christian Ludwig von
Kalckstein sought assistance from neighboring Poland. After
Kalckstein was abducted by the elector's agents, he was executed in
1672. The Prussian estates' submission to Frederick William
followed; in 1673 and 1674 the elector received taxes not granted
by the estates and Königsberg received a garrison without the
estates' consent.[21] The
economic and political weakening of Königsberg strengthened the
power of the Junker nobility
within Prussia.[22]
Königsberg was long a center of Lutheran resistance to Calvinism within
Brandenburg-Prussia; Frederick William forced the city to accept
Calvinist citizens and property holders in 1668.[23]
Kingdom of
Prussia
By the act of coronation in Königsberg Castle on 18 January 1701,
Frederick William's son, Elector Frederick III, became Frederick I, King in
Prussia. The elevation of the Duchy of Prussia to the Kingdom of
Prussia was possible because the Hohenzollerns' authority in
Prussia was independent of Poland and the Holy Roman
Empire. Since "Kingdom of Prussia" was increasingly used to
designate all of the Hohenzollern lands, former ducal Prussia
became known as the Province of Prussia, with Königsberg as its
capital. However, Berlin and Potsdam in Brandenburg were the main residences
of the Prussian kings.
The city was wracked by plague and other illnesses from
September 1709 to April 1710, losing 9,368 people, or roughly a
quarter of its populace.[24] On
June 13, 1724, Altstadt, Kneiphof, and Löbenicht amalgamated to formally create the larger
city Königsberg. Suburbs that subsequently were annexed to
Königsberg include Sackheim, Rossgarten, and Tragheim.[3]
Imperial
Russian troops occupied eastern Prussia at the beginning of
1758 during the Seven Years' War. On December 31,
1757, Empress Elizabeth I of
Russia issued a ukase about the incorporation of Königsberg
into Russia. On January 24, 1758, the leading burghers of
Königsberg submitted to Elizabeth.[25] Five
Imperial
Russian general-governors administered the city during the war
from 1758–62; the Russian army did not abandon the town until
1763.
After the First Partition of Poland in 1772,
Königsberg became the capital of the province of East Prussia in
1773, which replaced the Province of Prussia in 1773. By 1800 the
city was approximately five miles in circumference and had 60,000
inhabitants, including a military garrison of 7,000, making it one
of the most populous German cities of the time.[26]
After Prussia's defeat at the hands of Napoleon
Bonaparte in 1806 during the War of the Fourth
Coalition, King Frederick William III of
Prussia fled with his court from Berlin to Königsberg.[27] The
city was a center for political resistance to Napoleon. In order to
foster liberalism and
nationalism among
the Prussian middle class, the "League of Virtue" was founded in
Königsberg in April 1808. The French forced its dissolution in
December 1809, but its ideals were continued by the
Turnbewegung of Friedrich Ludwig Jahn in
Berlin.[28]
Königsberg officials, such as Johann Gottfried Frey, formulated
much of Stein's 1808
Städteordnung, or new order for urban communities, which
emphasized self-administration for Prussian towns.[29] The
East Prussian Landwehr was organized from the city
after the Convention of Tauroggen.[30]
In 1819 Königsberg had a population of 63,800.[31] It
served as the capital of the united Province of Prussia from
1824–1878, when East Prussia was merged with West Prussia. It was
also the seat of the Regierungsbezirk Königsberg, an
administrative subdivision.
Led by the provincial president Theodor von Schön and the
Königsberger Zeitung newspaper, Königsberg was a
stronghold of liberalism against the conservative
government of King Frederick William
IV.[32]
During the revolution of
1848, there were 21 episodes of public unrest in the city;[33] major
demonstrations were suppressed.[34]
Königsberg became part of the German Empire in 1871 during the
Prussian-led unification of Germany. A
sophisticated for its time series of fortifications around the city
that included fifteen forts was completed in 1888.
The extensive Prussian Eastern Railway
linked the city to Breslau, Thorn, Insterburg, Eydtkuhnen, Tilsit, and
Pillau. In
1860 the railroad connecting Berlin with St. Petersburg was completed and
increased Königsberg's commerce. Extensive electric tramways were
in operation by 1900; and regular steamers plied to Memel, Tapiau and Labiau, Cranz, Tilsit, and Danzig. The completion of a
canal to Pillau in 1901 increased the trade of Russian grain in
Königsberg, but, like much of eastern Germany, the city's economy
was generally in decline.[35] By
1900 the city's population had grown to 188,000, with a
9,000-strong military garrison.[3] By
1914 Königsberg had a population of 246,000;[36] Jews flourished in the culturally
pluralistic city.[37]
Weimar
Republic
Königsberg within the borders of
East Prussia from 1919 to
1939.
Following the defeat of the Central Powers in World War I, Imperial Germany was replaced
with the democratic Weimar Republic. The Kingdom of Prussia
ended with the abdication of the Hohenzollern monarch, William,
and the kingdom was succeeded by the Free State of Prussia. Königsberg and East
Prussia, however, were separated from the rest of Weimar Germany by
the creation of the Polish Corridor. The Ostmesse (Eastern
Trade Fair) at the Königsberg Tiergarten was held annually
starting in 1920; it was intended to compensate for the
geographical distance that handicapped the economic development of
East Prussia and Königsberg. In 1922 the first permanent airport and commercial terminal
solely for commercial aviation was built at Königsberg-Devau. In
1929, Königsberg amalgamated
with some surrounding suburbs.
Nazi
Germany
In 1932 Prussia's legal (Social Democratic)
government under Otto
Braun was ousted by the Reich Government, and Gauleiter Erich Koch replaced the
elected local government during Nazi rule from 1933 to 1945.
In 1935, the Wehrmacht designated Königsberg as the
Headquarters for Wehrkreis I, (under the command of General der
Artillerie Albert Wodrig) which originally took in all of East Prussia. Wehrkreis I was
extended in March 1939 to include the Memel
area. In October 1939, it was extended again to include the Ciechanów and Suwałki areas. In 1942,
the Wehrkreis was again expanded to include the Białystok district.
Army units that called Königsberg home included the I Infantry
Corps, which was part of the pre-Nazi era Standing Army, and the
61st Infanterie Division, which was formed upon mobilization from
reservists from East Prussia. It took part in the invasion of Belgium, which was part of Case Yellow,
and Operation Barbarossa, the invasion
of the Soviet
Union. In Book XII of his World War II, Winston
Churchill referred to Königsberg as "a modernised heavily
defended fortress".
According to the census of May 17, 1939, Königsberg had a
population of 372,164.[38]
Following World War I, Königsberg was home to one third of East
Prussia's 13,000 Jews. The city's Jewish population shrank from
3,200 in 1933 to 2,100 in October 1938. The New Synagogue of
Königsberg, constructed in 1896, was destroyed during Kristallnacht
(November 9, 1938); 500 Jews soon fled the city. After the Wannsee
Conference of January 20, 1942, Königsberg's Jews began to be
deported to camps such as Maly Trostenets, Theresienstadt, and
Auschwitz.[39]
World War
II
The city hosted Radio Königsberg, a propaganda
station, during World
War II.
In 1944 Königsberg suffered heavy damage from British bombing
attacks and burned for several days. The historic city center,
especially the original quarters Altstadt, Löbenicht, and Kneiphof,
was completely destroyed, among it the cathedral, the castle, all
churches of the old city, the old and the new universities, and the
old shipping quarters.
Many people fled Königsberg ahead of the Red Army's advance after October 1944,
particularly after word spread of the Soviet atrocities at Nemmersdorf and Gumbinnen.[40][41]
Soviet forces under General Chernyakhovsky reached the city on
January 13, 1945 and had the city encircled by the end of the
month, but a temporary German breakout allowed many of the
remaining civilians to escape via train and naval evacuation from
the nearby port of Pillau. The siege of Königsberg, which had been
declared a "fortress" (Festung) by the Germans and fanatically
defended, raged all through February and March.
On 21 January during the Red Army's East Prussian Offensive, mostly
Polish and Hungarian Jews from Seerappen, Jesau, Heiligenbeil,
Schippenbeil, and Gerdauen (subcamps of Stutthof concentration
camp) were gathered in Königsberg. Up to 7,000 of them were
forced on a death march to Samland;
those that survived were subsequently executed at Palmnicken.[39]
On April 9 — one month before the end of the war in Europe — the
German military commander of Königsberg, General Otto Lasch, surrendered
the remnants of his forces following a Red Army assault. At the time of the
surrender, military and civilian dead in the city were estimated at
42,000, with the Red Army claiming over 90,000 prisoners. Lasch's
subterranean command bunker has been preserved as a museum, with
the rest of the 19th century fortification complex being abandoned
after use by the Soviet Army until the 1980s as a storage
facility.
About 120,000 survivors remained in the ruins of the devastated
city. These survivors, mainly women, children and the elderly and a
few others who returned immediately after the fighting ended, were
held as virtual prisoners until 1949. The large majority of German
citizens remaining in Königsberg after 1945 died of either disease,
starvation or revenge driven ethnic cleansing.[42]
The remaining 20,000 German residents were expelled in
1949-50.[43]
What remained of Königsberg City Centre
in 1949
Russian
Kaliningrad
Main article:
Kaliningrad
At the end of World War II in 1945, the city was annexed by the
Soviet Union
pending the final determination of territorial questions at the
peace settlement (as part of the Russian SFSR) as
agreed upon by the Allies at the Potsdam Conference:
VI. CITY OF KOENIGSBERG AND THE ADJACENT
AREA
The Conference examined a proposal by the Soviet Government that
pending the final determination of territorial questions at the
peace settlement, the section of the western frontier of the Union
of Soviet Socialist Republics which is adjacent to the Baltic Sea should pass
from a point on the eastern shore of the Bay of Danzig to the east, north of Braunsberg and Goldap, to the meeting point
of the frontiers of Lithuania, the Polish Republic and East Prussia. The Conference has agreed in
principle to the proposal of the Soviet Government concerning the
ultimate transfer to the Soviet Union of the city of Koenigsberg
and the area adjacent to it as described above, subject to expert
examination of the actual frontier. The President of the United
States and the British Prime Minister have declared
that they will support the proposal of the Conference at the
forthcoming peace settlement.[44]
After Königsberg's conquest by the Red Army, the city was
briefly Russified as Kyonigsberg
(Кёнигсберг). While it was initially planned to rename the city
"Baltijsk",[45] it
was renamed Kaliningrad on July 4, 1946, after the
death of the Chairman of the Presidium of
the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, Mikhail Kalinin, one of the original Bolsheviks. "Baltiysk" was used to rename
the nearby port of Pillau instead. The German population was either
deported to the
Western Zones of occupied Germany
or into Siberian labor camps, where about half of
them perished of hunger or diseases.[42]
After the ethnic cleansing, the city's former
population was entirely replaced with Russian citizens. Life
changed dramatically: the city had a new name (Kaliningrad), and German was
replaced by Russian as the language of everyday
life. Parts of the city were rebuilt, although the former Altstadt
remained an urban fallow with few buildings that survived the
destruction. The city went through industrialisation and modernisation. As one of the westernmost
territories of the Soviet Union, the Kaliningrad Oblast became a
strategically important area during the Cold War. The Soviet Baltic Fleet was headquartered in the city
in the 1950s. Because of its strategic importance, Kaliningrad was
closed to foreign
visitors.
Culture and
List of people from Königsberg
Königsberg was the birthplace of the mathematician Christian
Goldbach and the writer E.T.A. Hoffmann, as
well as the home of the philosopher Immanuel Kant. In 1736, the mathematician
Leonhard Euler
used the arrangement of the city's bridges and islands as the basis
for the Seven Bridges of Königsberg
Problem, which led to the mathematical branches of topology and graph theory. In the
19th century Königsberg was the birthplace of the influential
mathematician David
Hilbert.
The dialect spoken by most citizens was Low Prussian. A popular dish from the city
was Königsberger Klopse.
In the König Strasse (King Street) stood the Academy of Art with
a collection of over 400 pictures. About 50 works were by Italian masters; and some early Dutch paintings were also
to be found there.[46] At
the Königstor (King's Gate) stood
statues of King Ottakar I of
Bohemia, Albert of Prussia, and Frederick I of Prussia.
Königsberg had a magnificent Exchange (completed in 1875) with fine
views of the harbor from the staircase. Along Bahnhof Strasse
("Railway Street") were the offices of the famous Royal Amber Works
— Samland was celebrated as the "Amber Coast". There was also an observatory fitted up by the
astronomer Friedrich Bessel, a botanical garden,
and a zoological museum. The "Physikalisch", near the Heumarkt,
contained botanical and anthropological collections and prehistoric
antiquities. Two large theatres built during the Wilhelmine era were the
Stadt (city) Theatre and the Appollo.
Eastern side of Königsberg Castle, ca. 1900.
Königsberg Castle was one of the
city's most notable structures. The former seat of the Grand Masters of the
Teutonic Knights and the Dukes of Prussia,
it contained the Schloßkirche, or palace church, where Frederick I was crowned in 1701
and William I
in 1861. It also contained the spacious Moscowiter-Saal, one of the
largest halls in the German Reich, and a museum of Prussian
history.
Königsberg became a centre of education when the Albertina University was
founded by Duke Albert of Prussia in 1544. The university was
situated opposite the north and east side of the Königsberg Cathedral. Lithuanian
scholar Stanislovas Rapalionis, one of
founding fathers of the university, was the first professor of
theology.[47]
Numerous German and Polish publications were printed in
Königsberg espousing the Protestant Reformation.[48] The
city was a center for the publication of books in the Lithuanian
language, especially by educated Prussian
Lithuanians from Lithuania Minor. After the territory
became Lutheran,
prayer books were printed in the Lithuanian vernacular. The first
non-religious Lithuanian books were published later as well. With
the support of the government, Ruhig and Mielcke published
Lithuanian dictionaries in 1747 and 1800, respectively.[49]
Sports clubs which played in Königsberg included VfB
Königsberg and SV Prussia-Samland
Königsberg.
Notes
- ^
Biskup
- ^
Koch, p. 10
- ^ a
b
c
Baedeker, p. 174
- ^
Seward, p. 107
- ^
Turnbull, p. 13
- ^
Christiansen, p. 205
- ^ a
b
Christiansen, p. 224
- ^
Christiansen, p. 222
- ^
Urban, pp. 225–226
- ^
Koch, p. 19
- ^
Christiansen, p. 243
- ^
Urban, p. 254
- ^
Koch, p. 33
- ^
Christiansen, p. 247
- ^
Koch, p. 34
- ^
Koch, p. 44
- ^
Kirby, Northern Europe, p. 8
- ^
Kirby, Northern Europe, p. 13
- ^
Koch, p. 46
- ^
Clark, p. 53
- ^
Koch, p. 57
- ^
Holborn, 1648-1840, p. 61
- ^
Clark, pp. 121-2
- ^
Kirby, Northern Europe, p. 352
- ^
Holborn, 1648-1840, p. 245
- ^
For comparison: Berlin ca.
170,000, Cologne and Frankfurt ca. 50,000 each, and Munich ca. 30,000.
- ^
Koch, p. 160
- ^
Koch, p. 192
- ^
Holborn, 1648-1840, p. 401
- ^
Clark, p. 361
- ^
Holborn, 1840-1945, p. 8
- ^
Clark, pp. 440-2
- ^
Clark, p. 476
- ^
Holborn, 1840-1945, p. 51
- ^
Kirby, The Baltic World, p. 303
- ^
Kirby, The Baltic World, p. 205
- ^
Clark, p. 584
- ^
GRC, p. 37
- ^ a
b
Ostpreussen.net
- ^
Berlin , Antony Beevor
- ^
A Writer at War Vasily Grossman, Edited & Translated
by Antony Beevor and Luba Vinoradova, Pimlico, 2006
- ^ a
b
de Zayas, Alfred-Maurice: A Terrible Revenge: The Ethnic Cleansing
of the Eastern European Germans 1944-1950, New York: St. Martin's
Press, 1994
- ^
Michael Wieck: A Childhood Under Hitler and Stalin: Memoirs of a
"Certified Jew," University of Wisconsin Press, 2003, ISBN
0-299-18544-3, Hans Lehndorff: East Prussian Diary, A Journal of
Faith, 1945-1947 London 1963
- ^
"The Potsdam Declaration".
Ibiblio.org. http://www.ibiblio.org/pha/policy/1945/450802a.html. Retrieved
2009-05-05.
- ^
Brodersen, Per (2008). "Die Stadt im Westen: wie
Königsberg Kaliningrad wurde" (in German). Vandenhoeck &
Rupprecht. p. 61. http://books.google.de/books?id=nLHScO99vR4C&pg=PA270&dq=baltijsk&lr=&as_brr=3#v=onepage&q=baltijsk%20k%C3%B6nigsberg%20kalinin&f=false. Retrieved
2009-10-17.
- ^
Baedeker, p. 176
- ^
Zinkevičius, p.32
- ^
Kirby, Northern Europe, p. 88
- ^
Clark, p. 134
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