Postwar
Prussians being as properly distinct from Germans as Austrians only really became 'German' only after the evacuations and deportations from their Baltic home to Germany, by Nazi and (during the Stalinist genocide) Soviet troops respectively, enabled by the Yalta Conference's agreement (February 1945, Roosevelt, Churchill, Stalin) where their Prussian ethnicity was not considered. Ever since many have failed to integrate and have never felt at home even to the point of a 2nd emigration.
Brandenburg's power was declared defunct post-facto in 1947 by the Allied victors of World War II and Prussia was to all intents & purposes "deleted". The Allied Control Council Decree No. 46 of February 25, 1947, declared: "The state of Prussia, which has forever been the carrier of militarism and reaction in Germany, [...] shall herewith be dissolved." and while Brandenburg came under the iron curtain, its capital was was split into eastern & western areas of control the area of Prussia proper was distributed amongst present-day Poland and Russia, with Klaipeda returning to Lithuania.
The Brandenburg & western areas of Brandenburg-Prussia's former Kingdom of Prussia were distributed among many of Germany's sixteen Bundesländer (federal states), among them Berlin, Brandenburg, Lower Saxony, and North Rhine-Westphalia. The Prussian parts of the pre-war Brandenburg-Prussian state were made parts of Poland and the Soviet Union at the Potsdam Conference, when the Oder-Neisse line was established as the new border between Poland and Germany.
Prussia fell victim to popular myths that surrounded her, the prussian story was obscured as she was scapegoated for the war. The Yalta Conference determined to delete the area. For being an object of Nazi desire, Prussia was cut into three. South Prussia, the biggest portion including Warmia-Mazurski (Ermeland and Masurland), was ceded to Poland. The major Part of north-east Prussia with the port Königsberg went to Russia becoming an enclave and colony on the Baltic coast - regardless of the fact that the territories were not even connecting - out of fear that Prussia might be too much of a temptation to Germany. The rest, being the far northern 'Department of Lithuania-Minor' with the port Memel (Klaipeda), was ceded again to Lithuania as part then of the USSR. According to Lithuanian sources, the bulk of the population in this part of former Prussia were and still are Lithuanians. From the same source a major portion of the pre-war Prussish inhabitants emigrated.
Stalin did not differentiate civilian Prussishers (nor any of the other nationalities present in the area) from soldiers. He also considered "ethnic Germans" from all over what was Soviet occupied East Europe, repatriated in 1945 as traitors and therefore also war criminals.
For those left in Prussia, "The Terror" of 1945-50 began. In traumatised post-war Europe a silent ethnocide slipped by enabled by Roosevelt and Churchill. All remaining Prussians (110-170 thousand) who had not been forced into evacuation by the Nazis were also accused of collaboration with the Nazis. Stalin, in accordance with the Yalta agreement, set about the deletion process.
Much of the following narative is parallelled from a Lithuanian source with details added.
"In the formerly Soviet north, in order to make Prussia look more Russian, the entire ancient toponymy of the land was reinvented as a Russian one, while it suffered badly in the Polish south. Cities, towns and settlements acquired Russian names which were often made of Bolsheviks', statesmen's and servicemen's second names, even the second names of the Tsar's generals to complete the artificiality! The names of all places underwent a total metamorphosis. The port and region of Kaliningrad was born, becoming a Russian colony and strategic Soviet power foothold.
People were deprived of their homes and murdered. Some were sent to (East?)Germany between 1946-48. Anything left in the region was confiscated or burned. Some remaining Prussishers fled to Soviet Lithuania, believing they would be safe there, but this was not their salvation. By the autumn of 1944-spring of 1945 refugees from Prussia, mostly women, little children and disabled old persons, all living in penury, were concentrated in the western part of Soviet Lithuania. Some spoke Lithuanian but many did not understand the language at all. Despite Soviet prohibitions, everybody tried to help the deprived. The adults were deported by the Soviets. Mothers left their children with kind Lithuanians who raised these vokietukai (the "Little Germans") up.
Eventually the entire population was deported and sent to labour camps or killed and a Soviet one imported. The rulers of the Kremlin inhabited their part of north Prussia mostly with Russians coming from Smolensk, Voronez, Oriol, and other regions. By the end of 1946 about 12 thousand families had been moved. Absurd ideas about Prussia being the native Russian or at least Slavic land from times immemorial were drummed into their heads. This was even written in the Great Soviet Encyclopaedia published in 1953. Authors of scientific researches had been ordered to prove unreal facts."
No autochthons were left in (north) Prussia. As were all newly defined "Soviet Germans" Prussishers were made to sign a statement that they would never return to their former districts, or put in a claim for confiscated property?
Nevertheless, there are people all over the world who still determine themselves ethnically/culturally as Prussians. Thousands of Prussians stil live in central asia and Siberia and attempts are being made to gain international recognition for their minority.
Provinces of Prussia
The following list names all provinces and equivalent subdivisions which were considered part of Prussia between 1815 and 1947.
Further reading
Publications in German
- B. Schumacher, Geschichte Ost- und Westpreussens, Wurzburg 1959
Publications in Polish
- K. Piwarski, Dzieje Prus Wschodnich w czasach nowożytnych, Gdańsk 1946
- Gerard Labuda (ed.), Historia Pomorza, vol. I-IV, Poznań 1969-2003 (also covers East Prussia)
- collective work, Szkice z dziejów Pomorza, vol. 1-3, Warszawa 1958-61
See also
External links