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Revision as of 21:48, 16 January 2009 edit70.133.78.156 (talk) History: 1177, 1215,1231← Previous edit Revision as of 22:04, 16 January 2009 edit undo70.133.78.156 (talk) there was no Kingdom of Poland around 960s-1005Next edit →
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] (center) partitioned between the ] and ] after the ]. ] (]) is indicated in blue, Brandenburgian ] (East Pomerania) is shown in orange.]] ] (center) partitioned between the ] and ] after the ]. ] (]) is indicated in blue, Brandenburgian ] (East Pomerania) is shown in orange.]]


* ] (small part around 960s-1005) * Dukes of Poland after 990s (small part around 960s-1005)
* independent (1005-1116) * independent (1005-1116)
* ] (1116-1138) * ] (1116-1135)
* independent (1135-1181) * independent (1135-1177)
* ] (1181-1214) * ] direct since 1181, fief of ] since 1177
* ] (1214-1227) *fief of Brandenburg since 1215, ] (1214-1227)
* ] (1227-1806) (except for the ], see below) * ] (1227-1806) (except for the ], see below)
** different duchies within the HRE ruled by the Dukes of Pomerania (1227-1637) ** different duchies within the HRE ruled by the Dukes of Pomerania (1227-1637)
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* ] dialect in the rural areas of ] (Łeba) and ] (Lębork), roughly ] by 1850. * ] dialect in the rural areas of ] (Łeba) and ] (Lębork), roughly ] by 1850.


* After ] in 1945, Farther Pomerania became part of the territory of ], and most of the ]. * After ] in 1945, Farther Pomerania became part of the territory of ], and most of the ] as well as the Kashubian and Slovincian.


== Timelines == == Timelines ==

Revision as of 22:04, 16 January 2009

Prussian Farther Pomerania in yellow

Farther Pomerania or Further Pomerania (Template:Lang-de; Template:Lang-pl) is a Pomeranian region roughly stretching from the Oder River in the West to Pomerelia in the East. The region corresponds with the eastern part of the pre-war Prussian Province of Pomerania, yet today it is not an administrative, but a historical region within the West Pomeranian and Pomeranian Voivodeships.

Terminology

Farther Pomerania is the rough English translation of German Hinterpommern, which is literally behind or rear Pomerania. Initially, the term meant areas east of ("behind") Pomerania-Wolgast and was gradually adopted for areas east of Stettin in the 1500s. When the 1648 Peace of Westphalia and the Treaty of Stettin (1653) divided the Duchy of Pomerania into its Western, Swedish and Eastern Brandenburgian parts, Farther Pomerania was used for the latter - in opposition to Swedish Hither Pomerania (Vorpommern) now including Stettin (Szczecin) and a strip of land east of the Oder River. As this Swedish-Prussian border shifted west several times afterwards, the Oder River was considered the western edge of Farther Pomerania. To the Southeast and East, Farther Pomerania has no distinct border to the Pomerelian region, as the administrative borders between the duchy and later province of Pomerania and its neighbors varied significant over time. In the post-1945 era, Farther Pomerania was affected by the Polish-German border shift. Before, it happened to be the Eastern part of German Pomerania (Pommern, consisting of Hither and Farther Pomerania), yet thereafter it became the Western part of Polish Pomerania (Pomorze, consisting of Farther Pomerania and Pomerelia). As Polish Pomorze has also been in use for Pomerelia, Farther Pomerania is termed Western Pomerania in Poland and roughly represented in today's West Pomeranian Voivodeship, including Szczecin (Stettin) and Wolin (Wollin). However, this term is not being adopted by the Germans, as the German part of Pomerania (Hither Pomerania) is considered to be Western Pomerania, so Farther Pomerania is still in use.

Towns

Major towns of Farther Pomerania include:

History

Part of a series on the
History of Pomerania
DUCATUS POMERANIAE Tabula Generalis, in qua sunt DUCATUS POMERANIAE, STETTINENSIS CASSUBIAE, VANDALIAE et BARDENSIS, PRINCIPATUS RUGIAE ac INSULAE, COMITATUS GUSKOVIENSIS
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Main article: History of Pomerania

After the Germanic tribes had left during the migration period, Farther Pomerania and Pomerelia became the settlement area of West Slavic tribes known as Pomeranians. By 992 AD some of the Pomeranians' territory was conquered by Mieszko I, who established a bishopric in Kołobrzeg that was destroyed only a decade later in a pagan uprising to regain Pomerania's independence. A note in a papal abbey in the 1080s mentiones that lands were gifted in 992 by Mieszko I to the pope (referred to as Dagome iudex, or (according to other sources) to sons of Mieszko I and Oda von Haldensleben. After a result of military campaigns from 1102 to 1121, all areas of Pomerania were conquered by Bolesław III Wrymouth. The eastern parts of Farther Pomerania, the Lands of Schlawe and Stolp ruled by Griffin duke Ratibor I, and the western parts ruled by Griffin duke Wartislaw I became Polish vassals. Wartislaw I was able to conquer large territories of Liutizian tribes in the West, the stock of the later Hither Pomerania, and by inviting the missionary Otto of Bamberg managed to Christianize the formerly pagan Pomeranian and Liutizian inhabitants of his realm.

Wartislaw I is the first non-legendary member of the Griffin dynasty that ruled Farther Pomerania until 1637, when the last Duke of Pomerania died without descendants. The Griffins joined the Saxony after the 1164 Battle of Verchen. In 1177 the emperor Frederick Barbarossa gave the Duchy of Pomerania to Otto of Brandenburg. In 1181 the Duchy of Pomerania came directly under the rule of the Holy Roman Empire, then ruled by Frederic Barbarossa, and the Pomeranian Dukes became German princes (Landesfürsten). In 1215 the emperor verified feudal rights to Pomerania to Albert II of Brandenburg, a son of Otto. In 1231 the Duchy of Pomerania was again verified as fief of Brandenburg. In the course of the German Ostsiedlung, Farther Pomerania was settled with Germans. German law, culture and language was introduced. In contrast to Hither Pomerania, there still were substantial Slavic Pomeranian populations after this period in the East, that kept Slavic tongue and customs and became known as Slovincians (Lutheran) and Kashubs (Roman-Catholic). In 1534 the Dukes of Pomerania joined the Protestant Reformation influenced by Johannes Bugenhagen and Pomerania became a Lutheran state. Pomeranian Dukes managed lands on both sides of the Oder river and therefore in different history periods territories were vassal's or real estate of:

The former Duchy of Pomerania (center) partitioned between the Swedish Empire and Brandenburg after the Treaty of Stettin (1653). Swedish Pomerania (West Pomerania) is indicated in blue, Brandenburgian Farther Pomerania (East Pomerania) is shown in orange.
                *fief of Brandenburg since 1215, Denmark (1214-1227) 

After German vassalization, the region saw a huge influx of German settlers invited by the Pomeranian nobility to found towns and cultivate the countryside. By the 18th century, Farther Pomerania was linguistically:

Timelines

Majority of Farther Pomerania

Lębork and Bytów

Main article: Lauenburg and Bütow Land

Lębork (Lauenburg) and Bytów (Bütow) had a slightly different history:

See also

History of Pomerania
Administrative
Western Pomerania
Farther Pomerania
Lauenburg-Bütow
classified as
Farther Pomerania
or Pomerelia
Pomerelia
(Kashubia,
Kociewie,
Tuchola Forest,
Chełmno Land)
Ecclesiastical
Roman Catholic
Historical
Extant
Protestant
Historical
Extant
Demography and anthropology
Archaeological cultures
Peoples
Major demographic events
Languages and dialects
West Germanic
West Slavic
Treaties
1200–1500
1500–1700
1700–present
Holy Roman Empire Upper Saxon Circle (1512–1806) of the Holy Roman Empire
Electorates Map indicating the Upper Saxon Circle of the Holy Roman Empire
Ecclesiastical
Secular
Prelates
Counts / Lords
Circles est. 1500: Bavarian, Swabian, Upper Rhenish, Lower Rhenish–Westphalian, Franconian, (Lower) Saxon
Circles est. 1512: Austrian, Burgundian, Upper Saxon, Electoral Rhenish     ·     Unencircled territories
See also: Ernestine duchies
Territories and provinces of Prussia (1525–1947)
Before 1701
After 1701
Post-Congress of
Vienna
(1814–15)
Territorial reforms
after 1918
Became Province of Posen in 1848.    From the Lower Rhine and Jülich-Cleves-Berg.
Categories: