
A cropped image of Prussia from "Spread of German settlements to the Eastward, 800-1400". ()
Prussia is a
historical region in
Central Europe extending from the south-eastern coast of the
Baltic Sea to the
Masurian Lake District. It is now divided between
Poland,
Russia, and
Lithuania. The former
German state of
Prussia derived its name from the region.
Prehistory
Parts of the
Baltic region retained large wilderness areas for longer than anywhere else in Europe. In prehistory, the east of the area was inhabited by the
Eastern Balts, whilst the
Western Balts inhabited the
Sambian peninsula and the areas to the west. Over time, the Western Balts consolidated into the
Old Prussian nation, while the Eastern Balts of the area, including the
Curonians, consolidated into (a part of) the
Latvian and
Lithuanian nations.
About 350 BC
Pytheas called the territory Mentenomon and the inhabitants Guttones, neighbors of the
Teutones. A river to the east of the Vistula was called the
Guttalus (also Guthalus) and was assumed to have been the Memel or the Alle or Pregel river.
Vikings in Prussia
The
Vikings started to penetrate into
Eastern Europe in the 7th and 8th centuries. The largest trade centres of the Prussians, such as
Truso and
Kaup, seem to have absorbed a number of Norsemen. Prussians were known to go from Truso to
Birka across the
Baltic Sea.
At the end of the
Viking Age, the sons of Danish king
Harald Bluetooth and
Canute the Great launched several expeditions against the Prussians, which resulted in far-spread destruction of many areas in Prussia including the destruction of Truso and Kaup, however they failed to establish a firm foothold in Prussia. A Viking (
Varangian) presence in the area was "less than dominant and very much less than imperial".
[Gwyn Jones. A History of the Vikings. Oxford University Press, 2001. ISBN 0-19-280134-1. Page 244.]Old Prussians
Histories of Prussia from the 16th century link the name of the "Prussai"/"Prussi", and thereby Prussia, to a place called "Prutenia". This is historically correct; although the folk etymology they provided was based on legends and not factual etymological information. According to legend, the name "Prussia" is from
Pruteno (or
Bruteno), the chief priest of Prussia and brother of the legendary king
Widewuto/Waidewut, who lived in the late 10th century. The regions of Prussia and the corresponding tribes are said to bear Widewuto's sons' names — for example,
Sudovia is from Widewuto's son
Sudo. In the first half of the 13th century, Bishop
Christian of Prussia recorded the history of a much earlier era.
Adam of Bremen mentions Prussians in 1072.
The Old Prussians spoke a variety of languages, with
Old Prussian belonging to the
Western branch of the Baltic language group. Related, but not mutually intelligible, are the modern representatives of the Baltic languages, the
Latvian and
Lithuanian languages, from the East Baltic branch. Previous historians had documented the Prussian tribes as
easterners, with
Tacitus referring to them as the
Aesti[Although the Aesti are generally accepted to be the Prussians, primarily based on their association with amber, this is by no means universally accepted. See Aesti.]. The territory was called
Brus in the 8th century map of the
Bavarian Geographer.
Adalbert of Prague, a Christian missionary sent with guards by
Boleslaw I of Poland to convert the Prussians, was
killed by a Prussian priest in 997.
Attempts at conquest of Prussia
The establishment of a new state of the
Polans in the 10th century, brought ongoing attempts to conquer the land of the Prussians. In 997 AD
Adalbert of Prague came with soldiers of
Boleslaw I Chrobry. When this failed Boleslaw tried again in 1015 with some short-lived success, where he got some Prussians in the border regions to pay tribute. They soon shook this off. Further attempts by Polish rulers came in 1147, 1161/1166 and a number in the early 1200s. All these were repelled by the Prussians, however the Culmer Land region was now a contested area exposed to constant raids.
Teutonic Knights
In the 13th century
Konrad of Masovia had called for
Crusades and tried for years to conquer Prussia, but failed. Thus the pope set up further crusades. Finally he invited the
Teutonic Knights to fight the inhabitants of Prussia in exchange for a
fief of
Chełmno Land. Prussia was conquered by the
Teutonic Knights during the
Prussian Crusade and administered within their
monastic state.
With the
Second Peace of Thorn (1466), Prussia was divided into eastern and western lands. The western part became the autonomous
Royal Prussia within the
Kingdom of Poland, while the eastern part of the monastic state became a
fief of Poland. In 1492, a life of
Dorothea of Montau, published in Marienburg (Malbork), became the first printed publication in Prussia.
Early modern era

Map by Caspar Henneberg, Elbing 1576:
Duchy and
Royal Prussia originally with same color (for the duchy the color was added later)
During the
Protestant Reformation, endemic religious upheavals and wars occurred, and in 1525, the last
Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights,
Albert of Brandenburg, a member of a cadet branch of the
House of Hohenzollern, adopted the
Lutheran faith, resigned his position, and assumed the title of "Duke of Prussia." In a deal partially brokered by
Martin Luther, the
Duchy of Prussia became the first Protestant state and a vassal of Poland. The ducal capital of
Königsberg, now
Kaliningrad, became a centre of learning and printing through the establishment of the
Albertina University in 1544.
Ducal Prussia passed to the senior Hohenzollern branch, the ruling Margraves of
Brandenburg, in 1618, and Polish sovereignty over the duchy ended in 1657 with the
Treaty of Wehlau. Because Ducal Prussia lay outside of the
Holy Roman Empire,
Frederick I achieved the elevation of the duchy to the
Kingdom of Prussia in 1701. The former ducal lands became known as
East Prussia. Royal Prussia was annexed from the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth by the Kingdom of Prussia during the 18th century
Partitions of Poland and administered within
West Prussia.
Modern era
Though the Kingdom of Prussia was a member of the
German Confederation from 1815 to 1866, the provinces of
Posen and
Prussia were not a part of
Germany until the creation of the
German Empire in 1871 during the
unification of Germany.
By the
Treaty of Versailles, some territories of West Prussia and the Province of Posen that had belonged to the Prussian kingdom and the German Empire were ceded to the
Second Polish Republic. East Prussia, minus the
Memelland, received
some districts of former West Prussia and remained within the German
Weimar Republic.
According to the
Potsdam Conference in 1945 after
World War II, the Prussian region was divided between
Poland and the
Soviet Union. Western Prussia (West Prussia / Royal Prussia) and the East Prussian lands of
Warmia and
Masuria are in Poland, while northern East Prussia was divided between the
Russian and
Lithuanian Soviet republics. The German state of Prussia, of which the Prussian region was but a small part, was dissolved in 1947.