The
Treaty of Stettin () of 4 May 1653
[Heitz (1995), p.232] settled a dispute between
Brandenburg and
Sweden, who both claimed succession in the
Duchy of Pomerania after the extinction of the local
House of Pomerania during the
Thirty Years' War. Brandenburg's claims were based on the
Treaty of Grimnitz (1529), while Sweden's claims were based on the
Treaty of Stettin (1630). The parties had agreed on a partition of the Swedish-held duchy in the
Peace of Westphalia (1648), and with the Treaty of Stettin determined the actual border between the partitions.
Western Pomerania became
Swedish Pomerania,
Farther Pomerania became
Brandenburgian Pomerania.
Background
thumb|right|300px|[[Swedish Pomerania (Vorpommern) within the
Swedish Empire (green). The dates indicate the year Sweden acquired and lost (in brackets) the respective territories.]]
During the war, Sweden
had occupied the
Duchy of Pomerania in 1630. The last
Griffin duke Bogislaw XIV died in 1637, his duchy was supposed to be inherited by Brandenburg, who based her claims on in the
Treaty of Grimnitz.
[Croxton (2002), p.30]This however was hindered by the Swedish presence. The 1648
Peace of Westphalia ended the war, and Pomerania was to be partitioned between Brandenburg and Sweden. The 1650
Treaty of Nuremberg roughly defined the areas that should be under control of Sweden and Brandenburg, respectively.
The treaty
The precise border was drawn in the 1653 Treaty of Stettin, partitioning the
Duchy of Pomerania along a line running east of the
Oder river. The areas west of this line (
Vorpommern, including
Stettin) stayed with
Sweden and hence were referred to as
Swedish Pomerania. The areas east of the line (
Farther Pomerania) were to be
transferred to Brandenburg.
[Shennan (1995), p.19] Half of the customs revenues of the Farther Pomeranian towns were the prerogative of Sweden even after her withdrawal.
The border was determined to run north from the Brandenburg-Pomeranian border, leaving Komturei Greifenhagen and Komturei Wildenbruch with Sweden, to run towards Woltiner See between Wierow and Schönfeld, from there run north between Damerow and Greifenhagen, Klebow and Brünken, Hökendorf and Buchholz, then meet the Plöne river, from there run through the Friedrichswalde forest, cross the Ihna, circumvent Gollnow and Hohenbrück (with Sweden), meet the Martinscher See, circumvent Kammin, Tribsow and Fritzow (with Sweden) and meet the Baltic Sea between Raddack and Lüchentin.
On 19 July 1653, the first Landtag in Brandenburgian Pomerania assembled in Stargard. In 1654, the Swedish withdrawal from Farther Pomerania was complete.Notability in European context
The treaty consolidated Sweden's control of the Oder estituary, adding to Sweden's gain of control at the lower Weser and Elbe rivers from the Peace of Westphalia. Thus, the treaty consolidated Sweden's control over the mouths of all major German rivers, except for the Rhine. Swedish Pomerania became the largest territorial foothold of Pomerania in Germany.Border revisions of 1679 and 1720
The border as agreed on in the treaty was slightly shifted westwards after the Scanian War in the Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye (1679), and shifted far west to the Peene and Peenestrom rivers after the Great Northern War in the Treaty of Stockholm (1720).See also
Sources
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