From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pomerania
has experienced several transitions not only of culture and administration, but also of its population.
In 997 AD many Old Prussians were baptized by
Adalbert of Prague
in the Vistula Delta. By that time
Slavs
had moved up north and the territory became known as Pomerania by 1046 AD.
The second major transition of most of the Pomeranian tribes was from Slavic to
German
in the 14th century. At the end of the first millennium,
Piast
Poland
incorporated whole of Pomerania into its state. Afterwards, in the beginning of the second millennium,
Denmark
and the German
Holy Roman Empire
started to incorporate pagan Pomeranian territories into their expanding feudal states. Most Slavic Pomeranian tribes west of the Oder had lost their independence in late 12th century. In the course of the 14th and 15th century, German settlement in the
Duchy of Pomerania
increased. Where Slavic population was left, they were called
Wends
,
Kashubians
or
Slovincians
to distinguish them from the German Pomeranians. Whereas through later history the Kashubs were only minority in the Eastern Duchy of Pomerania, their numbers were notably higher in Pomerelia as well as the numbers of Germans were significantly lower there either. Pomeranian history was, from that time, closely tied to the history of Germany, Denmark and Sweden, whereas Pomerelian history was also until 1308 and between 1466 and 1772 closely tied to Poland.
[
citation needed
]
In the 17th and 18th centuries, the
Thirty Years' War
and the
Nordic Wars
had a severe impact on all of Germany including the Pomeranian population. More than half died and many villages were wiped out. After this enormous population drop, new settlers were called in from less devastated German territories. Yet, not all villages were repopulated, so today's density of communities is not as high as back in the
Middle Ages
.
[
citation needed
]
The third major change of Pomeranian population happened in the course of
World War II
and its aftermath. In
Nazi Germany
, Jews and many members of the Polish minority were
murdered
. Due to the advance of the
Red Army
and the
territorial changes
after the war
, nearly all Germans populating post-war Poland that survived the war and failed to evacuate in 1945 were
expelled to post-war Germany
1945-1947. The major, now Polish part of Pomerania was resettled mostly with
Poles
, in part
expellees from
the
former eastern territories of Poland
annexed by the
Soviet Union
.
References
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