Historical Eastern Germany
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This article is part of the series: Territorial changes of Poland in the 20th century History of Poland |
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Lines |
Curzon Line |
Oder-Neisse line |
Areas |
Kresy Wschodnie |
Kresy Zachodnie |
Recovered Territories |
Historical Eastern Germany |
Zaolzie |
See also |
History of Poland |
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The term Historical Eastern Germany is not being used in this article to describe communist East Germany - the former German Democratic Republic (GDR).
Historical Eastern Germany or Former German Eastern Territories are terms which can be used to describe collectively those provinces or regions east of the Oder-Neisse line which were either parts of the Holy Roman Empire from 1198 to 1806 or part of Germany after its unification in 1871 and were internationally recognised as such at the time. About a fourth of this territory belonged to Poland until its partitions of (1772, 1793 and 1795) and ceded to Poland after World War I, in the Treaty of Versailles of 1919. Germany lost the rest of the area at the end of World War II in 1945, when international recognition of German jurisdiction over any of these territories was withdrawn. Germany officially recognised its present Eastern border at the time of its reunification in 1990.
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[edit] History
East Brandenburg, Silesia, East Prussia, West Prussia, Pomerania and Province of Posen were incorporated into the German Empire by Otto von Bismarck in 1871. Germans did not make up all of the population in these areas, in some areas, such as the Province of Posen or the southern part of Upper Silesia, the majority was actually Polish, in others the population was predominantly German.[citation needed]
[edit] Treaty of Versailles
The provisions of the Treaty of Versailles at the end of World War I included transferring some German territories to other countries. Particularly, in Central Europe, these included:
- Most of Greater Poland ("Province of Posen") and Pomerelia (parts of West Prussia), mostly what the Kingdom of Prussia had taken in the Partitions of Poland was handed over to the re-established Polish state after the Greater Poland Uprising; this land comprised an area of 53,800 km² 4,224,000 inhabitants (1931) including 510 km² and 26,000 inhabitants from Upper Silesia). The German population in those areas in 1921 was 16.7% in the Poznań region (1910: 27.1%), and 18.8% in the area of Polish Pomorze (1910: 42.5%) [1]
- The Hlučín Area of Moravian-Silesian Region to Czechoslovakia (316 or 333 km² and 49,000 people),
- The eastern part of Upper Silesia (including Katowice), to Poland (area 3,214 km² 965,000 people), ignoring a pro-German plebiscite,
- The area of Działdowo (Soldau) in East Prussia to Poland (area 492 km²),
- The northeastern part of East Prussia, named Memelland, was placed under the control of France, and was later annexed by Lithuania, as Klaipėda Region,
- A few villages in the eastern part of West Prussia and in the southern part of East Prussia (Warmia and Masuria) to Poland, after a plebiscite.
- The city of Danzig (Polish Gdańsk) with the delta of the Vistula river at the Baltic Sea was made the Free City of Danzig under the League of Nations and partially Polish authority (area 1893 km², 408,000 inhabitants 1929).
[edit] Nazi occupation and annexation
With the defeat of Poland in 1939 at the start of World War II, many of the regions Germany lost after World War I were occupied and annexed by Nazi Germany, along with some other areas which had never been a part of a unified Germany before (such as Suwałki). These annexations were not recognised by the Allied governments, that after the 1942 Declaration by the United Nations were also known as the United Nations.
[edit] Potsdam Conference
After World War II, as agreed at the Potsdam Conference, all the areas of Germany east of the Oder-Neisse line, whether recognised by the international community as part of Germany since 1871 or annexed by Germany during World War II, were placed under the jurisdiction of other countries.
[edit] Evacuation and expulsion of ethnic Germans
The majority of the German-speaking population east of the Oder–Neisse line that had not already been evacuated by Nazi German authorities or fled from the advancing Red Army in the winter of 1944–1945 (following massacres such as Niemmersdorf) was expelled without compensation, and with no consideration whether their families had lived in the region for centuries or were settlers who moved there during the Second World War, leaving the territories virtually desert. In the following months, several milion Poles similarly expelled from former Polish land annexed by the USSR were settled in the formerly German regions. Although in the post-war period German sources often cited the number of German expellees at 16 million people and the death toll at between 1.7[1] and 2.5 million[2], the numbers are considered by some writers to be "exaggerated"[3]. Some present-day German estimates place the numbers at 14 million expelled and 500 thousand dead[4][3]. The exact number of civilian casualties therefore remains disputed.
[edit] Post World War II politics
Since 1945, referring to lands over which there was a transfer of jurisdiction as "East Germany" has had political connotations, which means that any article which discusses this issue is likely to be contentious. The contention has been somewhat dissipated over the last twenty years by three related phenomena:
- The passage of time means that there are fewer and fewer people alive who have firsthand experience of these regions under German jurisdiction.
- Until the Treaty on the Final Settlement With Respect to Germany, the official German government position on the status of areas vacated by settled German communities east of the Oder–Neisse rivers was that the areas were "temporarily under Polish [or Soviet] administration." To facilitate wide international acceptance of German re-unification in 1990, the German political establishment recognised the "facts on the ground" and accepted clauses in the Treaty on the Final Settlement whereby Germany renounced all claims to territory east of the Oder–Neisse line. This allowed the treaty to be negotiated quickly and for German unification to go ahead quickly, which was seen as a priority by most of the German political establishment of the time.
- The eastern expansion of the European Union (EU) which occurred on May 1, 2004 means that any German who wishes to live and work in Poland, and thus east of the Oder–Neisse rivers, may do so without requiring a permit. Some restrictions on the purchase of land and buildings will be in place for a period of a few years. Around October 2007 Poland is likely to enter the Schengen Area and all border controls on its border with Germany will be eliminated, making movement across the border even easier.
The problem with the status of those territories recognised as German by the international community between 1920 and 1945 east of the Oder–Neisse rivers was that in 1945 the concluding document of the Potsdam Conference was not a legally binding treaty, but a memorandum. It regulated the issue of the eastern German border, which was to be the Oder–Neisse line, but the final article of the memorandum said that the final regulations concerning Germany were subject to a separate peace treaty. This treaty was signed in 1990 under the name of "Treaty on the Final Settlement" by both the German states and ratified in 1991 by the united Germany. This ended the legal limbo state which meant that for 45 years, people on both sides of the border could not be sure whether the settlement reached in 1945 would be changed at some future date.
In the course of the German reunification process, Chancellor Helmut Kohl accepted the territorial changes made after WWII. This caused some outrage (and possibly cost some votes), especially among the Expellees who had hoped to get the land back. Some Poles were concerned about a possible revival of their 1939 trauma through a second German invasion, this time with the Germans buying all their land, which was cheaply available at the time. This happened on a smaller scale than many expected, and since the Baltic Sea coast in Poland has become popular with German tourists, Germans are now often welcome guests. The so-called "homesickness-tourism" which was often perceived as quite aggressive well into the 1990s now tends to be viewed as a good-natured nostalgia tour rather than a source of anger and desire for reconquest of the lost territories.
[edit] Usage
The news media in the non-German speaking world have continued to use the term "(former) East Germany" to describe the five states that make up the old GDR region of the reunited Germany. They have done this because of the need to have a short label which their viewers and readers understand when describing the economic and social problems which have beset the region since 1990.
Some Germans, often from families expelled from eastern territories of Germany, use the term "eastern Germany" or "east Germany" to refer to the area east of Berlin which had large settled German-speaking communities before World War II including those east of the Oder-Neisse rivers. The same people refer to the area from Berlin to the Elbe river, or possibly slightly further west, as "middle Germany" or "central Germany" (Mitteldeutschland). Some governmental institutions in Germany, like the Free State of Saxony, still use the term middle Germany when referring to their territory. This can cause confusion when translated into English because, in English since the start of the Cold War, "East Germany" has referred exclusively the area of Germany of the former GDR and the 5 states which make up the same region today.
[edit] See also
- Kresy Zachodnie
- Recovered Territories of Poland
- Kaliningrad oblast of Russia
- Klaipėda in Lithuania
- Partitions of Poland
- Congress of Vienna
- Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
- Evacuation of East Prussia
- German exodus from Eastern Europe
- Expulsion of Germans after World War II
- Willy Brandt's Ostpolitik
- Drang nach Osten German drive towards the east
- Medieval Colonisation of Eastern European territories by Germans
[edit] Notes and references
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- In-line:
- ^ (German) Hans-Ulrich Wehler (2003). Deutsche Gesellschaftsgeschichte Band 4: Vom Beginn des Ersten Weltkrieges bis zur Gründung der beiden deutschen Staaten 1914-1949. Munich: C.H. Beck Verlag. ISBN 3-406-32264-6.
- ^ (English) Dagmar Barnouw (2005). The War in the Empty Air: Victims, Perpetrators, and Postwar Germans. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 143. ISBN 0-253-34651-7.
- ^ a b (English) Frank Biess (2006). "Review of Dagmar Barnouw, The War in the Empty Air: Victims, Perpetrators, and Postwar Germans" (pdf). H-Net Reviews: 2.
- ^ (German) Rüdiger Overmans (2004). Deutsche militärische Verluste im Zweiten Weltkrieg (German Military Losses in WWII). Munich: Oldenbourg, 298-300. ISBN 3-486-56531-1.
[edit] Further reading
- Emotions prevail in relations between Germans, Czechs, Poles -- poll, Czech Happenings, 21 December 2005
- Jose Ayala Lasso Speech to the German expellees, Day of the Homeland, Berlin 6 August 2005 Lasso was the first United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (1994-1997)