Brandenburg-Prussia

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Brandenburg-Preußen
Brandenburg-Prussia

State union

Coat of arms of Brandenburg
Coat of arms of Prussia
1618 – 1701
Flag Coat of arms
Coat of arms of Brandenburg Coat of arms of Ducal Prussia
Location of Kurbrandenburg
Growth of Brandenburg-Prussia 1600–1795
Capital Berlin (Königsberg)
Government Principality
Elector-Duke
 - 1618–1619 John Sigismund
 - 1619–1640 George William
 - 1640–1688 Frederick William
 - 1688–1701 Frederick III
Historical era Holy Roman Empire
 - Personal union August 271618
 - Independence September 19, 1657
 - Elevation to kingdom January 181701

Brandenburg-Prussia (German: Brandenburg-Preußen) refers to the period from 1618–1701, when the personal union between the Duchy of Prussia and Electoral Brandenburg was established.

John Sigismund married Anna of Prussia on 30 October 1594. She was the daughter of Albert Frederick, Duke of Prussia, who died in 1618 without male heirs. The Margravate of Brandenburg and the Duchy of Prussia were ruled in a personal union since then. It is sometimes used as well to describe the Brandenburg-led state after the creation of the Kingdom of Prussia in 1701, although this state is referred to simply as "Prussia" after 1806.

[edit] History

The Duchy of Prussia was created through the secularization of the Prussian lands of the Teutonic Knights. It was a vassal of Poland and was governed by a cadet branch of the House of Hohenzollern. After the death of Duke Albert of Prussia in 1568, the duchy passed to the feeble-minded Albert Frederick. Because of the duke's sickness, Prussia was governed by the regents George Frederick, Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach (1577–1603) and Joachim Frederick, Elector of Brandenburg (1603–1618).

Albert Frederick's daughter Anna married Joachim Frederick's son John Sigismund, and the main Hohenzollern branch in Berlin was granted the right of succession to the duchy. The Electors of Brandenburg inherited the Duchy of Prussia upon Albert Frederick's death in 1618, but the duchy continued to be a fief under the Polish Crown till 1657.

During the reign of the ineffective George William (1619–1640), the Hohenzollern lands were repeatedly marched across by various armies in the Thirty Years' War, spending much of the war being occupied by Sweden. Taking advantage of the difficult position of Poland against Sweden during the Northern Wars, George William's successor Frederick William obtained full sovereignty for Brandenburg over Prussia from King Władysław IV Vasa of Poland in the Treaty of Wehlau in 1657. The rights of the Polish Crown meant the duchy would legally revert back to Poland if the Hohenzollern dynastic line became extinct; this clause, which was to be renewed at each country's change of ruler, expired by 1700.

The location of the Duchy of Prussia outside the Holy Roman Empire allowed Elector Frederick III of Brandenburg to become "king in Prussia" in 1701, in return for assisting Emperor Leopold I in the War of the Spanish Succession. This severed all links to Poland, and the first Prussian king was the last ruler of Brandenburg-Prussia who spoke fluent Polish. In 1773 the former duchy was reorganized into the province of East Prussia, while most of the Polish province of Royal Prussia became West Prussia.

[edit] See also