Mazurs

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The Mazurs or Masurs (Polish: Mazurzy) are a sub-ethnic group in the Masovian and Warmian-Masurian Voivodeships in Poland. Mazurs from Masovia are known as Masovians (Polish: Mazowszanie; German: Masowier), while Mazurs from the Masuria region of former East Prussia are known as Masurians (Polish: Mazurzy; German: Masuren). The name of the sub-ethnic group is derived from the Lekhitic tribe of Masovians who gave their name to the land of Masovia in Poland.

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[edit] History

In the Middle Ages, the inhabitants of the northern Duchy of Masovia were called Mazurzy in Polish. Between the 15th and 17th centuries, settlers from northern Masovia moved to southern territories of the former Old Prussians following their conquest by the Teutonic Knights.

Because of the influx of Masovians into the southern lakeland of the Duchy of Prussia, the area started to be known as "Masuria". During the Protestant Reformation, Masurians, like most inhabitants of Ducal Prussia, became Lutheran Protestants, while the neighboring Masovians remained Roman Catholic. The small minority of Protestant Masovians in the south emigrated into Prussian Masuria. Masuria became part of the Kingdom of Prussia in 1701 and the Prussian-led German Empire in 1871.

Beginning in the 1870s, Imperial German officials restricted the usage of languages other than German in Prussia's eastern provinces.[1] The German authorities undertook several measures to Germanise the Masurians or separate them culturally from neighboring Poles by creating a separate identity.[2] Many Masurians emigrated to the Ruhr Area, especially to Gelsenkirchen.

Support for Germany was strong amongst the Masurians during World War I.[3] In 1920, the East Prussian plebiscite was held to determine the new border between the Second Polish Republic and German East Prussia. Although a small group of Masurians did vote for Poland, the vast majority (97.9%) opted to remain in Prussia.[4]

Support for the Nazi Party was high in Masuria, especially in elections in 1932 and 1933.[5] Nazi political rallies were organized in Polish during the campaigning.[6] Several Masurian towns and villages had their original Slavic or sometimes Baltic Prussian names changed to new German names by Nazi Germany in 1938. Along with German-speaking East Prussians, many Masurians fled to western Germany as the Soviet Red Army approached East Prussia in 1945 during World War II. The post-war Potsdam Conference placed Masuria under Polish administration. After 1956 most Masurians who had remained in Poland immigrated to West Germany, due to economical and political reasons.

The Masurians have been studied by the sociologist Andrzej Sakson.

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[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Clark, p. 580
  2. ^ Becoming German: Lessons from the Past for the Present Brian McCook in Leitkultur and Nationalstolz-Tabu -German Phenomena? Bonn, April 2002 Alexander von Humboldt Foundation pages 33-42
  3. ^ Clark, p. 608
  4. ^ Rocznik statystyki Rzczypospolitej Polskiej/Annuaire statistique de la République Polonaise 1 (1920/22), Teil 2, Warszawa 1923, S. 358.
  5. ^ Clark, p. 640
  6. ^ Clark, p. 640

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