Northern March
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The Northern March or North March (German: Nordmark) was created out of the division of the vast marca Geronis in 965. It initially comprised the northern third of the marca (corresponding to the modern state of Brandenburg) and was part of the territorial organisation of areas conquered from the Wends. A Slavic rebellion in 983 reversed German control over the region until the establishment of the March of Brandenburg by Albert the Bear in the 12th century.
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[edit] Slavic background
The Northern March was established in territory known in antiquity as Magna Germania, which reached to the Vistula river. During the Migration Period, many Germanic peoples began migrating towards the Roman frontier. In the northeast they were replaced primarily by Slavic peoples. The first Slavs were certainly in the Brandenburg area by 720, after the arrival of the Avars in Europe. These Slavs had come via Moravia, where they had arrived in the mid-seventh century. The remnants of the Germanic Semnoni were absorbed into these Slav groups.
The group of people who settled at the Spree river became known as Sprevjane. They settled east of the line formed by the Havel and Nuthe rivers, in the current Barnim and Teltow regions. They built their main fortification at the confluence of the Spree and the Dahme at Köpenick. The Hevelli lived west of that line, in the current Havelland and Zauche regions. They were named Habelli for the ancient Germanic name of the river "Habula" (Havel). The name for themselves was the Stodoranie. They built their main fortification at "Brenna" (modern Brandenburg). The Hevelli also built a large outpost at the current site of Spandau Citadel in Berlin. The Sprevjane and Hevelli not only waged war against their German, but also their Slav, neighbours.
[edit] History of the Northern March
History of Brandenburg and Prussia |
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Northern March pre-12th century |
Old Prussians pre-13th century |
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Margraviate of Brandenburg 1157–1618 (1806) |
Ordensstaat 1224–1525 |
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Duchy of Prussia 1525–1618 |
Royal (Polish) Prussia 1466–1772 |
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Brandenburg-Prussia 1618–1701 |
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Kingdom in Prussia 1701–1772 |
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Kingdom of Prussia 1772–1918 |
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Free State of Prussia 1918–1947 |
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Brandenburg 1947–1952 / 1990– |
[edit] Establishment and loss, 965–983
After the Saxon War of 808, the victorious Charlemagne bestowed on the Slavic tribes allied with him (such as the Obotrites) part of the Saxon lands between the Elbe and the Baltic Sea. A period of quiet followed in the region. The Bishopics of Brandenburg and Havelberg were established around 940 and the Christianisation of the pagan Slavs began.
Henry I of Germany conquered Brandenburg in 928–929 and imposed tribute upon the tribes up to the Oder. By 948 his son Otto I had established German control over the many remaining pagans, who were collectively referred to as Slavs or Wends by contemporaries. Slavic settlements such as Brenna, Budišin (Bautzen), and Chotebuž (Cottbus) came under German control through the installation of margraves.[citation needed] The main function of the margravial office was to defend and protect the marches (frontier districts) of the Teutonic kingdom. After the death of the margrave Gero the Great in 965, the vast collection of marches (a "super-march") was divided by Otto into five smaller commands. The Northern March was one of these. The others were the Eastern March, the March of Merseburg, the March of Meissen, and the March of Zeitz.
Many Slavic tribes allied together in a rebellion in 983 and threw the Germans back, destroying their monasteries and killing or expelling the priests and German officials. Until the collapse of the Liutizi alliance in the middle of the 11th century, the German expansion in the direction of the Northern March remained at a standstill and the Wends east of the Elbe remained independent for approximately 150 years.
[edit] March of Brandenburg
In the beginning of the 12th century, the German kings re-established control over the mixed Slav-inhabited lands on the eastern borders of the Holy Roman Empire. In the wake of the Wendish Crusade of 1147, the German magnate Albert the Bear was granted the Northern March by the Emperor Lothair II. Some Slavic tribes survived the conquests and still live there today, such as the Sorbs in Lusatia, but others were assimilated through a process of Germanisation. The church under Albert established dioceses, which with their walled towns protected the townspeople from attack. With the arrival of monks and bishops begins anew the recorded history of the town of Brandenburg, from which would develop the eponymous margraviate.
Albert's control of the region was nominal for several decades, but he engaged in a variety of military and diplomatic actions against the Wends, and saw his control become more real by the middle of the century. In 1150, Albert formally inherited Brandenburg from its last Wendish ruler, the Christian Pribislav. Albert and his Ascanian descendants made considerable progress in Christianising and cultivating the newly-German lands.
[edit] List of margraves
- Dietrich, 965–983
- Lothair, 983–1003
- Werner, 1003–1009
- Bernard, 1009–1051
- William, 1051–1056
- Otto, 1056–1057
- Lothair Udo I, 1056–1057
- Udo II, 1057–1082
- Henry I, 1082–1087
- Lothair Udo III, 1087–1106
- Rudolf I, 1106–1114
- Henry II, 1114–1128
- Udo IV, 1128–1130
- Rudolf I, 1130–1144
[edit] Sources
- Reuter, Timothy. Germany in the Early Middle Ages 800–1056. New York: Longman, 1991.
- Thompson, James Westfall. Feudal Germany, Volume II. New York: Frederick Ungar Publishing Co., 1928.