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The Kingdom of Prussia (German: Königreich Preußen, pronounced [ˈkøːnɪkʁaɪç ˈpʁɔʏsn̩] ) constituted the German state of Prussia between 1701 and 1918. It was the driving force behind the unification of Germany in 1866 and was the leading state of the German Empire until its dissolution in 1918. Although it took its name from the region called Prussia, it was based in the Margraviate of Brandenburg. Its capital was Berlin.
Kingdom of Prussia Königreich Preußen (German) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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1701–1918 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Anthem: Borussia "Prussia" (1820–1830) Preußenlied "Song of Prussia" (1830–1840) Royal anthem: "Heil dir im Siegerkranz" "Hail to thee in the Victor's Crown" (1795–1918) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Status | Kingdom | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Capital |
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Common languages | Official: German Neo-Latin (until 1806) Polish (only in GD of Posen, 1815–1848) Minorities:
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Religion | Statewide majority: Protestantism (Lutheran and Calvinist; Prussian United after 1817 (state religion)) Majority in some territories: Catholicism Other minorities: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Demonym(s) | Prussian | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Government |
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King | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
• 1701–1713 (first) | Frederick I | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
• 1888–1918 (last) | Wilhelm II | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Minister-Presidenta | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
• 1848 (first) | A. H. von Arnim-Boitzenburg | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
• 1918 (last) | Max von Baden | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Legislature | Landtag | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Herrenhaus | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Abgeordnetenhaus | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Historical era |
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• Coronation of Frederick I | 18 January 1701 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
• Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire | 6 August 1806 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
• Formation of German Confederation | 8 June 1815 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
• Constitution adopted | 5 December 1848 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
• North German Confederation Treaty | 18 August 1866 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
• German Empire proclaimed | 18 January 1871 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
• Free State of Prussia proclaimed | 9 November 1918 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
• Abdication of Wilhelm IIb | 28 November 1918 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Area | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1871 | 348,779 km2 (134,664 sq mi) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Population | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
• 1756 | 4,500,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
• 1816 | 10,349,031 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
• 1871 | 24,689,000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
• 1910 | 40,169,219 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Currency |
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Today part of | Germany Poland Russia | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The kings of Prussia were from the House of Hohenzollern. Brandenburg-Prussia, predecessor of the kingdom, became a military power under Frederick William, Elector of Brandenburg, known as "The Great Elector". As a kingdom, Prussia continued its rise to power, especially during the reign of Frederick II "the Great". Frederick the Great was instrumental in starting the Seven Years' War (1756–1763), holding his own against Austria, Russia, France and Sweden and establishing Prussia's dominant role among the German states, as well as establishing the country as a European great power through the victories of the powerful Prussian Army. Prussia made attempts to unify all the German states (excluding the German cantons in Switzerland) under its rule, and whether Austria would be included in such a unified German domain became an ongoing question. After the Napoleonic Wars led to the creation of the German Confederation, the issue of unifying the German states caused the German revolutions of 1848–1849, with representatives from all states attempting to unify under their own constitution. Attempts to create a federation remained unsuccessful and the German Confederation collapsed in 1866 when the Austro-Prussian War ensued between its two most powerful member states.
Prussia was subsequently the driving force behind establishing in 1866 the North German Confederation, transformed in 1871 into the unified German Empire and considered the earliest continual legal predecessor of today's Federal Republic of Germany. The North German Confederation was seen as more of an alliance of military strength in the aftermath of the Austro-Prussian War but many of its laws were later used in the German Empire. The German Empire successfully unified all of the German states aside from Austria and Switzerland under Prussian hegemony due to the defeat of Napoleon III in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–1871. The war united all the German states against a common enemy, and with the victory came an overwhelming wave of nationalism which changed the opinions of some of those who had been against unification.
With the German Revolution of 1918–1919, the Kingdom of Prussia was transformed into the Free State of Prussia. Prussia as a whole was abolished in 1947.
History
Background and establishment
The Hohenzollerns were made rulers of the Margraviate of Brandenburg in 1518. In 1529, the Hohenzollerns secured the reversion of the Duchy of Pomerania after a series of conflicts, and acquired its eastern part following the Peace of Westphalia.
In 1618, the electors of Brandenburg also inherited the Duchy of Prussia, since 1511 ruled by a younger branch of the House of Hohenzollern. In 1525, Albrecht of Brandenburg, the last grand master of the Teutonic Order, secularized his territory and converted it into a duchy. It was ruled in a personal union with Brandenburg, known as "Brandenburg-Prussia". A full union was not possible, since Brandenburg was still legally part of the Holy Roman Empire and the Duchy of Prussia was a fief of Poland. The Teutonic Order had paid homage to Poland since 1466, and the Hohenzollerns continued to pay homage after secularizing Ducal Prussia.
In the course of the Second Northern War, the treaties of Labiau and Wehlau-Bromberg granted the Hohenzollerns full sovereignty over the Prussian duchy by September 1657.
In return for an alliance against France in the War of the Spanish Succession, the Great Elector's son, Frederick III, was allowed to elevate Prussia to a kingdom in the Crown Treaty of 16 November 1700. Frederick crowned himself "King in Prussia" as Frederick I on 18 January 1701. Legally, no kingdoms could exist in the Holy Roman Empire except for Bohemia and Italy. However, Frederick took the line that since Prussia had never been part of the empire and the Hohenzollerns were fully sovereign over it, he could elevate Prussia to a kingdom. Emperor Leopold I, keen to secure Frederick's support in the impending War of the Spanish Succession, acquiesced.
The style "King in Prussia" was adopted to acknowledge the legal fiction that the Hohenzollerns were legally kings only in their former duchy. In Brandenburg and the portions of their domains that were within the Empire, they were still legally only electors under the overlordship of the emperor. However, by this time the emperor's authority was only nominal. The rulers of the empire's various territories acted largely as the rulers of sovereign states, and only acknowledged the emperor's suzerainty in a formal way. In addition, the duchy was only the eastern bulk of the region of Prussia; the westernmost fragment constituted the part of Royal Prussia east of Vistula, held along with the title King of Prussia by the King of Poland. While the personal union between Brandenburg and Prussia legally continued until the end of the empire in 1806, from 1701 onward, Brandenburg was de facto treated as an integral part of the kingdom. Since the Hohenzollerns were nominally still subjects of the emperor within the parts of their domains that were part of the empire, they continued to use the additional title of Elector of Brandenburg until the empire was dissolved. It was not until 1772 that the title "King of Prussia" was adopted, following the acquisition of Royal Prussia in the First Partition of Poland.
1701–1721: Plague and the Great Northern War
The Kingdom of Prussia was still recovering from the devastation of the Thirty Years' War and poor in natural resources. Its territory was disjointed, stretching 1,200 km (750 mi) from the lands of the Duchy of Prussia on the south-east coast of the Baltic Sea to the Hohenzollern heartland of Brandenburg, with the exclaves of Cleves, Mark and Ravensberg in the Rhineland. In 1708 about one third of the population of East Prussia died during the Great Northern War plague outbreak. The bubonic plague reached Prenzlau in August 1710 but receded before it could reach the capital Berlin, which was only 80 km (50 mi) away.
The Great Northern War was the first major conflict in which the Kingdom of Prussia was involved. Starting in 1700, the war involved a coalition led by Tsarist Russia against the dominant North European power at the time, the Swedish Empire. Crown Prince Frederick William tried in 1705 to get Prussia involved in the war, stating "best Prussia has her own army and makes her own decisions." His views, however, were not considered acceptable by his father, and was not until 1713 that Frederick William ascended to the throne. Therefore, in 1715, Prussia, led by Frederick William, joined the coalition for various reasons, including the danger of being attacked from both her rear and the sea; her claims on Pomerania; and the fact that if she stood aside and Sweden lost, she would not get a share of the territory. Prussia only participated in one battle, the Battle of Stresow on the island of Rügen, as the war had already been practically decided in the 1709 Battle of Poltava. In the Treaty of Stockholm Prussia gained all of Swedish Pomerania east of the River Oder. Sweden would however keep a portion of Pomerania until 1815. The Great Northern War not only marked the end of the Swedish Empire but also elevated Prussia and Russia at the expense of the declining Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth as new powers in Europe.
The Great Elector had incorporated the Junkers, the landed aristocracy, into the kingdom's bureaucracy and military machine, giving them a vested interest in the Prussian Army and compulsory education. King Frederick William I inaugurated the Prussian compulsory conscription system in 1717.
1740–1762: Silesian Wars
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In 1740, King Frederick II (Frederick the Great) came to the throne. Using the pretext of a 1537 treaty (vetoed by Emperor Ferdinand I) by which parts of Silesia were to pass to Brandenburg after the extinction of its ruling Piast dynasty, Frederick invaded Silesia, thereby beginning the War of the Austrian Succession. After rapidly occupying Silesia, Frederick offered to protect Queen Maria Theresa if the province were turned over to him. The offer was rejected, but Austria faced several other opponents in a desperate struggle for survival, and Frederick was eventually able to gain formal cession with the Treaty of Berlin in 1742.
To the surprise of many, Austria managed to renew the war successfully. In 1744 Frederick invaded again to forestall reprisals and to claim, this time, the Kingdom of Bohemia. He failed, but French pressure on Austria's ally Great Britain led to a series of treaties and compromises, culminating in the 1748 Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle that restored peace and left Prussia in possession of most of Silesia.
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Humiliated by the cession of Silesia, Austria worked to secure an alliance with France and Russia (the "Diplomatic Revolution"), while Prussia drifted into Great Britain's camp forming the Anglo-Prussian Alliance. When Frederick preemptively invaded Saxony and Bohemia over the course of a few months in 1756–1757, he began a Third Silesian War and initiated the Seven Years' War.
This war was a desperate struggle for the Prussian Army, and the fact that it managed to fight much of Europe to a draw bears witness to Frederick's military skills. Facing Austria, Russia, France, and Sweden simultaneously, and with only Hanover (and the non-continental British) as notable allies, Frederick managed to prevent a serious invasion until October 1760, when the Russian army briefly occupied Berlin and Königsberg. The situation became progressively grimmer, however, until the death in 1762 of Empress Elizabeth of Russia (Miracle of the House of Brandenburg). The accession of the Prussophile Peter III relieved the pressure on the eastern front. Sweden also exited the war at about the same time.
Defeating the Austrian army at the Battle of Burkersdorf and relying on continuing British success against France in the war's colonial theatres, Prussia was finally able to force a status quo ante bellum on the continent. This result confirmed Prussia's major role within the German states and established the country as a European great power. Frederick, appalled by the near-defeat of Prussia and the economic devastation of his kingdom, lived out his days as a much more peaceable ruler.
Other additions to Prussia in the 18th century were the County of East Frisia (1744), the Principality of Bayreuth (1791) and Principality of Ansbach (1791), the latter two being acquired through purchase from branches of the Hohenzollern dynasty.
1772, 1793, and 1795: Partitions of Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
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To the east and south of Prussia, the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth had gradually weakened during the 18th century. Alarmed by increasing Russian influences in Polish affairs and by a possible expansion of the Russian Empire, Frederick was instrumental in initiating the first of the Partitions of Poland between Russia, Prussia, and Austria in 1772 to maintain a balance of power.[citation needed] The Kingdom of Prussia annexed most of the Polish province of Royal Prussia, including Warmia, allowing Frederick to finally adopt the title King of Prussia; the annexed Royal Prussian land was organised the following year into the Province of West Prussia; most of the rest became the originally separate Netze District, which was attached to West Prussia in 1775. The boundary between West Prussia and the territory previously known as the Duchy of Prussia, now the Province of East Prussia was also adjusted, transferring Marienwerder to West Prussia (which became its capital) and Warmia (the Heilsberg and districts) to East Prussia. The annexed territory connected East Prussia with the Province of Pomerania, uniting the kingdom's eastern territories.
After Frederick died in 1786, his nephew Fredrick William II continued the partitions, gaining a large part of western Poland in 1793; Thorn (Toruń) and Danzig (Gdańsk), which had remained part of Poland after the first partition, were incorporated into West Prussia, while the remainder became the province of South Prussia.
In 1787, Prussia invaded Holland to restore the Orangist stadtholderate against the increasingly rebellious Patriots, who sought to overthrow the House of Orange-Nassau and establish a democratic republic. The direct cause of the invasion was the arrest at Goejanverwellesluis, where Frederick William II's sister Wilhelmina of Prussia, also stadtholder William V of Orange's wife, was stopped by a band of Patriots who denied her passage to The Hague to reclaim her husband's position.
In 1795, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth ceased to exist and a large area (including Warsaw) to the south and east of East Prussia became part of Prussia. Most of the new territories (and the part of South Prussia north of the Vistula) were organised into the province of New East Prussia; South Prussia gained the area immediately south of the Vistula, Narew and Bug, including Warsaw; a small area to the south of South Prussia became New Silesia. With the Polish-Lithuanian state gone Prussia now shared its eastern borders with the Habsburg monarchy (West Galicia) and Russia (Russian partition).
The Partitions were facilitated by the fact that they occurred just before the 19th-century rise of nationalism in Europe, and the national self-awareness was yet to be developed in most European peoples, especially among commoners. The Kingdom of Prussia was perceived in Poland more as a nationality-neutral personal holding of the ruling House of Hohenzollern, rather than a German nation-state, and any anxiety concerned predominantly freedom to practice religion rather than rights to maintain national identity. The onset of Germanisation in the following decades, later joined by the Kulturkampf, quickly changed this benign picture and alienated Poles from the Prussian state, ultimately boosting their national self-awareness and eliciting their national resistance against Prussian rule.
1801–1815: Napoleonic Wars
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Following the French Revolution and the Execution of Louis XVI, Prussia declared war on the French First Republic. When Prussian troops attempted to invade France, they were beaten back and the Treaty of Basel (1795) ended the War of the First Coalition. In it, the First French Republic and Prussia had stipulated that the latter would ensure the Holy Roman Empire's neutrality in all the latter's territories north of the demarcation line of the River Main, including the British continental dominions of the Electorate of Hanover and the Duchies of Bremen-Verden. To this end, Hanover (including Bremen-Verden) also had to provide troops for the so-called demarcation army maintaining this state of armed neutrality.
In the course of the War of the Second Coalition against France (1799–1802), Napoleon Bonaparte urged Prussia to occupy Hanover. In 1801, 24,000 Prussian soldiers invaded, surprising Hanover, which surrendered without a fight. In April 1801 the Prussian troops arrived in Bremen-Verden's capital Stade and stayed there until October that year. The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland first ignored Prussia's hostility, but when it joined the pro-French Second League of Armed Neutrality alongside Denmark–Norway and Russia, Britain started to capture Prussian sea vessels. After the Battle of Copenhagen the coalition fell apart and Prussia again withdrew its troops.
At Napoleon's instigation, Prussia recaptured British Hanover and Bremen-Verden in early 1806. On 6 August that year the Holy Roman Empire was dissolved as a result of Napoleon's victories over Austria. The title of Kurfürst (Prince-elector) of Brandenburg became meaningless, and was dropped. Nonetheless, King Frederick William III was now de jure as well as de facto sovereign of all of the Hohenzollern domains. Before this time, the Hohenzollern sovereign had held many titles and crowns, from Supreme Governor of the Protestant Churches (summus episcopus) to King, Elector, Grand Duke, Duke for the various regions and realms under his rule. After 1806 he was simply King of Prussia and summus episcopus.
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But when Prussia, after it turned against the First French Empire, was defeated in the Battle of Jena–Auerstedt (14 October 1806), Frederick William III was forced to temporarily flee to remote Memel. After the Treaties of Tilsit in 1807, Prussia lost about half of its territory, including the land gained from the Second and Third Partitions of Poland (which now fell to the Duchy of Warsaw) and all land west of the Elbe river. France recaptured Prussian-occupied Hanover, including Bremen-Verden. The remainder of the kingdom was occupied by French troops (at Prussia's expense) and the king was obliged to make an alliance with France and join the Continental System.
The Prussian reforms were a reaction to the Prussian defeat in 1806 and the Treaties of Tilsit. It describes a series of constitutional, administrative, social and economic reforms of the kingdom of Prussia. They are sometimes known as the Stein-Hardenberg Reforms after Karl Freiherr vom Stein and Karl August Fürst von Hardenberg, their main instigators.
After the defeat of Napoleon in Russia in 1812, Prussia quit the alliance and took part in the Sixth Coalition during the "Wars of Liberation" (Befreiungskriege) against the French occupation. Prussian troops under Marshal Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher contributed crucially in the Battle of Waterloo of 1815 to the final victory over Napoleon.
1815: After Napoleon
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Prussia's reward for its part in France's defeat came at the Congress of Vienna. It regained most of its pre-1806 territory. Notable exceptions included part of the territory annexed in the Second and Third Partitions of Poland, which became Congress Poland under Russian rule (though it did retain Danzig, acquired in the Second Partition). It also did not regain several of its former towns in the south. However, as compensation it picked up some new territory, including 40% of the Kingdom of Saxony and much of Westphalia and the Rhineland. Prussia now stretched uninterrupted from the Niemen in the east to the Elbe in the west, and possessed a chain of disconnected territories west of the Elbe. This left Prussia as the only great power with a predominantly German-speaking population.
With these gains in territory, the kingdom was reorganized into 10 provinces. Most of the kingdom, aside from the provinces of East Prussia, West Prussia, and the autonomous Grand Duchy of Posen but including the formerly Polish Lauenburg and Bütow Land and the Draheim territory, became part of the new German Confederation, a confederacy of 39 sovereign states (including Austria and Bohemia) replacing the defunct Holy Roman Empire.
Frederick William III submitted Prussia to a number of administrative reforms, among others reorganising the government by way of ministries, which remained formative for the following hundred years.
As to religion, reformed Calvinist Frederick William III—as Supreme Governor of the Protestant Churches—asserted his long-cherished project (started in 1798) to unite the Lutheran and the Reformed Church in 1817, (see Prussian Union). The Calvinist minority, strongly supported by its co-religionist Frederick William III, and the partially reluctant Lutheran majority formed the united Protestant Evangelical Church in Prussia. However, ensuing quarrels causing a permanent schism among the Lutherans into united and Old Lutherans by 1830.
As a consequence of the Revolutions of 1848, the Principalities of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen and Hohenzollern-Hechingen (ruled by a Catholic cadet branch of the House of Hohenzollern) were annexed by Prussia in 1850, later united as the Province of Hohenzollern.
1848–1871: German wars of unification
During the half-century that followed the Congress of Vienna, a conflict of ideals took place within the German Confederation between the formation of a single German nation and the conservation of the current collection of smaller German states and kingdoms. The main debate centered around whether Prussia or the Austrian Empire should be the leading member of any unified Germany. Those advocating for Prussian leadership contended that Austria had far too many non-German interests to work for the greater good of Germany. They argued that Prussia, as by far the most powerful state with a majority of German-speakers, was best suited to lead the new nation.
The establishment of the German Customs Union (Zollverein) in 1834, which excluded Austria, increased Prussian influence over the member states. In the wake of the Revolutions of 1848, the Frankfurt Parliament in 1849 offered King Frederick William IV of Prussia the crown of a united Germany. Frederick William refused the offer on the grounds that revolutionary assemblies could not grant royal titles. But he also refused for two other reasons: to do so would have done little to end the internal power-struggle between Austria and Prussia, and all Prussian kings (up to and including William I) feared that the formation of a German Empire would mean the end of Prussia's independence within the German states.[citation needed]
In 1848, actions taken by Denmark towards the Duchies of Schleswig and Holstein led to the First War of Schleswig (1848–51) between Denmark and the German Confederation, resulting in a Danish victory.
Frederick William issued Prussia's first constitution by his own authority in 1848, modifying it in the Constitution of 1850. These documents—moderate by the standards of the time but conservative by today's—provided for a two-chamber parliament, the Landtag. The lower house, later known as the Abgeordnetenhaus, was elected by all males over the age of 25 using the Prussian three-class franchise. Voters were divided into three classes whose votes were weighted according to the amount of taxes paid. In one typical election, the first class (with those who paid the most in taxes) included 4% of voters and the third class (with those who paid the least) had 82%, yet each group chose the same number of electors. The system all but assured dominance by the more well-to-do men of the population. The upper house, later renamed the Herrenhaus ("House of Lords"), was appointed by the king. He retained full executive authority, and ministers were responsible only to him. As a result, the grip of the landowning classes, the Junkers, remained unbroken, especially in the eastern provinces. The constitution nevertheless contained a number of liberal elements such as the introduction of jury courts and a catalog of fundamental rights that included freedom of religion, speech and the press.
Frederick William suffered a stroke in 1857, and his younger brother, Prince William, became regent. William pursued a considerably more moderate policy. Upon Frederick William IV's death in 1861 he succeeded to the Prussian throne as William I. However, shortly after becoming king, he faced a dispute with his parliament over the size of the army. The parliament, dominated by the liberals, balked at William's desire to increase the number of regiments and withheld approval of the budget to pay for its cost. A deadlock ensued, and William seriously considered abdicating in favour of his son, Crown Prince Frederick. Ultimately, he decided to appoint as prime minister Otto von Bismarck, at that time the Prussian ambassador to France. Bismarck took office on 23 September 1862.
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Although Bismarck had a reputation as an unyielding conservative, he initially inclined to seek a compromise over the budget issue. However, William refused to consider it; he viewed defence issues as the crown's personal province. Forced into a policy of confrontation, Bismarck came up with a novel theory. Under the constitution, the king and the parliament were responsible for agreeing on the budget. Bismarck argued that since they had failed to come to an agreement, there was a "hole" in the constitution, and the government had to continue to collect taxes and disburse funds in accordance with the old budget in order to keep functioning. The government thus operated without a new budget from 1862 to 1866, allowing Bismarck to implement William's military reforms.
The liberals violently denounced Bismarck for what they saw as his disregard for the fundamental law of the kingdom. However, Bismarck's real plan was an accommodation with liberalism. Although he had opposed German unification earlier in his career, he had now come to believe it inevitable. To his mind, the conservative forces had to take the lead in the drive toward creating a unified nation in order to keep from being eclipsed. He also believed that the middle-class liberals wanted a unified Germany more than they wanted to break the grip of the traditional forces over society. He thus embarked on a drive to form a united Germany under Prussian leadership, and guided Prussia through three wars which ultimately achieved this goal.
The first of these wars was the Second War of Schleswig (1864), which Prussia initiated and succeeded in, and in which it gained the assistance of Austria. Denmark was soundly defeated and surrendered both Schleswig and Holstein, to Prussia and Austria respectively.
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The divided administration of Schleswig and Holstein then became the trigger for the Austro-Prussian War of 1866—also known as the Seven Weeks' War. Prussia, allied with the Kingdom of Italy and various northern German states, declared war on the Austrian Empire. The Austrian-led coalition was crushed, and Prussia annexed four of its smaller allies—the Kingdom of Hanover, the Electorate of Hesse, the Duchy of Nassau and the Free City of Frankfurt. Prussia also annexed Schleswig and Holstein, and also effectively annexed Saxe-Lauenburg by forcing it into a personal union with Prussia (which was turned into a full union in 1876). King William initially wanted to take territory from Austria itself and annex Saxony, but Bismarck persuaded him to abandon the idea. While Bismarck wanted Austria to play no future role in German affairs, he foresaw that Austria could be a valuable future ally. With these gains in territory, the Prussian possessions in the Rhineland and Westphalia became geographically connected to the rest of the kingdom for the first time. Counting the de facto annexation of Saxe-Lauenburg, Prussia now stretched uninterrupted across the northern two-thirds of Germany. It would remain at this size until the overthrow of the monarchy in 1918.
Bismarck used this opportunity to end the budget dispute with parliament. He proposed a bill of indemnity granting him retroactive approval for governing without a legal budget. He guessed, correctly as it turned out, that this would lead to a split between his liberal adversaries. While some of them argued that there could be no compromise with the principle of constitutional government, most of the liberals decided to support the bill in hopes of winning more freedom in the future.
The German Confederation was dissolved as part of the war.[citation needed] In its place, Prussia cajoled the 21 states north of the Main into forming the North German Confederation in 1866. Prussia entered the Confederation as a whole (including the East Prussian cradle of its statehood, as well as its share of dismembered Poland consisting of Province of Posen and West Prussia), thus becoming the dominant state in this new entity, with four-fifths of its territory and population—more than the other members of the confederation combined. Its near-total control was cemented in a constitution written by Bismarck. Executive power was vested in a president—a hereditary office of the rulers of Prussia. He was assisted by a chancellor responsible only to the president. There was also a bicameral parliament. The lower house, or Reichstag (Diet), was elected by universal male suffrage. The upper house, or Bundesrat (Federal Council) was appointed by the state governments. The Bundesrat was, in practice, the stronger chamber. Prussia had 17 of 43 votes and could easily control proceedings through alliances with the other states. For all intents and purposes, Bismarck dominated the new grouping. He served as his own foreign minister for virtually his entire tenure as prime minister of Prussia, and in that capacity was able to instruct the Prussian delegates to the Bundesrat.
The southern German states (except Austria) were forced[by whom?] to accept military alliances with Prussia, and Prussia began steps to merge them with the North German Confederation. Bismarck's planned Kleindeutschland unification of Germany had come considerably closer to realisation.
The final act came with the Franco-Prussian War (1870–1871), where Bismarck maneuvered Emperor Napoleon III of France into declaring war on Prussia. Activating the German alliances put in place after the Austro-Prussian War, the German states, aside from Austria, came together and swiftly defeated France, even managing to take Napoleon III prisoner (2 September 1870). Even before then,[citation needed] Bismarck was able to complete the work of unifying Germany under Prussian leadership. The patriotic fervour aroused by the war against France overwhelmed the remaining opponents of a unified Kleindeutschland nation, and on 18 January 1871 (the 170th anniversary of the coronation of the first Prussian king, Frederick I), the German Empire was proclaimed in the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles outside of Paris, while the French capital was still under siege. King William became the first emperor (Kaiser) of a unified Germany. However, the titles of German Emperor and King of Prussia were to be borne by the same man until the end of the monarchy.
1871–1918: Peak and fall
Bismarck's new empire was the most powerful state on the Continent. Prussia's dominance over the new empire was almost as absolute as it was with the North German Confederation. It included two-thirds of the empire's territory and three-fifths of its population. The imperial crown was a hereditary office of the House of Hohenzollern. Prussia also had a large plurality of seats in the Bundesrat, with 17 votes out of 58 (17 out of 61 after 1911); no other state had more than six votes. As before, it could effectively control the proceedings with the support of its allies in the secondary states. As mentioned above, Bismarck served as foreign minister of Prussia for almost his entire career, and in that role instructed the Prussian deputies to the Bundesrat. The Imperial German Army was essentially an enlarged Prussian army, and the embassies of the new empire were mostly old Prussian embassies. The Constitution of the German Empire was essentially an amended version of the constitution of the North German Confederation.
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However, the seeds for future problems lay in a gross disparity between the imperial and Prussian systems. The empire granted the vote to all men over 25, although Prussia retained its three-class franchise, in which votes were weighted by taxes paid. Since the imperial chancellor was, except for two periods (January–November 1873 and 1892–94) also prime minister of Prussia, this meant that for most of the empire's existence, the king/emperor and prime minister/chancellor had to seek majorities from legislatures elected by two completely different franchises.
At the time of the empire's creation, both Prussia and Germany were roughly two-thirds rural. Within 20 years, the situation was reversed; the cities and towns accounted for two-thirds of the population. However, in both the kingdom and the empire, the constituencies were never redrawn to reflect the growing population and influence of the cities and towns. This meant that rural areas were grossly overrepresented from the 1890s onward.
Bismarck realized that the rest of Europe was sceptical of his powerful new Reich, and turned his attention to preserving peace with such acts as the Congress of Berlin. The new German Empire improved its already-strong relations with Britain. The ties between London and Berlin had already been sealed in 1858, when Crown Prince Frederick William of Prussia married Victoria, Princess Royal.
William I died in 1888, and the Crown Prince succeeded to the throne as Frederick III. The new emperor, a decided Anglophile, planned to transform Prussia and the empire into a more liberal and democratic monarchy based on the British model. However, Frederick was already ill with inoperable throat cancer, and died after only 99 days on the throne. He was succeeded by his 29-year-old son, William II. As a boy, William had rebelled against his parents' efforts to mould him as a liberal, and had become thoroughly Prussianized under Bismarck's tutelage.
The new Kaiser William rapidly soured relations with the British and Russian royal families (despite being closely related to them), becoming their rival and ultimately their enemy. Before and during World War I (1914–1918), Prussia supplied significant numbers of soldiers and sailors in the German military, and Prussian Junkers dominated the higher ranks. In addition, portions of the Eastern Front were fought on Prussian soil. Prussia – along with Germany as a whole – experienced increasing troubles with revolutionaries during the war. The Great War ended by armistice on 11 November 1918.
Uprisings in Berlin and other centres began the civil conflict of the German Revolution of 1918–19 (German: Novemberrevolution). By late 1918, the Prussian House of Representatives was controlled by the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD), which advocated Marxism. William knew that he had lost his imperial crown for good, but still hoped to retain his Prussian crown; he believed that as ruler of two-thirds of Germany, he could remain a major figure in any successor regime. However, William discovered this was impossible under the imperial constitution. Although he believed he ruled the empire in personal union with Prussia, the imperial constitution stipulated that the imperial crown was tied to the Prussian crown. In any event, he had lost support of the military who might have fought for him. William's abdication as both king of Prussia and German emperor was announced on 9 November 1918, and he went into exile in the Netherlands the next day. With armed revolts, mass strikes, and street fighting in Berlin, the Prussian state government declared a state of siege and appealed for imperial military aid. The Garde-Kavallerie-Schützen-Division, commanded by Waldemar Pabst, moved against the strikers in Berlin. By the end of the fighting on 16 March, they had killed approximately 1,200 people, many of them unarmed and uninvolved. The revolutionary period lasted from November 1918 until the establishment in August 1919 of a republic that later became known as the Weimar Republic.
Prussia was incorporated as the Free State of Prussia in the Weimar Republic, gaining a new republican constitution in 1920, becoming the Free State of Prussia. The state was abolished in 1947.
State
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Government
The joint authority, feudal and bureaucratic, on which Prussian absolute monarchy was based, saw its interests laid in suppression of the drive for personal freedom and democratic rights. It therefore had to recourse on police methods. The "police state", as Otto Hintze described it, replaced the older system with its feudal squirearchy run in the interests of the ruling class, but which in its rudimentary form was a constitutional state.
Politics
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The Kingdom of Prussia was an absolute monarchy until the Revolutions of 1848 in the German states, after which Prussia became a constitutional monarchy and Adolf Heinrich von Arnim-Boitzenburg was appointed as Prussia's first Minister President. Following Prussia's first constitution, a two-house parliament was formed, called the Landtag. The lower house, or Prussian House of Representatives was elected by all males over the age of 25 using the Prussian three-class franchise introduced in the Constitution of 1850, which assured dominance by the more well-to-do elements of the population. The upper house, which was later renamed the Prussian House of Lords, was appointed by the king. He retained full executive authority and ministers were responsible only to him. As a result, the grip of the landowning classes, the Prussian Junkers, remained unbroken, especially in the eastern provinces. Prussian Secret Police, formed in response to the German revolutions of 1848–1849, aided the conservative government.
Constitutions
There were two constitutions during the kingdom's existence, those of 1848 and 1850. The first was granted by the reluctant Frederick William IV in response to demands that arose during the German revolutions of 1848–1849. Elections were called in early 1848 for a Prussian National Assembly, with all males 25 and older able to vote. King Frederick William IV and his ministers presented a draft constitution in which the king retained many of his old rights. The Assembly responded with the "Charte Waldeck" which included an expanded list of fundamental rights, a Volkswehr ('people's guard') responsible to parliament and restrictions on feudal rights. The King declared to his ministers that "he would never accept [it] under any conditions". On 9 November he adjourned the Assembly and on 5 December 1848 unilaterally imposed the Constitution of 1848. It contained a significant number of liberal elements from the Charte Waldeck, including a parliament with two chambers, the introduction of jury courts, certain limitations on the monarch's powers and a mandate to ensure legal certainty. It also guaranteed many fundamental rights such as freedom of speech, the press and religion.
In spite of the constitution's liberal clauses, Prussia was still far from a democratic state. The king had an absolute veto over laws, which restricted the separation of powers. It was possible for the monarch to circumvent the judiciary, and the military could be described as a state within the state. All adult male citizens regardless of class had the right to vote, but the Prussian three-class franchise that weighted votes based on the amount of taxes paid significantly limited the political voice of the middle and lower classes.
The 1850 Constitution of Prussia was an amended version of the 1848 Constitution. Unlike the earlier version, the 1850 revision was a cooperative effort between the new Prussian Parliament, the King and his ministers. The changes they made to the 1848 Constitution were mostly of a minor nature. The king remained in a position of dominance over the three branches of government, and parliament had no control over the military, but the liberal elements introduced in the 1848 Constitution remained largely in place.
The 1850 Constitution, frequently amended, was the fundamental law of Prussia until the end of the German Empire in 1918.
Religion
The Prussian Constitution of 1850 allowed for freedom of conscience, freedom of public and private worship and freedom of association with religious bodies. It stated that all churches and other religious associations should administer everything independently and privately from the state and that no part of the government may affect the Church. The constitution also stated that all children should be taught their religion from people of their own religion and not by someone else.
According to a census taken in the early- to mid-1800s, there was a division of six religions around the 1830s: this was, per million inhabitants, 609,427.0 practising Protestants, 376,177.1 practising Catholics, 13,348.8 practising Jews, 925.1 Mennonites, 121.4 Greek Orthodox and 0.6 Muslims. At this time, the total population was 14,098,125 people, meaning there were approximately 8,591,778 practising Protestants, 5,303,392 practising Catholics, 188,193 practising Jews, 13,042 Mennonites, 1,712 Greek Orthodox, and 8 Muslims.
Although dominated by Protestant Lutherans (along with some Calvinist), it contained millions of Catholics in the west and in Poland. There were numerous Catholic populations in the Rhineland and parts of Westphalia. In addition, West Prussia, Warmia, Silesia, and the province of Posen had predominantly Catholic Polish-speaking populations. East Prussia's southern region of Masuria was mostly made up of Germanised Protestant Masurs.
Ethnicity
Apart from ethnic Germans, the country was also inhabited by ethnolinguistic minorities. Minority groups included Poles (including Kashubs in West Prussia and Mazurs in East Prussia), Prussian Lithuanians (in East Prussia), Sorbs (in Lusatia), Czechs and Moravians (in Silesia), Danes (in Schleswig), Jews, Frisians, Dutch, Walloons, Russians (in Wojnowo (Eckertsdorf)), French, Italians, Hungarians and others.
- Ethnic structure of the eastern regions of Prussia in 1817–1823
- Poles in the Kingdom of Prussia during the 19th century:90% – 100% Polish80% – 90% Polish70% – 80% Polish60% – 70% Polish50% – 60% Polish20% – 50% Polish5% – 20% Polish
- Polish language distribution (light blue) in 1910
Subdivisions
The original core regions of the Kingdom of Prussia were the Margraviate of Brandenburg and the Duchy of Prussia which together formed Brandenburg-Prussia. A Further Pomeranian province had been held by Prussia since 1653. Combined with Swedish Pomerania, gained from Sweden in 1720 and 1815, this region formed the Province of Pomerania. Prussian gains in the Silesian Wars led to the formation of the Province of Silesia in 1740.
After the First Partition of Poland in 1772, the newly annexed Royal Prussia and Warmia became the Province of West Prussia, while the Duchy of Prussia (along with part of Warmia) became the Province of East Prussia. Other annexations along the Noteć (Netze) River became the Netze District. Following the second and third partitions (1793–1795), the new Prussian annexations became the provinces of New Silesia, South Prussia, and New East Prussia, with the Netze District redivided between West and South Prussia. All the acquired Polish lands remained outside of the Holy Roman Empire, and the latter three provinces were disentangled from Prussia following the Treaties of Tilsit to be included in the Napoleonic Grand Duchy of Warsaw in 1806, and were ultimately lost to Congress Poland after the Congress of Vienna in 1815, except for the western part of South Prussia, which would form part of the Grand Duchy of Posen, the latter however also remained outside of German Confederation, the successor of the dissolved Holy Roman Empire, as did the province of East Prussia and the province of West Prussia.
Following the major western gains made by Prussia after the Vienna Congress, a total of ten provinces were established, each one subdivided further into smaller administrative regions known as Regierungsbezirke. The provinces were:
- Province of Brandenburg
- Province of East Prussia (outside of German Confederation)
- Province of Jülich-Cleves-Berg
- Grand Duchy of the Lower Rhine
- Province of Pomerania
- Grand Duchy of Posen (autonomous, outside of German Confederation)
- Province of Saxony
- Province of Silesia
- Province of West Prussia (outside of German Confederation)
- Province of Westphalia
In 1822, the provinces of Jülich-Cleves-Berg and the Lower Rhine were merged to form the Rhine Province. In 1829, the provinces of East and West Prussia merged to form the Province of Prussia, but the separate provinces were reformed in 1878. The principalities of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen and Hohenzollern-Hechingen were annexed in 1850 to form the Province of Hohenzollern.
After Prussia's victory in the 1866 Austro-Prussian War, territories annexed by Prussia were reorganised into three new provinces:
- Province of Hanover
- Province of Hesse-Nassau
- Province of Schleswig-Holstein
- The ten provinces of the Kingdom of Prussia, after the Congress of Vienna. The other member states of the German Confederation are shown in beige. The Canton of Neuchâtel in the south-west was under Prussian administration until 1848.
- Map of the current states of Germany (in dark green) that are completely or mostly situated inside the old borders of Imperial Germany's Kingdom of Prussia
- Map of current Poland with Polish Prussia in red & pink (borders aligned to counties of Poland)
References
- Due to Brandenburg's prominence as the seat of power within the kingdom, it is also sometimes referred to as Prussia-Brandenburg or Brandenburg-Prussia. The erroneous labels Kingdom of Brandenburg and Kingdom of Nordmark have also been applied to the Prussia of this period.
- When the Holy Roman Empire was dissolved in 1806, the function of prince-electors electing its emperors had lapsed.
- E. Alvis, Robert (2005). Religion and the Rise of Nationalism: A Profile of an East-Central European City. Syracuse University Press. p. 133. ISBN 9780815630814.
- Ernest John Knapton. "Revolutionary and Imperial France, 1750–1815." Scribner: 1971. Page 12.
- "Königreich Preußen (1701–1918)" (in German). Archived from the original on 2 May 2019. Retrieved 2 May 2007.
- "German Empire: administrative subdivision and municipalities, 1900 to 1910" (in German). Archived from the original on 25 December 2018. Retrieved 2 May 2007.
- Marriott, J. A. R., and Charles Grant Robertson. The Evolution of Prussia, the Making of an Empire. Rev. ed. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1946.
- "Prussia | History, Maps, & Definition". Encyclopædia Britannica. Archived from the original on 8 May 2015. Retrieved 2 November 2020.
- Fueter, Eduard (1922). World history, 1815–1920. United States of America: Harcourt, Brace and Company. pp. 25–28, 36–44. ISBN 1-58477-077-5.
- Danilovic, Vesna. "When the Stakes Are High—Deterrence and Conflict among Major Powers", University of Michigan Press (2002), p 27, p225–228
- [1][dead link ] Aping the Great Powers: Frederick the Great and the Defence of Prussia's International Position 1763–86, Pp. 286–307.
- [2] The Rise of Prussia Archived 10 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine
- Horn, D. B. "The Youth of Frederick the Great 1712–30." In Frederick the Great and the Rise of Prussia, 9–10. 3rd ed. London: English Universities Press, 1964.
- Horn, D. B. "The Seven Years' War." In Frederick the Great and the Rise of Prussia, pp. 81–101. 3rd ed. London: English Universities Press, 1964.
- Atkinson, C. T. A History of Germany, 1715–1815. New York: Barnes & Noble, 1969.
- Walker, Mack, The Salzburg transaction: expulsion and redemption in eighteenth-century Germany, (Cornell University Press, 1992), 74.
- Feuchtwanger, E. J. Prussia: Myth and Reality: The Role of Prussia in German History. Chicago: Henry Regnery Company, 1970.
- Shennan, Margaret. The Rise of Brandenburg-Prussia. London: Routledge, 1995
- Rothbard, Murray N. (1999). Education: Free & Compulsory. Auburn, Alabama: The Ludwig von Mises Institute. pp. 24–27. ISBN 0-945466-22-6.
- "History of Klaipėda (Memel) | True Lithuania". truelithuania.com. Archived from the original on 28 November 2020. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
- Peter, Jelena (1 February 2000). "Das Preußische Dreiklassenwahlrecht" [The Prussian Three-Class Franchise]. Deutsches Historisches Museum (in German). Retrieved 3 April 2023.
- – via Wikisource.
- Prussia allies in the Austro-Prussian War were: Anhalt, Bremen, Brunswick, Lauenburg, Lippe-Detmold, Lübeck, Hamburg, Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, Oldenburg, Saxe-Altenburg, Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, Schwarzburg-Sondershausen, Waldeck-Pyrmont.
- Austrian allies in the Austro-Prussian War were: Baden, Bavaria, Hanover, Hesse-Darmstadt, Hesse-Kassel (or Hesse-Cassel), Nassau, Reuss-Greiz, Saxe-Meiningen, Saxony, Schaumburg-Lippe, Württemberg.
- Die Reichsgründung 1871 Archived 2014-08-18 at the Wayback Machine (The Foundation of the Empire, 1871), Lebendiges virtuelles Museum Online, accessed 2008-12-22. German text translated: [...] on the wishes of Wilhelm I, on the 170th anniversary of the elevation of the House of Brandenburg to princely status on 18 January 1701, the assembled German princes and high military officials proclaimed Wilhelm I as German Emperor in the Hall of Mirrors at the Versailles Palace.
- Jacoby 1973, p. 34.
- Hintze, Der Commissarius
- Robinson, James Harvey (September 1894). "The Constitution of the Kingdom of Prussia". Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science: 12–13. Archived from the original on 7 April 2023. Retrieved 7 April 2023.
- "[oktroyierte] Verfassungsurkunde für den preußischen Staat vom 5. Dezember 1848 documentArchiv.de" [[imposed] Constitutional Charter for the Prussian State of 5 December 1848]. documentArchiv.de (in German). Retrieved 6 April 2023.
- Robinson, James Harvey ( (September 1894). "The Constitution of the Kingdom of Prussia". Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science: 13–14. Archived from the original on 2 April 2023. Retrieved 7 April 2023.
- Wilhelm, Friedrich; Robinson, James (1894). "Supplement: Constitution of the Kingdom of Prussia". Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 5 (Supplement 8). Sage Publications Inc., American Academy of Political and Social Science: 1–54. JSTOR 1009032.
- Burgess, John (1887). "The Culturconflict" in Prussia". Political Science Quarterly. 2 (2). The Academy of Political Science: 313–340. doi:10.2307/2139282. JSTOR 2139282.
- Hebeler, Bernard (1847). "Statistics of Prussia". Journal of the Statistical Society of London. 10 (2). Wiley for the Royal Statistical Society: 154–186. doi:10.2307/2337688. JSTOR 2337688.
- Belzyt, Leszek (1998). Sprachliche Minderheiten im preussischen Staat: 1815 – 1914 ; die preußische Sprachenstatistik in Bearbeitung und Kommentar. Marburg: Herder-Inst. ISBN 978-3-87969-267-5.
Bibliography
- Hintze, Otto. Der Commissarius und seine Bedeutung in der allgemeinen Verwaltungsgeschichte. Retrieved 15 June 2015.
- Jacoby, Henry (1 January 1973). The Bureaucratization of the World. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-02083-2. Retrieved 15 June 2015.
The Kingdom of Prussia German Konigreich Preussen pronounced ˈkoːnɪkʁaɪc ˈpʁɔʏsn constituted the German state of Prussia between 1701 and 1918 It was the driving force behind the unification of Germany in 1866 and was the leading state of the German Empire until its dissolution in 1918 Although it took its name from the region called Prussia it was based in the Margraviate of Brandenburg Its capital was Berlin Kingdom of PrussiaKonigreich Preussen German 1701 1918State flag 1803 1892 Coat of arms 1701 1871 Anthem Borussia Prussia 1820 1830 Preussenlied Song of Prussia 1830 1840 Royal anthem Heil dir im Siegerkranz Hail to thee in the Victor s Crown 1795 1918 source source track track track track track track track track track track track track track track Within the Holy Roman Empire in 1714Within the Holy Roman Empire in 1797Within the German Confederation in 1815Within the North German Confederation in 1870Within the German Empire in 1914StatusKingdomCapitalBerlin Konigsberg 1806 09 Common languagesOfficial German Neo Latin until 1806 Polish only in GD of Posen 1815 1848 Minorities Low GermanDanishEast FrisianNorth FrisianPolishKashubianSlovincianSilesianCzechMoravianUpper SorbianLower SorbianPolabianLithuanianOld Prussian until 18th century KurseniekiYiddishFrenchDutchReligionStatewide majority Protestantism Lutheran and Calvinist Prussian United after 1817 state religion Majority in some territories Catholicism Other minorities JudaismDemonym s PrussianGovernmentAbsolute monarchy until 1848 Semi constitutional monarchy from 1848 King 1701 1713 first Frederick I 1888 1918 last Wilhelm IIMinister Presidenta 1848 first A H von Arnim Boitzenburg 1918 last Max von BadenLegislatureLandtag Upper houseHerrenhaus Lower houseAbgeordnetenhausHistorical eraNew ImperialismWorld War I Coronation of Frederick I18 January 1701 Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire6 August 1806 Formation of German Confederation8 June 1815 Constitution adopted5 December 1848 North German Confederation Treaty18 August 1866 German Empire proclaimed18 January 1871 Free State of Prussia proclaimed9 November 1918 Abdication of Wilhelm IIb28 November 1918Area1871348 779 km2 134 664 sq mi Population 17564 500 000 181610 349 031 187124 689 000 191040 169 219Currency1701 1750 Reichsthaler1750 1857 Thaler1857 1873 Vereinsthaler1873 1914 Goldmark1914 1918 PapiermarkPreceded by Succeeded byBrandenburg PrussiaRoyal PrussiaPrincipality of NeuchatelPolish Lithuanian CommonwealthSwedish PomeraniaFree City of DanzigDuchy of WarsawElectorate of HesseDuchy of NassauKingdom of HanoverDuchy of HolsteinDuchy of SchleswigSaxe LauenburgLands of the Bohemian CrownDuchies of SilesiaCounty of KladskoFree City of Frankfurt 1807 Duchy of WarsawFree City of DanzigCanton of Neuchatel1918 Free State of PrussiaFree City of DanzigSecond Polish RepublicFirst Czechoslovak RepublicBelgiumDenmarkToday part ofGermany Poland Russia a During the North German Confederation 1866 1871 and German Empire 1871 1918 the Minister President of Prussia was also the Chancellor of Germany b Statement of Abdication of William IISovereign kingdom former Ducal Prussia only 1701 1772 East Prussia West Prussia South Prussia Netze District New East Prussia Lauenburg and Butow Land and Starostwo of Draheim 1795 1806 East Prussia West Prussia Grand Duchy of Posen 1815 1866 Vassal semi independent of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth 1701 1772 Lauenburg and Butow Land and Starostwo of Draheim only Associate of the Swiss Confederation 1707 1806 County of Neuchatel only Vassal of the Holy Roman Empire 1701 1806 all territories except those listed above State of the Continental System under occupation by the First French Empire 1806 1813 without the lost County of Neuchatel and territories ceded to the Duchy of Warsaw or the Free City of Danzig Member of the Swiss Confederation 1814 1848 County of Neuchatel 1814 1857 Federated state of the German Confederation 1815 1866 only territories previously in the Holy Roman Empire as well as Lauenburg and Butow Land and Starostwo of Draheim Federated state of the North German Confederation 1866 1871 as a whole king holding the Bundesprasidium Federated state of the German Empire 1871 1918 as a whole king holding the Bundesprasidium as the German Emperor ErmlandWest PrussiaSouth PrussiaNetze DistrictNew East PrussiaGrand Duchy of PosenProvince of PosenLauenburg and Butow LandStarostwo of DraheimRhine ProvinceProvince of WestphaliaUpper SilesiaCounty of Glatz The kings of Prussia were from the House of Hohenzollern Brandenburg Prussia predecessor of the kingdom became a military power under Frederick William Elector of Brandenburg known as The Great Elector As a kingdom Prussia continued its rise to power especially during the reign of Frederick II the Great Frederick the Great was instrumental in starting the Seven Years War 1756 1763 holding his own against Austria Russia France and Sweden and establishing Prussia s dominant role among the German states as well as establishing the country as a European great power through the victories of the powerful Prussian Army Prussia made attempts to unify all the German states excluding the German cantons in Switzerland under its rule and whether Austria would be included in such a unified German domain became an ongoing question After the Napoleonic Wars led to the creation of the German Confederation the issue of unifying the German states caused the German revolutions of 1848 1849 with representatives from all states attempting to unify under their own constitution Attempts to create a federation remained unsuccessful and the German Confederation collapsed in 1866 when the Austro Prussian War ensued between its two most powerful member states Prussia was subsequently the driving force behind establishing in 1866 the North German Confederation transformed in 1871 into the unified German Empire and considered the earliest continual legal predecessor of today s Federal Republic of Germany The North German Confederation was seen as more of an alliance of military strength in the aftermath of the Austro Prussian War but many of its laws were later used in the German Empire The German Empire successfully unified all of the German states aside from Austria and Switzerland under Prussian hegemony due to the defeat of Napoleon III in the Franco Prussian War of 1870 1871 The war united all the German states against a common enemy and with the victory came an overwhelming wave of nationalism which changed the opinions of some of those who had been against unification With the German Revolution of 1918 1919 the Kingdom of Prussia was transformed into the Free State of Prussia Prussia as a whole was abolished in 1947 HistoryBackground and establishment The Hohenzollerns were made rulers of the Margraviate of Brandenburg in 1518 In 1529 the Hohenzollerns secured the reversion of the Duchy of Pomerania after a series of conflicts and acquired its eastern part following the Peace of Westphalia In 1618 the electors of Brandenburg also inherited the Duchy of Prussia since 1511 ruled by a younger branch of the House of Hohenzollern In 1525 Albrecht of Brandenburg the last grand master of the Teutonic Order secularized his territory and converted it into a duchy It was ruled in a personal union with Brandenburg known as Brandenburg Prussia A full union was not possible since Brandenburg was still legally part of the Holy Roman Empire and the Duchy of Prussia was a fief of Poland The Teutonic Order had paid homage to Poland since 1466 and the Hohenzollerns continued to pay homage after secularizing Ducal Prussia In the course of the Second Northern War the treaties of Labiau and Wehlau Bromberg granted the Hohenzollerns full sovereignty over the Prussian duchy by September 1657 In return for an alliance against France in the War of the Spanish Succession the Great Elector s son Frederick III was allowed to elevate Prussia to a kingdom in the Crown Treaty of 16 November 1700 Frederick crowned himself King in Prussia as Frederick I on 18 January 1701 Legally no kingdoms could exist in the Holy Roman Empire except for Bohemia and Italy However Frederick took the line that since Prussia had never been part of the empire and the Hohenzollerns were fully sovereign over it he could elevate Prussia to a kingdom Emperor Leopold I keen to secure Frederick s support in the impending War of the Spanish Succession acquiesced The Prussian Crown Jewels Charlottenburg Palace Berlin The style King in Prussia was adopted to acknowledge the legal fiction that the Hohenzollerns were legally kings only in their former duchy In Brandenburg and the portions of their domains that were within the Empire they were still legally only electors under the overlordship of the emperor However by this time the emperor s authority was only nominal The rulers of the empire s various territories acted largely as the rulers of sovereign states and only acknowledged the emperor s suzerainty in a formal way In addition the duchy was only the eastern bulk of the region of Prussia the westernmost fragment constituted the part of Royal Prussia east of Vistula held along with the title King of Prussia by the King of Poland While the personal union between Brandenburg and Prussia legally continued until the end of the empire in 1806 from 1701 onward Brandenburg was de facto treated as an integral part of the kingdom Since the Hohenzollerns were nominally still subjects of the emperor within the parts of their domains that were part of the empire they continued to use the additional title of Elector of Brandenburg until the empire was dissolved It was not until 1772 that the title King of Prussia was adopted following the acquisition of Royal Prussia in the First Partition of Poland 1701 1721 Plague and the Great Northern War The Kingdom of Prussia was still recovering from the devastation of the Thirty Years War and poor in natural resources Its territory was disjointed stretching 1 200 km 750 mi from the lands of the Duchy of Prussia on the south east coast of the Baltic Sea to the Hohenzollern heartland of Brandenburg with the exclaves of Cleves Mark and Ravensberg in the Rhineland In 1708 about one third of the population of East Prussia died during the Great Northern War plague outbreak The bubonic plague reached Prenzlau in August 1710 but receded before it could reach the capital Berlin which was only 80 km 50 mi away The Great Northern War was the first major conflict in which the Kingdom of Prussia was involved Starting in 1700 the war involved a coalition led by Tsarist Russia against the dominant North European power at the time the Swedish Empire Crown Prince Frederick William tried in 1705 to get Prussia involved in the war stating best Prussia has her own army and makes her own decisions His views however were not considered acceptable by his father and was not until 1713 that Frederick William ascended to the throne Therefore in 1715 Prussia led by Frederick William joined the coalition for various reasons including the danger of being attacked from both her rear and the sea her claims on Pomerania and the fact that if she stood aside and Sweden lost she would not get a share of the territory Prussia only participated in one battle the Battle of Stresow on the island of Rugen as the war had already been practically decided in the 1709 Battle of Poltava In the Treaty of Stockholm Prussia gained all of Swedish Pomerania east of the River Oder Sweden would however keep a portion of Pomerania until 1815 The Great Northern War not only marked the end of the Swedish Empire but also elevated Prussia and Russia at the expense of the declining Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth as new powers in Europe The Great Elector had incorporated the Junkers the landed aristocracy into the kingdom s bureaucracy and military machine giving them a vested interest in the Prussian Army and compulsory education King Frederick William I inaugurated the Prussian compulsory conscription system in 1717 1740 1762 Silesian Wars Prussian territorial acquisitions in the 18th century In 1740 King Frederick II Frederick the Great came to the throne Using the pretext of a 1537 treaty vetoed by Emperor Ferdinand I by which parts of Silesia were to pass to Brandenburg after the extinction of its ruling Piast dynasty Frederick invaded Silesia thereby beginning the War of the Austrian Succession After rapidly occupying Silesia Frederick offered to protect Queen Maria Theresa if the province were turned over to him The offer was rejected but Austria faced several other opponents in a desperate struggle for survival and Frederick was eventually able to gain formal cession with the Treaty of Berlin in 1742 To the surprise of many Austria managed to renew the war successfully In 1744 Frederick invaded again to forestall reprisals and to claim this time the Kingdom of Bohemia He failed but French pressure on Austria s ally Great Britain led to a series of treaties and compromises culminating in the 1748 Treaty of Aix la Chapelle that restored peace and left Prussia in possession of most of Silesia Attack of the Prussian infantry at the Battle of Hohenfriedberg in 1745 Humiliated by the cession of Silesia Austria worked to secure an alliance with France and Russia the Diplomatic Revolution while Prussia drifted into Great Britain s camp forming the Anglo Prussian Alliance When Frederick preemptively invaded Saxony and Bohemia over the course of a few months in 1756 1757 he began a Third Silesian War and initiated the Seven Years War This war was a desperate struggle for the Prussian Army and the fact that it managed to fight much of Europe to a draw bears witness to Frederick s military skills Facing Austria Russia France and Sweden simultaneously and with only Hanover and the non continental British as notable allies Frederick managed to prevent a serious invasion until October 1760 when the Russian army briefly occupied Berlin and Konigsberg The situation became progressively grimmer however until the death in 1762 of Empress Elizabeth of Russia Miracle of the House of Brandenburg The accession of the Prussophile Peter III relieved the pressure on the eastern front Sweden also exited the war at about the same time Defeating the Austrian army at the Battle of Burkersdorf and relying on continuing British success against France in the war s colonial theatres Prussia was finally able to force a status quo ante bellum on the continent This result confirmed Prussia s major role within the German states and established the country as a European great power Frederick appalled by the near defeat of Prussia and the economic devastation of his kingdom lived out his days as a much more peaceable ruler Other additions to Prussia in the 18th century were the County of East Frisia 1744 the Principality of Bayreuth 1791 and Principality of Ansbach 1791 the latter two being acquired through purchase from branches of the Hohenzollern dynasty 1772 1793 and 1795 Partitions of Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth The three partitions of Poland the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth The Russian Partition red the Austrian Partition green and the Prussian Partition blue To the east and south of Prussia the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth had gradually weakened during the 18th century Alarmed by increasing Russian influences in Polish affairs and by a possible expansion of the Russian Empire Frederick was instrumental in initiating the first of the Partitions of Poland between Russia Prussia and Austria in 1772 to maintain a balance of power citation needed The Kingdom of Prussia annexed most of the Polish province of Royal Prussia including Warmia allowing Frederick to finally adopt the title King of Prussia the annexed Royal Prussian land was organised the following year into the Province of West Prussia most of the rest became the originally separate Netze District which was attached to West Prussia in 1775 The boundary between West Prussia and the territory previously known as the Duchy of Prussia now the Province of East Prussia was also adjusted transferring Marienwerder to West Prussia which became its capital and Warmia the Heilsberg and de districts to East Prussia The annexed territory connected East Prussia with the Province of Pomerania uniting the kingdom s eastern territories After Frederick died in 1786 his nephew Fredrick William II continued the partitions gaining a large part of western Poland in 1793 Thorn Torun and Danzig Gdansk which had remained part of Poland after the first partition were incorporated into West Prussia while the remainder became the province of South Prussia In 1787 Prussia invaded Holland to restore the Orangist stadtholderate against the increasingly rebellious Patriots who sought to overthrow the House of Orange Nassau and establish a democratic republic The direct cause of the invasion was the arrest at Goejanverwellesluis where Frederick William II s sister Wilhelmina of Prussia also stadtholder William V of Orange s wife was stopped by a band of Patriots who denied her passage to The Hague to reclaim her husband s position In 1795 the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth ceased to exist and a large area including Warsaw to the south and east of East Prussia became part of Prussia Most of the new territories and the part of South Prussia north of the Vistula were organised into the province of New East Prussia South Prussia gained the area immediately south of the Vistula Narew and Bug including Warsaw a small area to the south of South Prussia became New Silesia With the Polish Lithuanian state gone Prussia now shared its eastern borders with the Habsburg monarchy West Galicia and Russia Russian partition The Partitions were facilitated by the fact that they occurred just before the 19th century rise of nationalism in Europe and the national self awareness was yet to be developed in most European peoples especially among commoners The Kingdom of Prussia was perceived in Poland more as a nationality neutral personal holding of the ruling House of Hohenzollern rather than a German nation state and any anxiety concerned predominantly freedom to practice religion rather than rights to maintain national identity The onset of Germanisation in the following decades later joined by the Kulturkampf quickly changed this benign picture and alienated Poles from the Prussian state ultimately boosting their national self awareness and eliciting their national resistance against Prussian rule 1801 1815 Napoleonic Wars Prussia orange and its territories lost after the War of the Fourth Coalition other colours Following the French Revolution and the Execution of Louis XVI Prussia declared war on the French First Republic When Prussian troops attempted to invade France they were beaten back and the Treaty of Basel 1795 ended the War of the First Coalition In it the First French Republic and Prussia had stipulated that the latter would ensure the Holy Roman Empire s neutrality in all the latter s territories north of the demarcation line of the River Main including the British continental dominions of the Electorate of Hanover and the Duchies of Bremen Verden To this end Hanover including Bremen Verden also had to provide troops for the so called demarcation army maintaining this state of armed neutrality In the course of the War of the Second Coalition against France 1799 1802 Napoleon Bonaparte urged Prussia to occupy Hanover In 1801 24 000 Prussian soldiers invaded surprising Hanover which surrendered without a fight In April 1801 the Prussian troops arrived in Bremen Verden s capital Stade and stayed there until October that year The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland first ignored Prussia s hostility but when it joined the pro French Second League of Armed Neutrality alongside Denmark Norway and Russia Britain started to capture Prussian sea vessels After the Battle of Copenhagen the coalition fell apart and Prussia again withdrew its troops At Napoleon s instigation Prussia recaptured British Hanover and Bremen Verden in early 1806 On 6 August that year the Holy Roman Empire was dissolved as a result of Napoleon s victories over Austria The title of Kurfurst Prince elector of Brandenburg became meaningless and was dropped Nonetheless King Frederick William III was now de jure as well as de facto sovereign of all of the Hohenzollern domains Before this time the Hohenzollern sovereign had held many titles and crowns from Supreme Governor of the Protestant Churches summus episcopus to King Elector Grand Duke Duke for the various regions and realms under his rule After 1806 he was simply King of Prussia and summus episcopus The Declaration of Victory After the Battle of Leipzig by Johann Peter Krafft 1839 Frederick William III of Prussia Alexander I of Russia and Francis I of Austria after the Battle of Leipzig 1813 But when Prussia after it turned against the First French Empire was defeated in the Battle of Jena Auerstedt 14 October 1806 Frederick William III was forced to temporarily flee to remote Memel After the Treaties of Tilsit in 1807 Prussia lost about half of its territory including the land gained from the Second and Third Partitions of Poland which now fell to the Duchy of Warsaw and all land west of the Elbe river France recaptured Prussian occupied Hanover including Bremen Verden The remainder of the kingdom was occupied by French troops at Prussia s expense and the king was obliged to make an alliance with France and join the Continental System The Prussian reforms were a reaction to the Prussian defeat in 1806 and the Treaties of Tilsit It describes a series of constitutional administrative social and economic reforms of the kingdom of Prussia They are sometimes known as the Stein Hardenberg Reforms after Karl Freiherr vom Stein and Karl August Furst von Hardenberg their main instigators After the defeat of Napoleon in Russia in 1812 Prussia quit the alliance and took part in the Sixth Coalition during the Wars of Liberation Befreiungskriege against the French occupation Prussian troops under Marshal Gebhard Leberecht von Blucher contributed crucially in the Battle of Waterloo of 1815 to the final victory over Napoleon 1815 After Napoleon Expansion of Prussia 1807 1871 Prussia s reward for its part in France s defeat came at the Congress of Vienna It regained most of its pre 1806 territory Notable exceptions included part of the territory annexed in the Second and Third Partitions of Poland which became Congress Poland under Russian rule though it did retain Danzig acquired in the Second Partition It also did not regain several of its former towns in the south However as compensation it picked up some new territory including 40 of the Kingdom of Saxony and much of Westphalia and the Rhineland Prussia now stretched uninterrupted from the Niemen in the east to the Elbe in the west and possessed a chain of disconnected territories west of the Elbe This left Prussia as the only great power with a predominantly German speaking population With these gains in territory the kingdom was reorganized into 10 provinces Most of the kingdom aside from the provinces of East Prussia West Prussia and the autonomous Grand Duchy of Posen but including the formerly Polish Lauenburg and Butow Land and the Draheim territory became part of the new German Confederation a confederacy of 39 sovereign states including Austria and Bohemia replacing the defunct Holy Roman Empire Frederick William III submitted Prussia to a number of administrative reforms among others reorganising the government by way of ministries which remained formative for the following hundred years As to religion reformed Calvinist Frederick William III as Supreme Governor of the Protestant Churches asserted his long cherished project started in 1798 to unite the Lutheran and the Reformed Church in 1817 see Prussian Union The Calvinist minority strongly supported by its co religionist Frederick William III and the partially reluctant Lutheran majority formed the united Protestant Evangelical Church in Prussia However ensuing quarrels causing a permanent schism among the Lutherans into united and Old Lutherans by 1830 As a consequence of the Revolutions of 1848 the Principalities of Hohenzollern Sigmaringen and Hohenzollern Hechingen ruled by a Catholic cadet branch of the House of Hohenzollern were annexed by Prussia in 1850 later united as the Province of Hohenzollern 1848 1871 German wars of unification During the half century that followed the Congress of Vienna a conflict of ideals took place within the German Confederation between the formation of a single German nation and the conservation of the current collection of smaller German states and kingdoms The main debate centered around whether Prussia or the Austrian Empire should be the leading member of any unified Germany Those advocating for Prussian leadership contended that Austria had far too many non German interests to work for the greater good of Germany They argued that Prussia as by far the most powerful state with a majority of German speakers was best suited to lead the new nation The establishment of the German Customs Union Zollverein in 1834 which excluded Austria increased Prussian influence over the member states In the wake of the Revolutions of 1848 the Frankfurt Parliament in 1849 offered King Frederick William IV of Prussia the crown of a united Germany Frederick William refused the offer on the grounds that revolutionary assemblies could not grant royal titles But he also refused for two other reasons to do so would have done little to end the internal power struggle between Austria and Prussia and all Prussian kings up to and including William I feared that the formation of a German Empire would mean the end of Prussia s independence within the German states citation needed In 1848 actions taken by Denmark towards the Duchies of Schleswig and Holstein led to the First War of Schleswig 1848 51 between Denmark and the German Confederation resulting in a Danish victory Frederick William issued Prussia s first constitution by his own authority in 1848 modifying it in the Constitution of 1850 These documents moderate by the standards of the time but conservative by today s provided for a two chamber parliament the Landtag The lower house later known as the Abgeordnetenhaus was elected by all males over the age of 25 using the Prussian three class franchise Voters were divided into three classes whose votes were weighted according to the amount of taxes paid In one typical election the first class with those who paid the most in taxes included 4 of voters and the third class with those who paid the least had 82 yet each group chose the same number of electors The system all but assured dominance by the more well to do men of the population The upper house later renamed the Herrenhaus House of Lords was appointed by the king He retained full executive authority and ministers were responsible only to him As a result the grip of the landowning classes the Junkers remained unbroken especially in the eastern provinces The constitution nevertheless contained a number of liberal elements such as the introduction of jury courts and a catalog of fundamental rights that included freedom of religion speech and the press Frederick William suffered a stroke in 1857 and his younger brother Prince William became regent William pursued a considerably more moderate policy Upon Frederick William IV s death in 1861 he succeeded to the Prussian throne as William I However shortly after becoming king he faced a dispute with his parliament over the size of the army The parliament dominated by the liberals balked at William s desire to increase the number of regiments and withheld approval of the budget to pay for its cost A deadlock ensued and William seriously considered abdicating in favour of his son Crown Prince Frederick Ultimately he decided to appoint as prime minister Otto von Bismarck at that time the Prussian ambassador to France Bismarck took office on 23 September 1862 King Wilhelm I on a black horse with his suite Bismarck Moltke and others watching the Battle of Koniggratz Although Bismarck had a reputation as an unyielding conservative he initially inclined to seek a compromise over the budget issue However William refused to consider it he viewed defence issues as the crown s personal province Forced into a policy of confrontation Bismarck came up with a novel theory Under the constitution the king and the parliament were responsible for agreeing on the budget Bismarck argued that since they had failed to come to an agreement there was a hole in the constitution and the government had to continue to collect taxes and disburse funds in accordance with the old budget in order to keep functioning The government thus operated without a new budget from 1862 to 1866 allowing Bismarck to implement William s military reforms The liberals violently denounced Bismarck for what they saw as his disregard for the fundamental law of the kingdom However Bismarck s real plan was an accommodation with liberalism Although he had opposed German unification earlier in his career he had now come to believe it inevitable To his mind the conservative forces had to take the lead in the drive toward creating a unified nation in order to keep from being eclipsed He also believed that the middle class liberals wanted a unified Germany more than they wanted to break the grip of the traditional forces over society He thus embarked on a drive to form a united Germany under Prussian leadership and guided Prussia through three wars which ultimately achieved this goal The first of these wars was the Second War of Schleswig 1864 which Prussia initiated and succeeded in and in which it gained the assistance of Austria Denmark was soundly defeated and surrendered both Schleswig and Holstein to Prussia and Austria respectively Aftermath of the Austro Prussian War 1866 Prussia Prussian allies Italy and 14 German states Austria Austrian allies 11 German states Neutral states Liechtenstein Limburg Luxembourg Reuss Schleiz Saxe Weimar Eisenach Schwarzburg Rudolstadt Prussian acquisitions Hanover Schleswig Holstein Hessian Hinterland Hesse Kassel Nassau and Frankfurt The divided administration of Schleswig and Holstein then became the trigger for the Austro Prussian War of 1866 also known as the Seven Weeks War Prussia allied with the Kingdom of Italy and various northern German states declared war on the Austrian Empire The Austrian led coalition was crushed and Prussia annexed four of its smaller allies the Kingdom of Hanover the Electorate of Hesse the Duchy of Nassau and the Free City of Frankfurt Prussia also annexed Schleswig and Holstein and also effectively annexed Saxe Lauenburg by forcing it into a personal union with Prussia which was turned into a full union in 1876 King William initially wanted to take territory from Austria itself and annex Saxony but Bismarck persuaded him to abandon the idea While Bismarck wanted Austria to play no future role in German affairs he foresaw that Austria could be a valuable future ally With these gains in territory the Prussian possessions in the Rhineland and Westphalia became geographically connected to the rest of the kingdom for the first time Counting the de facto annexation of Saxe Lauenburg Prussia now stretched uninterrupted across the northern two thirds of Germany It would remain at this size until the overthrow of the monarchy in 1918 Bismarck used this opportunity to end the budget dispute with parliament He proposed a bill of indemnity granting him retroactive approval for governing without a legal budget He guessed correctly as it turned out that this would lead to a split between his liberal adversaries While some of them argued that there could be no compromise with the principle of constitutional government most of the liberals decided to support the bill in hopes of winning more freedom in the future The German Confederation was dissolved as part of the war citation needed In its place Prussia cajoled the 21 states north of the Main into forming the North German Confederation in 1866 Prussia entered the Confederation as a whole including the East Prussian cradle of its statehood as well as its share of dismembered Poland consisting of Province of Posen and West Prussia thus becoming the dominant state in this new entity with four fifths of its territory and population more than the other members of the confederation combined Its near total control was cemented in a constitution written by Bismarck Executive power was vested in a president a hereditary office of the rulers of Prussia He was assisted by a chancellor responsible only to the president There was also a bicameral parliament The lower house or Reichstag Diet was elected by universal male suffrage The upper house or Bundesrat Federal Council was appointed by the state governments The Bundesrat was in practice the stronger chamber Prussia had 17 of 43 votes and could easily control proceedings through alliances with the other states For all intents and purposes Bismarck dominated the new grouping He served as his own foreign minister for virtually his entire tenure as prime minister of Prussia and in that capacity was able to instruct the Prussian delegates to the Bundesrat The southern German states except Austria were forced by whom to accept military alliances with Prussia and Prussia began steps to merge them with the North German Confederation Bismarck s planned Kleindeutschland unification of Germany had come considerably closer to realisation The final act came with the Franco Prussian War 1870 1871 where Bismarck maneuvered Emperor Napoleon III of France into declaring war on Prussia Activating the German alliances put in place after the Austro Prussian War the German states aside from Austria came together and swiftly defeated France even managing to take Napoleon III prisoner 2 September 1870 Even before then citation needed Bismarck was able to complete the work of unifying Germany under Prussian leadership The patriotic fervour aroused by the war against France overwhelmed the remaining opponents of a unified Kleindeutschland nation and on 18 January 1871 the 170th anniversary of the coronation of the first Prussian king Frederick I the German Empire was proclaimed in the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles outside of Paris while the French capital was still under siege King William became the first emperor Kaiser of a unified Germany However the titles of German Emperor and King of Prussia were to be borne by the same man until the end of the monarchy 1871 1918 Peak and fall Bismarck s new empire was the most powerful state on the Continent Prussia s dominance over the new empire was almost as absolute as it was with the North German Confederation It included two thirds of the empire s territory and three fifths of its population The imperial crown was a hereditary office of the House of Hohenzollern Prussia also had a large plurality of seats in the Bundesrat with 17 votes out of 58 17 out of 61 after 1911 no other state had more than six votes As before it could effectively control the proceedings with the support of its allies in the secondary states As mentioned above Bismarck served as foreign minister of Prussia for almost his entire career and in that role instructed the Prussian deputies to the Bundesrat The Imperial German Army was essentially an enlarged Prussian army and the embassies of the new empire were mostly old Prussian embassies The Constitution of the German Empire was essentially an amended version of the constitution of the North German Confederation Prussia in the German Empire 1871 1918Administrative divisions of the German Empire on 1 January 1900 However the seeds for future problems lay in a gross disparity between the imperial and Prussian systems The empire granted the vote to all men over 25 although Prussia retained its three class franchise in which votes were weighted by taxes paid Since the imperial chancellor was except for two periods January November 1873 and 1892 94 also prime minister of Prussia this meant that for most of the empire s existence the king emperor and prime minister chancellor had to seek majorities from legislatures elected by two completely different franchises At the time of the empire s creation both Prussia and Germany were roughly two thirds rural Within 20 years the situation was reversed the cities and towns accounted for two thirds of the population However in both the kingdom and the empire the constituencies were never redrawn to reflect the growing population and influence of the cities and towns This meant that rural areas were grossly overrepresented from the 1890s onward Bismarck realized that the rest of Europe was sceptical of his powerful new Reich and turned his attention to preserving peace with such acts as the Congress of Berlin The new German Empire improved its already strong relations with Britain The ties between London and Berlin had already been sealed in 1858 when Crown Prince Frederick William of Prussia married Victoria Princess Royal William I died in 1888 and the Crown Prince succeeded to the throne as Frederick III The new emperor a decided Anglophile planned to transform Prussia and the empire into a more liberal and democratic monarchy based on the British model However Frederick was already ill with inoperable throat cancer and died after only 99 days on the throne He was succeeded by his 29 year old son William II As a boy William had rebelled against his parents efforts to mould him as a liberal and had become thoroughly Prussianized under Bismarck s tutelage The new Kaiser William rapidly soured relations with the British and Russian royal families despite being closely related to them becoming their rival and ultimately their enemy Before and during World War I 1914 1918 Prussia supplied significant numbers of soldiers and sailors in the German military and Prussian Junkers dominated the higher ranks In addition portions of the Eastern Front were fought on Prussian soil Prussia along with Germany as a whole experienced increasing troubles with revolutionaries during the war The Great War ended by armistice on 11 November 1918 Uprisings in Berlin and other centres began the civil conflict of the German Revolution of 1918 19 German Novemberrevolution By late 1918 the Prussian House of Representatives was controlled by the Social Democratic Party of Germany SPD which advocated Marxism William knew that he had lost his imperial crown for good but still hoped to retain his Prussian crown he believed that as ruler of two thirds of Germany he could remain a major figure in any successor regime However William discovered this was impossible under the imperial constitution Although he believed he ruled the empire in personal union with Prussia the imperial constitution stipulated that the imperial crown was tied to the Prussian crown In any event he had lost support of the military who might have fought for him William s abdication as both king of Prussia and German emperor was announced on 9 November 1918 and he went into exile in the Netherlands the next day With armed revolts mass strikes and street fighting in Berlin the Prussian state government declared a state of siege and appealed for imperial military aid The Garde Kavallerie Schutzen Division commanded by Waldemar Pabst moved against the strikers in Berlin By the end of the fighting on 16 March they had killed approximately 1 200 people many of them unarmed and uninvolved The revolutionary period lasted from November 1918 until the establishment in August 1919 of a republic that later became known as the Weimar Republic Prussia was incorporated as the Free State of Prussia in the Weimar Republic gaining a new republican constitution in 1920 becoming the Free State of Prussia The state was abolished in 1947 StateBerlin Palace the main residence of the House of HohenzollernGovernment The joint authority feudal and bureaucratic on which Prussian absolute monarchy was based saw its interests laid in suppression of the drive for personal freedom and democratic rights It therefore had to recourse on police methods The police state as Otto Hintze described it replaced the older system with its feudal squirearchy run in the interests of the ruling class but which in its rudimentary form was a constitutional state Politics This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2008 The Prussian King s Crown Hohenzollern Castle Collection The Kingdom of Prussia was an absolute monarchy until the Revolutions of 1848 in the German states after which Prussia became a constitutional monarchy and Adolf Heinrich von Arnim Boitzenburg was appointed as Prussia s first Minister President Following Prussia s first constitution a two house parliament was formed called the Landtag The lower house or Prussian House of Representatives was elected by all males over the age of 25 using the Prussian three class franchise introduced in the Constitution of 1850 which assured dominance by the more well to do elements of the population The upper house which was later renamed the Prussian House of Lords was appointed by the king He retained full executive authority and ministers were responsible only to him As a result the grip of the landowning classes the Prussian Junkers remained unbroken especially in the eastern provinces Prussian Secret Police formed in response to the German revolutions of 1848 1849 aided the conservative government Constitutions There were two constitutions during the kingdom s existence those of 1848 and 1850 The first was granted by the reluctant Frederick William IV in response to demands that arose during the German revolutions of 1848 1849 Elections were called in early 1848 for a Prussian National Assembly with all males 25 and older able to vote King Frederick William IV and his ministers presented a draft constitution in which the king retained many of his old rights The Assembly responded with the Charte Waldeck which included an expanded list of fundamental rights a Volkswehr people s guard responsible to parliament and restrictions on feudal rights The King declared to his ministers that he would never accept it under any conditions On 9 November he adjourned the Assembly and on 5 December 1848 unilaterally imposed the Constitution of 1848 It contained a significant number of liberal elements from the Charte Waldeck including a parliament with two chambers the introduction of jury courts certain limitations on the monarch s powers and a mandate to ensure legal certainty It also guaranteed many fundamental rights such as freedom of speech the press and religion In spite of the constitution s liberal clauses Prussia was still far from a democratic state The king had an absolute veto over laws which restricted the separation of powers It was possible for the monarch to circumvent the judiciary and the military could be described as a state within the state All adult male citizens regardless of class had the right to vote but the Prussian three class franchise that weighted votes based on the amount of taxes paid significantly limited the political voice of the middle and lower classes The 1850 Constitution of Prussia was an amended version of the 1848 Constitution Unlike the earlier version the 1850 revision was a cooperative effort between the new Prussian Parliament the King and his ministers The changes they made to the 1848 Constitution were mostly of a minor nature The king remained in a position of dominance over the three branches of government and parliament had no control over the military but the liberal elements introduced in the 1848 Constitution remained largely in place The 1850 Constitution frequently amended was the fundamental law of Prussia until the end of the German Empire in 1918 ReligionThe Prussian Constitution of 1850 allowed for freedom of conscience freedom of public and private worship and freedom of association with religious bodies It stated that all churches and other religious associations should administer everything independently and privately from the state and that no part of the government may affect the Church The constitution also stated that all children should be taught their religion from people of their own religion and not by someone else According to a census taken in the early to mid 1800s there was a division of six religions around the 1830s this was per million inhabitants 609 427 0 practising Protestants 376 177 1 practising Catholics 13 348 8 practising Jews 925 1 Mennonites 121 4 Greek Orthodox and 0 6 Muslims At this time the total population was 14 098 125 people meaning there were approximately 8 591 778 practising Protestants 5 303 392 practising Catholics 188 193 practising Jews 13 042 Mennonites 1 712 Greek Orthodox and 8 Muslims Although dominated by Protestant Lutherans along with some Calvinist it contained millions of Catholics in the west and in Poland There were numerous Catholic populations in the Rhineland and parts of Westphalia In addition West Prussia Warmia Silesia and the province of Posen had predominantly Catholic Polish speaking populations East Prussia s southern region of Masuria was mostly made up of Germanised Protestant Masurs EthnicityApart from ethnic Germans the country was also inhabited by ethnolinguistic minorities Minority groups included Poles including Kashubs in West Prussia and Mazurs in East Prussia Prussian Lithuanians in East Prussia Sorbs in Lusatia Czechs and Moravians in Silesia Danes in Schleswig Jews Frisians Dutch Walloons Russians in Wojnowo Eckertsdorf French Italians Hungarians and others Ethnic structure of the eastern regions of Prussia in 1817 1823 Poles in the Kingdom of Prussia during the 19th century 90 100 Polish 80 90 Polish 70 80 Polish 60 70 Polish 50 60 Polish 20 50 Polish 5 20 Polish Polish language distribution light blue in 1910SubdivisionsThe original core regions of the Kingdom of Prussia were the Margraviate of Brandenburg and the Duchy of Prussia which together formed Brandenburg Prussia A Further Pomeranian province had been held by Prussia since 1653 Combined with Swedish Pomerania gained from Sweden in 1720 and 1815 this region formed the Province of Pomerania Prussian gains in the Silesian Wars led to the formation of the Province of Silesia in 1740 After the First Partition of Poland in 1772 the newly annexed Royal Prussia and Warmia became the Province of West Prussia while the Duchy of Prussia along with part of Warmia became the Province of East Prussia Other annexations along the Notec Netze River became the Netze District Following the second and third partitions 1793 1795 the new Prussian annexations became the provinces of New Silesia South Prussia and New East Prussia with the Netze District redivided between West and South Prussia All the acquired Polish lands remained outside of the Holy Roman Empire and the latter three provinces were disentangled from Prussia following the Treaties of Tilsit to be included in the Napoleonic Grand Duchy of Warsaw in 1806 and were ultimately lost to Congress Poland after the Congress of Vienna in 1815 except for the western part of South Prussia which would form part of the Grand Duchy of Posen the latter however also remained outside of German Confederation the successor of the dissolved Holy Roman Empire as did the province of East Prussia and the province of West Prussia Following the major western gains made by Prussia after the Vienna Congress a total of ten provinces were established each one subdivided further into smaller administrative regions known as Regierungsbezirke The provinces were Province of Brandenburg Province of East Prussia outside of German Confederation Province of Julich Cleves Berg Grand Duchy of the Lower Rhine Province of Pomerania Grand Duchy of Posen autonomous outside of German Confederation Province of Saxony Province of Silesia Province of West Prussia outside of German Confederation Province of Westphalia In 1822 the provinces of Julich Cleves Berg and the Lower Rhine were merged to form the Rhine Province In 1829 the provinces of East and West Prussia merged to form the Province of Prussia but the separate provinces were reformed in 1878 The principalities of Hohenzollern Sigmaringen and Hohenzollern Hechingen were annexed in 1850 to form the Province of Hohenzollern After Prussia s victory in the 1866 Austro Prussian War territories annexed by Prussia were reorganised into three new provinces Province of Hanover Province of Hesse Nassau Province of Schleswig HolsteinThe ten provinces of the Kingdom of Prussia after the Congress of Vienna The other member states of the German Confederation are shown in beige The Canton of Neuchatel in the south west was under Prussian administration until 1848 Map of the current states of Germany in dark green that are completely or mostly situated inside the old borders of Imperial Germany s Kingdom of Prussia Map of current Poland with Polish Prussia in red amp pink borders aligned to counties of Poland ReferencesDue to Brandenburg s prominence as the seat of power within the kingdom it is also sometimes referred to as Prussia Brandenburg or Brandenburg Prussia The erroneous labels Kingdom of Brandenburg and Kingdom of Nordmark have also been applied to the Prussia of this period When the Holy Roman Empire was dissolved in 1806 the function of prince electors electing its emperors had lapsed E Alvis Robert 2005 Religion and the Rise of Nationalism A Profile of an East Central European City Syracuse University Press p 133 ISBN 9780815630814 Ernest John Knapton Revolutionary and Imperial France 1750 1815 Scribner 1971 Page 12 Konigreich Preussen 1701 1918 in German Archived from the original on 2 May 2019 Retrieved 2 May 2007 German Empire administrative subdivision and municipalities 1900 to 1910 in German Archived from the original on 25 December 2018 Retrieved 2 May 2007 Marriott J A R and Charles Grant Robertson The Evolution of Prussia the Making of an Empire Rev ed Oxford Clarendon Press 1946 Prussia History Maps amp Definition Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 8 May 2015 Retrieved 2 November 2020 Fueter Eduard 1922 World history 1815 1920 United States of America Harcourt Brace and Company pp 25 28 36 44 ISBN 1 58477 077 5 Danilovic Vesna When the Stakes Are High Deterrence and Conflict among Major Powers University of Michigan Press 2002 p 27 p225 228 1 dead link Aping the Great Powers Frederick the Great and the Defence of Prussia s International Position 1763 86 Pp 286 307 2 The Rise of Prussia Archived 10 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine Horn D B The Youth of Frederick the Great 1712 30 In Frederick the Great and the Rise of Prussia 9 10 3rd ed London English Universities Press 1964 Horn D B The Seven Years War In Frederick the Great and the Rise of Prussia pp 81 101 3rd ed London English Universities Press 1964 Atkinson C T A History of Germany 1715 1815 New York Barnes amp Noble 1969 Walker Mack The Salzburg transaction expulsion and redemption in eighteenth century Germany Cornell University Press 1992 74 Feuchtwanger E J Prussia Myth and Reality The Role of Prussia in German History Chicago Henry Regnery Company 1970 Shennan Margaret The Rise of Brandenburg Prussia London Routledge 1995 Rothbard Murray N 1999 Education Free amp Compulsory Auburn Alabama The Ludwig von Mises Institute pp 24 27 ISBN 0 945466 22 6 History of Klaipeda Memel True Lithuania truelithuania com Archived from the original on 28 November 2020 Retrieved 4 November 2017 Peter Jelena 1 February 2000 Das Preussische Dreiklassenwahlrecht The Prussian Three Class Franchise Deutsches Historisches Museum in German Retrieved 3 April 2023 Constitution of the Kingdom of Prussia via Wikisource Prussia allies in the Austro Prussian War were Anhalt Bremen Brunswick Lauenburg Lippe Detmold Lubeck Hamburg Mecklenburg Schwerin Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg Strelitz Oldenburg Saxe Altenburg Saxe Coburg and Gotha Schwarzburg Sondershausen Waldeck Pyrmont Austrian allies in the Austro Prussian War were Baden Bavaria Hanover Hesse Darmstadt Hesse Kassel or Hesse Cassel Nassau Reuss Greiz Saxe Meiningen Saxony Schaumburg Lippe Wurttemberg Die Reichsgrundung 1871 Archived 2014 08 18 at the Wayback Machine The Foundation of the Empire 1871 Lebendiges virtuelles Museum Online accessed 2008 12 22 German text translated on the wishes of Wilhelm I on the 170th anniversary of the elevation of the House of Brandenburg to princely status on 18 January 1701 the assembled German princes and high military officials proclaimed Wilhelm I as German Emperor in the Hall of Mirrors at the Versailles Palace Jacoby 1973 p 34 Hintze Der Commissarius Robinson James Harvey September 1894 The Constitution of the Kingdom of Prussia Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 12 13 Archived from the original on 7 April 2023 Retrieved 7 April 2023 oktroyierte Verfassungsurkunde fur den preussischen Staat vom 5 Dezember 1848 documentArchiv de imposed Constitutional Charter for the Prussian State of 5 December 1848 documentArchiv de in German Retrieved 6 April 2023 Robinson James Harvey September 1894 The Constitution of the Kingdom of Prussia Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 13 14 Archived from the original on 2 April 2023 Retrieved 7 April 2023 Wilhelm Friedrich Robinson James 1894 Supplement Constitution of the Kingdom of Prussia Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 5 Supplement 8 Sage Publications Inc American Academy of Political and Social Science 1 54 JSTOR 1009032 Burgess John 1887 The Culturconflict in Prussia Political Science Quarterly 2 2 The Academy of Political Science 313 340 doi 10 2307 2139282 JSTOR 2139282 Hebeler Bernard 1847 Statistics of Prussia Journal of the Statistical Society of London 10 2 Wiley for the Royal Statistical Society 154 186 doi 10 2307 2337688 JSTOR 2337688 Belzyt Leszek 1998 Sprachliche Minderheiten im preussischen Staat 1815 1914 die preussische Sprachenstatistik in Bearbeitung und Kommentar Marburg Herder Inst ISBN 978 3 87969 267 5 Bibliography Hintze Otto Der Commissarius und seine Bedeutung in der allgemeinen Verwaltungsgeschichte Retrieved 15 June 2015 Jacoby Henry 1 January 1973 The Bureaucratization of the World University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 02083 2 Retrieved 15 June 2015