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- History_of_Pomerania abstract "The history of Pomerania, an area in modern-day Germany and Poland, dates back more than 10,000 years. The name Pomerania comes from Slavic po more, which means Land at the Sea.Settlement in the area started by the end of the Vistula Glacial Stage, about 13,000 years ago. Archeological traces have been found of various cultures during the Stone and Bronze Age, of Veneti and Germanic peoples during the Iron Age and, in the Middle Ages, Slavic tribes and Vikings. Starting in the 10th century, Piast Poland on several occasions acquired parts of the region from the southeast, while the Holy Roman Empire and Denmark augmented their territory from the west and north.In the High Middle Ages, the area became Christian and was ruled by local dukes of the House of Pomerania and the Samborides, at various times vassals of Denmark, the Holy Roman Empire and Poland. From the late 12th century, the Griffin Duchy of Pomerania stayed with the Holy Roman Empire and the Principality of Rugia with Denmark, while Denmark, Brandenburg, Poland and the Teutonic Knights struggled for control in Samboride Pomerelia. The Teutonic Knights succeeded in annexing Pomerelia to their monastic state in the early 14th century. Meanwhile, the Ostsiedlung started to turn Pomerania into a German-settled area; the remaining Wends, who became known as Slovincians and Kashubians, continued to settle within the rural East. In 1325 the line of the princes of Rugia (Rügen) died out, and the principality was inherited by House of Pomerania, themselves involved in the Brandenburg-Pomeranian conflict about superiority in their often internally divided duchy. In 1466, with the Teutonic Order's defeat, Pomerelia became subject to the Polish Crown as a part of Royal Prussia. While the Duchy of Pomerania adopted the Protestant Reformation in 1534, Kashubia remained with the Roman Catholic Church. The Thirty Years' and subsequent wars severely ravaged and depopulated most of Pomerania. With the extinction of the Griffin house during the same period, the Duchy of Pomerania was divided between the Swedish Empire and Brandenburg-Prussia in 1648.Prussia gained the southern parts of Swedish Pomerania in 1720. It gained the remainder of Swedish Pomerania in 1815, when French occupation during the Napoleonic Wars was lifted. The former Brandenburg-Prussian Pomerania and the former Swedish parts were reorganized into the Prussian Province of Pomerania, while Pomerelia in the partitions of Poland was made part of the Province of West Prussia. With Prussia, both provinces joined the newly constituted German Empire in 1871. Following the empire's defeat in World War I, Pomerelia became part of the Second Polish Republic (Polish Corridor) and the Free City of Danzig was created. Germany's Province of Pomerania was expanded in 1938 to include northern parts of the former Province of Posen–West Prussia, and in 1939 the annexed Polish territories became the part of Nazi Germany known as Reichsgau Danzig-West Prussia. The Nazis deported the Pomeranian Jews to a reservation near Lublin and mass-murdered Jews, Poles and Kashubians in Pomerania, planning to eventually exterminate Jews and Poles and Germanise the Kashubians.After Nazi Germany's defeat in World War II, the German–Polish border was shifted west to the Oder–Neisse line and all of Pomerania was placed under Soviet military control. The area west of the line became part of East Germany, the other areas part of the People's Republic of Poland. The German population of the areas east of the line was expelled, and the area was resettled primarily with Poles (some themselves expellees from former eastern Poland) and some Ukrainians (resettled under Operation Vistula) and Jews. Most of Western Pomerania (Vorpommern) today forms the eastern part of the state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern in Federal Republic of Germany, while the Polish part of the region is divided between West Pomeranian Voivodeship and Pomeranian Voivodeship, with their capitals in Szczecin and Gdańsk, respectively. During the late 1980s, the Solidarność and Die Wende movements overthrew the Communist regimes implemented during the post-war era . Since then, Pomerania has been democratically governed.".
- History_of_Pomerania thumbnail LG_Dolmen1.JPG?width=300.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageID "786545".
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageLength "79386".
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageOutDegree "810".
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageRevisionID "694715027".
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink 1970_Polish_protests.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Absalon.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Administrative_divisions_of_East_Germany.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Ahrensburg_culture.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Alina_Hutnikiewicz.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Allerød_oscillation.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Altes_Lager_(Menzlin).
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Anti-miscegenation_laws.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Baltic_Sea.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Berlin.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Bornhöved_(1227).
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Colberger_Heide.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Stralsund_(1809).
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Verchen.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Wolgast.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Battle_on_the_Raxa.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Bay_of_Greifswald.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Berlin.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Bezirk.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Bezirk_Frankfurt.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Bezirk_Neubrandenburg.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Bezirk_Rostock.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Bełżec_extermination_camp.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Billung_March.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Bishopric_of_Cammin.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Bogdan_Wachowiak.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Bogislaw_X,_Duke_of_Pomerania.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Bogislaw_XIV,_Duke_of_Pomerania.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Bolesław_III_Wrymouth.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Brandenburg.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Brandenburg-Prussia.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Brandenburg–Pomeranian_conflict.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Bronze_Age.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Burgundians.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Bydgoszcz.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Capitulation_of_Franzburg.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_Poland.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_Pomerania_by_period.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Category:Jomsvikings.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Category:Kashubians.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Catholic_Church.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Christianity.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Christianization.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Christianization_of_Pomerania.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Circipania.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Communism.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Congress_of_Gniezno.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Congress_of_Vienna.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Convention_of_Tauroggen.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Corded_Ware_culture.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink County_of_Gützkow.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Crown_of_the_Kingdom_of_Poland.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Democracy.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Denmark.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Die_Wende.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Domestic_pig.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Dominions_of_Sweden.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Drawsko_Pomorskie.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Duchy_of_Pomerania.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Duchy_of_Saxony.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Dębczyn_culture.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink East_Germany.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink East_Pomeranian_Offensive.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink East_Prussia.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Eastern_Bloc.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Edward_Wlodarczyk.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Enabling_Act_of_1933.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Eric_of_Pomerania.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Ertebølle_culture.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Farther_Pomerania.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Ferdinand_von_Schill.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink File:Prussian_Settlement_Commission.jpg.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Flight_and_expulsion_of_Germans_from_Poland_during_and_after_World_War_II.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Florian_Ceynowa.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Former_eastern_territories_of_Germany.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink France.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Franz_Schwede.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Frederick_I,_Holy_Roman_Emperor.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Free_City_of_Danzig.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Free_State_of_Prussia.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Freikorps.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Funnelbeaker_culture.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Gauleiter.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Gdańsk.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Gdynia.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Gepids.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink German_Confederation.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink German_Empire.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink German_National_Peoples_Party.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink German_Revolution_of_1918–19.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink German_reunification.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink German_town_law.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Germanic_peoples.
- History_of_Pomerania wikiPageWikiLink Germanische_Altertumskunde_Online.