Prussian Krautism

>Slavs are inferior animals that we must conquer and destroy as superior German race!
>Gets eradicated from the face of the world forever by Slavs
Was there ever more ironic fate in history of mankind?

Other urls found in this thread:

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greater_Poland_uprising_(1848)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prussian_deportations
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germanisation_of_Poles_during_the_Partitions
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partitions_of_Poland
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third_Partition_of_Poland
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish_Border_Strip
de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polenschwärmerei
pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polenlieder
de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polenverein
historum.com/european-history/59130-silesia-polish-culture-history-years-ca-1300-ca-1900-a-7.html
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_revolutions_of_1848–49
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confederation_of_the_Rhine
twitter.com/NSFWRedditVideo

Prussian betrayal of Poland in 1655. A duchy created by Poland out of mercy to Teutons' last grand master. Rulers were Polish senators and were given a free rein how to rule their duchy. Later on, Poland propped it up several times, even refusing to kick the Hohenzolern dukes out when their other dominions are occupied by Sweden in the Thirty Years' War.

When Poland got invaded by Sweden, the duke switches sides and joins Sweden laying foundation to the Prussia that so many autists love that much.

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greater_Poland_uprising_(1848)

>While the Kingdom of Prussia already possessed a large Polish population in Upper Silesia, it gained additional Polish citizens during the partitions of Poland. From the beginnings of Prussian rule, Poles were subject to a series of measures aimed against them and their culture; the Polish language was replaced by German as the official language,[5] and most administration was made German as well; the Prussian ruler Frederick the Great despised Poles and hoped to replace them with Germans. Poles were portrayed as 'backward Slavs' by Prussian officials who wanted to spread German language and culture.[5] The land of Polish nobility was confiscated and given to German nobles.[5] Frederick the Great settled around 300,000 colonists in the Eastern provinces of Prussia and aimed at a removal of the Polish nobility by increasing the German population and trying to reduce Polish owned land.[6] [7] Another colonization attempt aimed at Germanization was pursued by Prussia after 1832,[8] and while Poles constituted 73% of population in 1815, they were reduced to 60% in 1848, at the same time the German presence grew from 25% to 30%.[9] The Poles were freed from Prussians with the arrival of Napoleon, and started a successful uprising against the Prussian forces in 1806.

>In 1819 the gradual elimination of Polish language in schools began, with German being introduced in its place.[1] This procedure was briefly stopped in 1822 but restarted in 1824.

>In 1825 August Jacob, a politician hostile to Poles, gained power over newly created Provincial Educational Collegium in Poznan.[1] Across the Polish territories Polish teachers were being removed from work, German educational programs were being introduced, and primary schooling was being replaced by German one that aimed at creation of loyal Prussian citizens.[1] Already in 1816 the Polish gymnasium in Bydgoszcz was turned into a German school and Polish language removed from classes.

>In 1825 the Teacher’s Seminary in Bydgoszcz was Germanized as well[1] While in 1824 a Provincial Parliament was invoked in Greater Poland, the representation was based on wealth census, meaning that the end result gave most of the power to German minority in the area.[1] Even when Poles managed to issue calls asking for enforcing of the guarantees formulated in treaties of Congress of Vienna and proclamations of Prussian King in 1815 they were rejected by Prussia.[1] Thus neither the attempt to create Polish University in Poznań or Polish Society of Friends of Agriculture, Industry and Education were accepted by authorities.[1] Nevertheless, Poles continued to ask for Polish representation in administration of the area, representing the separate character of the Duchy, keeping the Polish character of schools.[1]

>The administrator of the region became Eduard Heinrich Flotwell, a self-declared enemy of Poles, who openly called for Germanization and superiority of German culture over Polish people. Supported by Karl Grolman, a Prussian general, a program was presented that envisioned removing Poles from all offices, courts, judiciary system, and local administration, controlling the clergy, and making peasants loyal through enforced military service. Schools were to be Germanized as well.[1] Those plans were supported by such prominent public figures such as Clauswitz, Gneisenau, Theodor von Schon, and Wilhelm von Humbold.[1] By 1830 the right to use Polish in courts and institutions was no longer respected.[5] While the Poles constituted the majority of population in the area, they held only 4 out of 21 official posts of higher level.[5] From 1832 they could no longer hold higher posts at the local administrative level(Landrat).[5] At the same time the Prussian government and Prussian King pursued Germanization of administration and judicial system, while local officials enforced Germanization of educational system and tried to eradicate the economic position of Polish nobility.[5] In Bydgoszcz the mayors were all Germans. In Poznań, out of 700 officials, only 30 were Poles. Flotwell also initiated programs of German colonization and tried to reduce Polish landownership in favor of Germans.[1] In the time period of 1832-1842 the number of Polish holdings was reduced from 1020 to 950 and the German ones increased from 280 to 400.[1

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prussian_deportations
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germanisation_of_Poles_during_the_Partitions
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partitions_of_Poland
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third_Partition_of_Poland

Also, the partition coalition forced King Stanislaw to abdicate and he retired to St. Petersburg as Catherine II's trophy prisoner, where he died in 1798. Austria, Russia, and Prussia sought to permanently erase the existence of Poland, even down to the country's name, as proven by a secret and separate article signed by the partition coalition:

"In view of the necessity to abolish everything which could revive the memory of the existence of the Kingdom of Poland, now that the annulment of this body politic has been effected the high contracting parties are agreed and undertake never to include in their titles ... the name or designation of the Kingdom of Poland, which shall remain suppressed as from the present and forever".

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish_Border_Strip

>The term "Polish Border Strip" (German: Polnischer Grenzstreifen; Polish: polski pas graniczny) or "Polish Frontier Strip" refers to those territories which the German Empire wanted to annex from Congress Poland after World War I. It appeared in plans proposed by German officials as a territory to be ceded by the Kingdom of Poland to the German Empire after an expected German and Central Powers victory. German planners also envisioned forced expulsion and resettlement of the Polish and Jewish population which would be replaced by German colonists.[1][2][3] The proposed area of the Border Strip comprised up to 30,000 km2 (approximately the size of Belgium), and up to 3 million people were to be removed by the German Empire to make room for Germans.[3] The strip was also intended to separate the Polish inhabitants of Prussian-held Greater Poland from those in Congress Poland.

>In July 1917 the German supreme command under General Ludendorff, as part of the debate and planning regarding the cession of the "border strip" to Germany, specified its own designs in a memorandum.[1] It proposed annexing a greatly enlarged "border strip" of 20,000 square kilometres, and removing the pre-existing Polish and Jewish population (numbering between 2,000,000 and 3,000,000[3]) from a territory of 8,000 square kilometres and settling it with ethnic Germans.[1][2][5] Poles living in Prussia, especially in the province of Posen, were to be "encouraged" by unspecified means to move into the German-ruled Kingdom of Poland.[3]


>The German minority living in Congress Poland, which had earlier suggested the annexation of all territory up to Łódź in a letter to the German government, also supported such proposals.[6] The German government developed and agreed to these plans in March 1918, and in April gained support in the Prussian House of Lords; the plans for this were debated and developed across a wide spectrum of political parties and interested groups such as political scientists, industrialists, and nationalist organisations like the Pan-German League.[3] Parts of the plans were adopted by Nazis after the war, and implemented in the genocidal Generalplan Ost.[3]

They were generally lying genocidal thieves.

In case of pic related, led by easily depressed homosexual.

Silesian larper comming in 3.... 2... 1...

the only reason why it survived was because of slavs (poland, prussiaboo tsars etc)
they sure had weird relationship, maybe prussia hated them for not ending their miserable lives

I can post about Poles in Silesia as well. With sources.

Reminder that this was a prussian thing.
National-liberal germans of the 19th century, especially in the southern and western parts empathized with the poles, considering them to be opressed by the same rulers as them and their struggle for freedom an example for all europeans.
Some of them became literal polaboos, university fraternities especially, adopting polish clothes and hats.
de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polenschwärmerei
pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polenlieder
There were private associations, sending support to poland and helping emigrants trying to flee for france or america.
de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polenverein

The absolutist governments, prussia especially, supressed these, as they later supressed the german revolution.

Saxony and Poland were connected by Personal union.

By that time, saxony was a prussian satellite and poland a memory.

Napoleon's biggest fucking mistake was to attack Russia in 1812. He should have keeped Prussian scum under control and NEVER let them rise as a power again.

>German settlers coming to Silesia since the second half of the 13th century, called the native Slavic population of this land "Wasserpolen", and in further centuries this name was also extended into slavic speech of inhabitants of Silesia: "Wasserpolnisch Michsprache". A German geographical description of Silesia from year 1689 notes - for example - that between Oława and Kąty Wrocławskie "sehr polnisch redet". In Kąty Wrocławskie (Kanth) in year 1641 almost half of all artisans / craftsmen belonged to a separate, "Polish artisan guild". One of first decrees of Frederick the Great from year 1764 was directed against the Polish language - by this decree German language was introduced as official language and by the same decree from 1764 it was forbidden to employ in schools teachers who did not use German language. Restrictions for Polish language in schools and offices were introduced.

>Initially, Germanization affected the area of Lower Silesia - especially all large cities located in that area. The city of Wroclaw (Breslau) thanks to German settlement became a bilingual city. Gradually Polish language was being replaced by German language in Wroclaw, but nevertheless for a very long time the right bank side of Wroclaw, located on the eastern side of the Oder River, was being called by Germans "Polnische seite". Even a document from as late as 1789 says that population living in the suburbs of Wroclaw was still using Polish language.

In the 19th century Jerzy Samuel Bandtkie wrote:

>"The capital city of Silesia has many Polish-speaking inhabitants, because already 1,5 miles from Wroclaw there are entire Polish-speaking villages, and just 2 or 3 miles from Wroclaw there are entire parishes with majority of Polish-speaking populations, located at the Oder River."

In a brochure from 1791, an ethnic German pastor from Breslau - J. W. Pohleg - wrote:

(Source: J. W. Pohleg, "Der Oberschlesier verteidigt gegen seine Widersacher", published in 1791):


>"(...) What is the native language here in Silesia? Because rather not German? Basing on the names of cities and villages in a particular land, we can establish without any doubts, what was the most common language in this land when those cities and villages were built. What do words such as Glogau, Bunzlau, Wohlau, Jauer, Breslau, Brieg mean in German language? Nothing. On the other hand, in Polish language all these words have their meaning! Isn't the conclusion, that when those cities were built, Polish was the regional language in Silesia, true? Isn't this thus true, that accusing a Lower Silesian of speaking German language is more justified than accusing an Upper Silesian of speaking Polish language?* There is so much ignorance shown by your agitators**, who complain so loudly. The thing which they criticize,*** is rather worth praising. Honestly, how pitiful is a nation, which is jeering at people due to their mother tongue - people who are not at fault for using it - and the ones who are mocking, have not enough virtues to judge others genuinely and earnestly. (...)"


* He wrote this after Frederick the Great started oppressing Polish language in Silesia.

** He is writing about agitators of the Prussian king - Frederick William II.

*** And this thing is the fact that Upper Silesians spoke Polish language.

Breaking up prussia would have been better for germany too.

Józef Ignacy Kraszewski during his trip to Breslau from 1869 wrote:

>"(...) Germanization even until this day was not able to fully obliterate traces of old, Slavic extraction. Wroclaw is, we can already say this today, a half-polish city, because its part behind the Oder River, near Tum, even nowadays is called polish* and we can hear Polish language being spoken by inhabitants already in the suburbs of this city. (...)"

* This district of Breslau was called by Germans "Polnische seite".

And an ethnic German scholar - dr Partsch - in his book "Schlesien" from 1896 wrote:

>"(...) It is hard to believe, how could such a thing happen, that on the western side of the Oder River, in the Ohlau District as well as in the vincinity of parts of the Breslau District and the Strehlen District, there could survive completely compact territories of Polish-speaking inhabitants, which includes within its boundaries many important roads and which extends in all directions from the large center of transport that the city of Breslau is. (...)"

historum.com/european-history/59130-silesia-polish-culture-history-years-ca-1300-ca-1900-a-7.html

By the way, Napoleon was defeated by the Russians, but Germans claim that it was the Prussians who defeated them, which is completely false.

So the ''sub-human'' Slavs saved German nation from being forever under French control.

>Napoleon was defeated by the Russians, but Germans claim that it was the Prussians
Napoleon was defeated by a coalition of multiple nations, I've never seen anyone but you claim otherwise.
>saved German nation from being forever under French control.
If by that you mean "under french dominance until the next war kicks off", yes.

>''sub-human'' Slavs
Russia was only ever powerful because they had a nice big piece of clay ripe for taking from literal subhuman horsefuckers. They always were and still are inferior per capita in every possible way.

Uhmm... No? Napoleon was defeated by Russia alone. He was crushed in Russia, Lepizg in 1813 was just a finishing blow, his army was already 40% of what it was.

No, you dumb fuck. There would be NO next war. French would have disarmed Prussian filth, and dismantled that abomination. Buy Napoleon attacked Russia, and ONLY that openned the door for Prussians to break free.

Russia was powerful because they had superior soliders, and people to Krautniggers.

>Germany = Prussia
I don't think I'll be continuing this conversation.

So how would you define Prussia, other than backbone of German militaristic, Ordung identityt?

Germans were so fucking desperate for cultural cohesion, and unity that they jumped for the chance to be ''Ubermensch'' as soon as Bismarck united them.

Veeky Forumslet, read and learn.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_revolutions_of_1848–49
Prussia stopped the german unification because it was too autistic to see it happen under any rule but their or any system but autocratic monarchy.

Napoleon wanted to see the german states under his domination, no more and no less.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confederation_of_the_Rhine
Which wasn't disarmed, but fighting on his side, for what it's worth.
Had he won, he'd probably dissolve prussia and distribute it between new poland, rump prussia and saxony.

Thats what I said. Prussia was fucing cancer.

Also, Prussia did not stopped shit in 1848. Revolution was stopped by individual states, not Prussniggers.

>He was crushed in Russia
Nope

He crushed Russia, he was crushed by Russia's winter tho

He was crushed BY RUSSIANS you dumb fuck. Russians were better soliders than French.

LMAO
French steamrolled Russia, the only thing Russians did was to flee deep into SIberia waiting for the French to be caught by the winter.

No, Russians defeated French, and those are the facts you dumb fuck.

>Reminder that this was a prussian thing.
National-liberal germans of the 19th century
Not restoring Germany to its previous states before unification was a mistake.
With the exception of Prussia of course.They should just left Brandenburgia and abolish Prussia.

>ywn live in a world where Napoleon allows Frederick William III to declare himself Emperor in northern Germany
it hurts...

France should have occupied Germany, period.