Gdańsk (German, Danzig)
GDAŃSK (German, Danzig)
GDAŃSK (German, Danzig). A Slavic village founded in the second half of the tenth century at the mouth of the Vistula on the Baltic, Gdańsk became a largely German-speaking Hansa city, serving as the major port for trade between the Commonwealth of Poland-Lithuania and western Europe, especially Holland. The Teutonic Knights, welcomed in 1226 by the rulers of the Polish principality of Mazovia, occupied Gdańsk in 1308. German immigrants began to reside in the suburbs by the second half of the thirteenth century. After the defeat of the Teutonic Knights by Polish-Lithuanian forces at the Battle of Grunwald (Tannenberg, 1410), Gdańsk swore allegiance to the Polish crown. In response to the Knights' continued threats, gentry, clergy, and nineteen towns formed the Prussian Union in 1440. The order's rule ended definitively in Gdańsk in 1454, and the Prussian estates again swore allegiance to the Polish crown.
The privilegia casimiriana (for King Kazimierz IV Jagiellończyk, ruled 1444–1492) laid the foundation for the city's rights and freedoms until 1793. Gdańsk was now linked via the Vistula with the Polish-Lithuanian hinterland, where it had the right of free trade; the king promised to respect the city's autonomies. Gdańsk flourished, together with the commonwealth, until the wars of the mid-seventeenth century. Population rose from about 20,000 in 1450 to a peak of c. 70,000 in 1650, making it the leading city of Poland-Lithuania. The port became the link between two major trading partners, Poland and Holland, with Gdańsk merchants reaping profits from the grain trade. Imports included salt, salt herrings, spices, and wine.
The Reformation came to Gdańsk against the background of challenges to the patriciate's monopoly of power in the years 1522–1526. King Zygmunt I restored order in 1526, again banning Lutheran teachings. Residents may have remained crypto-Lutherans, and the ideas soon resurfaced. Sigismund II Augustus in 1557 allowed Communion in both kinds, and in 1577 Stephen Báthory granted a privilege for the practice of Lutheranism. By the seventeenth century the city was divided into a Calvinist patriciate and a Lutheran commonality. Some Catholics, some of them Slavs, lived in the city and suburbs. Jews, Mennonites, and Quakers competed with the city's artisans and merchants, although
they were restricted to residence in the suburbs, where other sorts of non-guild commercial activities throve.
Printing began in Gdańsk in 1499, and by the seventeenth century local houses were producing books in German, Dutch, Polish, French, Latin, Greek, and Hebrew. An Academic Grammar School stood at the peak of the city's education system and drew students from abroad (including Poles, Lithuanians, and Hungarians); it offered a course in Polish from 1589. Members of the merchant patriciate emulated the lives of Polish nobles, and residents sent their children to the hinterland to acquire the language. The Collegium Medicum founded in 1614 was the first such institution in the commonwealth.
The city defended its independence from foreign powers (Prussia, Sweden, Russia) just as tenaciously as it guarded its ties with, and privileges and rights vis-à-vis, the Polish crown. It shared in the upheavals and decline that met the commonwealth and the grain trade from the middle of the seventeenth century (including the Swedish "Deluge" of 1655–1660; the Northern War of 1700–1721; and the 1734 Saxon and Russian siege of the city). The population had declined to 36,000 by 1793. Although spared occupation in the first partition of Poland (1772), Gdańsk was subjected to a Prussian economic embargo for the next twenty years. Prussian troops entered the city on 4 April 1793, and the second partition of Poland put an end to Gdańsk's status as port to a now moribund Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.
See also Hansa ; Northern Wars ; Poland to 1569 ; Poland-Lithuania, Commonwealth of, 1569–1765 ; Prussia .
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Bogucka, Maria. Das alte Danzig: Alltagsleben vom 15. bis 17. Jahrhundert. Munich, 1987.
Ciešlak, Edmund, ed. Historia Gdańska. Vol. 2, 1454–1655. Vol. 3, pt. 1, 1655–1793. Gdańsk, 1982, 1993.
Ciešlak, Edmund, and Czesław Biernat. History of Gdańsk. Gdańsk, 1995.
Simson, Paul. Geschichte der Stadt Danzig bis 1626. 3 vols. Gdańsk, 1913–1924. (Reprint: Aalen, 1967.)
David Frick
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
FRICK, DAVID. "Gdańsk (German, Danzig)." Europe, 1450 to 1789: Encyclopedia of the Early Modern World. The Gale Group Inc. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. 23 Dec. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.
FRICK, DAVID. "Gdańsk (German, Danzig)." Europe, 1450 to 1789: Encyclopedia of the Early Modern World. The Gale Group Inc. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. (December 23, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404900440.html
FRICK, DAVID. "Gdańsk (German, Danzig)." Europe, 1450 to 1789: Encyclopedia of the Early Modern World. The Gale Group Inc. 2004. Retrieved December 23, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404900440.html
Learn more about citation styles
|
THE "REAL" CHARLEMAGNE (ACCORDING TO EINHARD).
Magazine article from: Calliope; 3/1/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...Aachen, Germany, there lived a biographer named Einhard. Charlemagne and Einhard were close friends, and the biographer wanted...their accomplishments or failures, but thanks to Einhard, the real Charlemagne was never forgotten. Charlemagne...
|
|
Charlemagne in Italy.
Magazine article from: History Today; 2/1/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...died in 814. The most startling case is Einhard (c.775-840), an influential lay...written between 829 and 836. Through it Einhard wanted to exalt the Charlemagne of great...appear that italian readers did not know Einhard's panegyric of Charlemagne and perhaps...
|
|
Spiritual progress in Carolingian Saxony: A case from ninth-century Corvey
Magazine article from: The Catholic Historical Review; 10/1/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...Writing sometime between 817 and 825/826, Einhard described Charlemagne's wars as thirty...Charlemagne's actions in Saxony. (10) Einhard's remark about religion as a bond uniting...against the background formed by the events Einhard described and by the Translatio sacti...
|
|
Lay Intellectuals in the Carolingian World.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Church History; 6/1/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...what they were writing about. This was obviously true for Einhard (discussed by David Ganz), but equally so for Nithard...complementary and overlapping identities" (238-239). Einhard is again an obvious example, and again far from unique: Nithard...
|
|
Charlemagne's black stones: the re-use of Roman columns in early medieval Europe. (historical king)
Magazine article from: Antiquity; 9/1/1997; ; 700+ words
; ...before the 19th century, and Charlemagne's biographer, Einhard the Frank, specifically states that he was unable to obtain...Firchow & Zeydel (1972: 95), for a translation of Einhard's Vita Karoli Magni). Charlemagne's columns Charlemagne...
|
|
THE SONG OF ROLAND.(Charlemagne's conquest of Spain led to the writing of the poem 'The Song of Roland')
Magazine article from: Calliope; 3/1/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...Franks' rearguard and baggage train at Roncevaux. According to Charlemagne's biographer Einhard, a Count Roland was killed in the fight. Einhard says that Charlemagne could not avenge the assault because the attackers dispersed quickly under...
|
|
Calliope's Past.(March/April issue of Calliope featured Defenders of France)
Magazine article from: Calliope; 3/1/1999; 402 words
; ...Genealogy Chart www.ac.wwu.edu/~stephan/Rulers/charlemagne.html 2. Biography by Einhard www.fordham.edu/halsall/basis/einhard.html 3. Charlemagne's Life and Times (*pronunciation sound clips*) history.idbsu...
|
|
Enklaven-Exklaven: Zur literaischen Darstellung von Offentlichkeit und Nichtoffenlichkeit im Mittelalter: Interpretationen, Motiv- und Terminologiestudien.
Magazine article from: Medium Aevum; 9/22/1995; ; 700+ words
; ...Chapter i is devoted to six case-studies, ranging from Einhard's Vita Caroli Magni to the Knecht und Magd of Hans Folz...few examples: he establishes three kinds of public realm in Einhard's Vita (pp. 50 ff.). He conversely points to different...
|
|
Staying the royal sword: Alcuin and the conversion dilemma in early medieval Europe.(religious conversion)
Magazine article from: The Historian; 9/22/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...pagan people dwelling to the northeast of the Frankish realm. In his well-known Vita Karoli magni, the royal biographer Einhard chose these words to describe the long Saxon campaign that consumed the king's attention from 772 to 804: No war taken up...
|
|
Roland redivivus.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life; 2/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...historical personage: we know that a certain Count Rotholandus was among the courtiers of Charlemagne in the year 772, and in Einhard's Vita Karoli the story of the death of "Hruolandus" is recounted for the first time. If nothing else, the ambuscade...
|
|
Einhard
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Einhard or Eginhard , c.770-840, Frankish...with the emperor. Emperor Louis I made Einhard tutor or adviser to his son Lothair. Later...reconcile Louis and the rebellious Lothair. Einhard wrote the Vita Karoli Magni ( Life of Charlemagne...
|
|
Charlemagne
Encyclopedia entry from: U*X*L Encyclopedia of World Biography
...achievements is the Vita Caroli Magni, the first medieval biography. Written by Einhard between 817 and 836, this biography is largely a firsthand account, as Einhard was a member of the palace school during Charlemagne's reign and was his close...
|
|
Medieval Latin literature
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...8th and early 9th cent. Charlemagne persuaded an Englishman, Alcuin , to establish a court school. The writers, such as Einhard , were medieval rather than classical in spirit, but the effects of the revival were lasting. The effects of the movement...
|
|
Asser
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...later was made a bishop. He is remembered for his biography of Alfred to 893, apparently modeled on that of Charlemagne by Einhard. He combined a translation of some text of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle with his original observations on Alfred's life.
|
|
Eginhard
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Eginhard see Einhard .
|