Province of Silesia

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Prussian Province of
Silesia
flag coat of arms
Flag - national colors of the Prussian province of Silesia Province coat of arms
Situation in Prussia
Red: Location of the province of Silesia in Prussia (blue)
Consist 1815-1919, 1938-1941
Provincial capital Wroclaw
surface 40,335 km² (1910)
37,013 km² (1939)
Residents 4,868,764 (1939)
Population density 132 inhabitants / km² (1939)
administration 3 administrative districts
License Plate IK
Arose from Silesia
Incorporated into Province of Lower Silesia , Province of Upper Silesia
Today part of v. a. Poland ; Saxony , Czech Republic
map
Map of Silesia from 1905

The Prussian Province of Silesia (also unofficially known as Prussian Silesia ) was a province in the southeast of the state of Prussia . Most of the historical region of Silesia belonged to it . The capital was Breslau . The province of Silesia existed from 1815 to 1919 and again from 1938 to 1941. In the years from 1919 to 1938 and from 1941 it was divided into the provinces of Lower Silesia and Upper Silesia .

history

Most of the Duchy of Silesia, along with the County of Glatz , was made a province of the Prussian state by the Prussian King Friedrich II in 1742 after the First Silesian War as a result of the Peace of Berlin . After Prussia had reorganized all of its territories as provinces in a new form after the Congress of Vienna in 1815, northern Upper Lusatia around Görlitz was added to the province of Silesia in 1816. The historical sub-landscape of Upper Silesia formed the administrative district of Opole. Lower Silesia was divided into the administrative districts of Breslau and Liegnitz , and briefly also in the administrative district of Reichenbach .

As part of Prussia, the province belonged to the German Confederation until 1866 and to the German Empire from 1871 . In the Reichstag elections , the predominantly Catholic Upper Silesians voted for the majority of the Center Party, while the Lower Silesians initially mainly voted for the “German Freethinkers”, later increasingly the SPD . With industrialization, Upper Silesia with its coal mines became an important industrial area of ​​the empire.

When the Second Polish Republic came into being after the First World War and made territorial claims to parts of the eastern Prussian provinces, the area was divided into the provinces of Lower and Upper Silesia in 1919 in order to give the many Slavic-speaking Upper Silesians more independence and to allow them to participate in the upcoming referendum To hold Upper Silesia for the Reich. As a result of the three Polish uprisings in Upper Silesia , parts of Upper Silesia ( Eastern Upper Silesia ) had to be ceded to Poland in 1922. The Hultschiner Ländchen went to Czechoslovakia as early as 1920 .

In 1938 the province was rebuilt for a short time. Territory annexed after the attack on Poland , which in the south-east extended well beyond the previous borders, was added in violation of international law at the end of 1939 .

Divided again in 1941, the area was almost entirely placed under the administration of Poland in 1945 as a result of the German defeat in World War II, and incorporated into the state. Here it is distributed today v. a. to the voivodeships of Silesia , Lower Silesia and Opole , as well as Lebus , Greater Poland and Lesser Poland . A small part remained with Germany and is distributed today within the Free State of Saxony between the districts of Bautzen and Görlitz .

Population development

year Residents
1819 2,061,589
1846 3,065,809
1871 3,707,167
1880 4,007,925
1890 4,224,458
1900 4,668,857
1910 5,225,962
1939 4,868,764

Administrative division 1910

Urban and rural districts of Silesia (1905):
  • Liegnitz administrative district
  • Wroclaw Governorate
  • Opole administrative district
  • Language situation in the province of Silesia according to Prussian statistics 1905/06.
  • German language
  • Polish language
  • Czech Language
  • Sorbian language
  • Bilingual
  • Other languages
  • Wroclaw Governorate

    City districts

    1. Wroclaw
    2. Brieg (since 1907)
    3. Schweidnitz

    Counties and counties

    1. Wroclaw district
    2. Brzeg district
    3. Frankenstein district
    4. Circle of Glatz
    5. Groß Wartenberg district
    6. District of Guhrau
    7. District of Habelschwerdt
    8. Militsch district
    9. Münsterberg district
    10. Namslau district
    11. Neumarkt district
    12. Neurode district
    13. Nimptsch district
    14. District of Oels
    15. Ohlau district
    16. Reichenbach district
    17. Schweidnitz district
    18. Steinau district
    19. Circle chasing
    20. Striegau district
    21. Trebnitz district
    22. Waldenburg district
    23. District Wohlau

    Liegnitz administrative district

    City districts

    1. Goerlitz
    2. Liegnitz

    Counties and counties

    1. Bolkenhain district
    2. Bunzlau district
    3. Freystadt district
    4. District of Glogau
    5. Goldberg-Haynau district
    6. Goerlitz district
    7. Grünberg district
    8. District of Hirschberg i. R.
    9. District of Hoyerswerda
    10. District of Jauer
    11. Landeshut district
    12. Lauban district
    13. District of Liegnitz
    14. Löwenberg district
    15. Lüben district
    16. District of Rothenburg (Ob. Laus.)
    17. Sagan County
    18. District of Schönau
    19. Sprottau district

    Opole administrative district

    City districts

    1. Bytom
    2. Gliwice
    3. Katowice
    4. Koenigshütte
    5. Neisse (since 1911)
    6. Opole
    7. Ratibor (since 1904)

    Counties and counties

    1. Beuthen district
    2. District of Cosel
    3. Falkenberg district
    4. Groß Strehlitz district
    5. Grottkau district
    6. District of Hindenburg OS
    7. Katowice County
    8. Kreuzburg district
    9. District of Leobschütz
    10. Lublinitz district
    11. Neisse district
    12. Neustadt district
    13. Opole district
    14. District of Pless
    15. Ratibor district
    16. Rosenberg district
    17. Rybnik district
    18. Tarnowitz district
    19. Tost-Gleiwitz district

    Development of the ethnolinguistic structure

    Number of Polish-speaking and German-speaking population in the Opole administrative region
    year Polish German
    absolutely percentage absolutely percentage
    1819 0377.100 67.2% 0162,600 29.0%
    1828 0418,437 0255.383
    1831 0456.348 0257.852
    1837 0495,362 0290.168
    1840 0525.395 0330.099
    1843 0540.402 0348.094
    1846 0568,582 0364.175
    1852 0584.293 0363,990
    1858 0612,849 0406,950
    1861 0665.865 0409.218
    1867 0742.153 0457,545
    1890 0918.728 58.2% 0566,523 35.9%
    1900 1., 048.230 56.1% 0684.397 36.6%
    1905 1,158,805 56.9% 0757.200 37.2%
    1910 1,169,340 53.0% 0884.045 40.0%

    Chief President

    See also

    literature

    Web links

    Wikisource: Silesia  - Sources and full texts
    Commons : Province of Silesia  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

    Individual evidence

    1. ^ Prussian Provinces 1910 , Gemeindeververzeichnis.de
    2. a b Statistical Yearbook for the German Reich 1939/40 (digitized version)
    3. ^ Peter Baumgart : Silesia as an independent province in the old Prussian state (1740-1806) . In Norbert Conrads (Hrsg.): German history in Eastern Europe. Silesia . Siedler, Berlin 2002, ISBN 978-3-88680-775-8 , p. 346
    4. ^ Statistisches Bureau zu Berlin (Ed.): Contributions to the statistics of the Prussian state . Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1821, Silesia, p. 86 ( digitized version ).
    5. Royal Statistical Bureau (ed.): Mittheilungen des Statistisches Bureau's in Berlin, Volume 2 . Population of the districts. ( Digitized version ).
    6. ^ Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. p_schlesien.html. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
    7. Georg Hassel: Statistical outline of all European and the most distinguished non-European states, in terms of their development, size, population, financial and military constitution, presented in tabular form; First issue: Which represents the two great powers Austria and Prussia and the German Confederation ; Verlag des Geographisches Institut Weimar (1823), p. 34; (Total population in 1819: 561,203; Moravians: 12,000; Jews: 8,000 and Czechs: 1,600)
    8. a b c d e f g h i j Paul Weber: The Poles in Upper Silesia: a statistical study ; Julius Springer's publishing bookstore in Berlin (1913), pp. 8–9
    9. ^ A b c d Paul Weber: The Poles in Upper Silesia: a statistical study ; Julius Springer's publishing bookstore in Berlin (1913), p. 27