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The eastern shores of the Baltic have had a complex history, weaving many sorts of folk and cultures together. Although the land is nearly impossible to defend adequately against invasion, it has managed to retain a number of survivals of early cultures and times, in part due to the unremitting resistance on the part of the inhabitants. Currently, this has: the Byelohravati,
Cracow,
Czersk,
Danzig,
Dorpat,
Ermland,
Estonia,
Finland,
Gersik,
Greater
Poland, Ingria, Kainu,
Kalisz,
Kuiavia,
Kukeinos,
Kurland,
Kvenland,
Latvia,
Lithuania,
Mazovia,
Memel,
Osel,
Plock,
Poland,
Pomerania,
Pomerelia,
Pomesania,
Poznan,
the Pruss, Prussia,
Przemysl,
Riga,
Samland,
Samogitia,
Sandomir,
Sieradz-Leczyca,
Silesia,
Sochaczew,
Turku,
Vyborg,
Warsaw,
and Wroclaw.
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DANZIG
Now called Gdansk, this city is the primary port of Poland. First noted
in 997, it achieved local autonomy in the 13th century. Granted as a Duchy
to one of Napoleon's Marshals, it became a Free City between the World
Wars. This area, the Danzig Corridor which gave Poland its access to the
sea and thus isolated East Prussia from the rest of Germany, was the fuse
that set off World War II. The City's most recent notoriety is as the home
of the shipyard that spawned Solidarnosc, the trade union that ultimately
toppled the communist government in Poland, and thus began the changes
resulting in the end of the Cold War.
FINLAND
Occupied
by a non-Indo European people closely related to Estonians and very distantly
related to Hungarians, Finland has always been a buffer zone between East
and West.
POLAND
A
general survey of this vital land; at times one of the largest, best cultured,
and most powerful in Europe.
POMERANIAThe
Baltic coast from the island of Rügen in Germany, to the mouth of
the Vistula in Gdansk Bay in Poland. It is centered somewhat on the mouth
of the Oder, which forms the current German/Polish frontier. Inhabited
by several groups of Slavic tribes, all closely related to one another
and to the Polish people in general, the region was absorbed into the Holy
Roman Empire and the Kingdom of Germany at an early date, but retained
its Slavic character nevertheless. A Duchy was established during the Middle
Ages, fragmented many times as was typical of German feudal states.
The lands to the east of the Oder were attached by the Teutonic Knights
early in the 14th century, in most cases. See also Danzig
for an early spin-off. Note also Kamminand
Kolberg,
ecclesiastic states in the region.
SILESIA
The mountainous southwestern quarter of Poland. The region became a partition
Duchy during the era of fragmentation, but unlike other Polish districts,
Silesia was absorbed into the Holy Roman Empire, and became a Germanized
province up until the nearly the present day. The name of the province
(Pol. Slaska, Ger. Schlesien) is derived from an ancient clan of the Teutonic
Vandals who lived here in the 3rd and 4th centuries CE - the Silings.