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After Poland finally united under Władysław I in 1320, king disputed the Order's action and asked for the papal mediation. In 1321 Pope commanded the Order to return the Pomerelia to Poland, but Order simply ignored the verdict, knowing very well that Pope seems to more sympathetic to them and Poland, still weakened, will not be able to take the disputed land by force. In the early 14th century, Teutonic Order also cooperated with John of Luxembourg, king of Bohemia (known in the West for his death at Crecy, where, then almost completely blind, decided to fight allegedly saying that 'fleeing from the battle is not befitting a monarch'). John laid a claim for the Polish crown (or at least the Greater Poland and Pomerania) as he was an indirect successor or Przemysł II and Wacław II, short-term kings of Poland (Wacław III was not officially crowned). Knowing that Władysław I wants to recreate Poland in its pre-1138 boredrs and unite all the Polish lands, he knew that he has the chance to keep the Greater Poland and Pomerania only through open conflict. Thus, he decided to seek Order's help and supported it in their war with Lithuania that, in turn, was backed by Poland. This resulted in the war of 1329-1331 that ended in a stalemate. This is important event as it clearly shows that at this moment, Teutonic Order evidently considered itself a political power influencing the balance of power in the region. Polish rulers also lacked political presence and acumen to present their situation to Holy Roman Emperor or the Pope, making it easier for the Order to portray the conflict in a biased way, earning the political support of the highest European authorities, what made it simpler for the Teutonic knights to earn favourable verdicts during the mediation in late 13th and early 14th century. The reign of Kazimierz III, son of Władysław I changed this situation, as the new king turned to be a very good diplomat and politician. In 1335 he made an agreement with John of Luxembourg, giving him Silesia in exchange for a substantial sum of money and formal abandonment of any pretenses to Polish land what also ended the alliance between Order and John against Poland. Stronger, unified Poland was harder to invade, so the Order decided to focus on the Lithuanian lands. The period of greatest tensions between Poland, Lithuania and Teutonic Order came in the late 14th century and early 15th century. Teutonic Order was involved in Lithuanian politics, especially in the conflict between Great Duke Jogaila and his cousin Vytautas, where it supported the latter, especially after the 1386, when Jogaila was crowned as king of Poland and designated his brother Skirgaila to be his regent in Lithuania. Negotiations between Jogaila and Vytautas and the presence of Svitrigaila that was both opposed to Poland and interested in the position of the ruler of Lithuania caused Vytautas to abandon Teutonic Order and tighten his relations with Poland. This, in turn caused Teutonic Order to support Svitrigaila, who however defeated. This shows that Teutonic Order was interested in both preventing the emergence of strong, unified powers in Central Europe and installing or supporting people sympathetic to their cause at the head of neighbouring polities. The next large conflict between Poland and Teutonic Order was again caused by the expansionist policies of the latter. Attempt to subjugate Samogitia, dividing their possessions in Prussia and Livonia met with local resistance supported by the Great Duke of Lithuania. Unable to dismantle or weaken the Polish-Lithuanian relationship, Order decided to attack the land of Dobrzyń and the attack on Greater Poland by Ulrich von der Osten, ruler of Driesen (now Drezdenko, Poland), an ally and later a vassal of the Order preceded the declaration of war by the Order and quick invasion of the Polish lands immediately bordering with the lands of the Order. It was possible that Grandmaster counted on establishing their presence in the invaded land and then call for negotiations, counting on the Polish and Lithuanian inability or reluctance to perform quick counterattack, but this was a mistake. The area-wide uprising in Samogitia backed by Lithuania drove all Teutonic forces from this realm and the joint strike against the Teutonic heartland resulted in the decisive Polish-Lithuanian victory at Tannenberg (Grunwald) and Koronowo in 1410 broke the Order power. The First Treaty of Thorn signed in 1411 marked the beginning of Order's decline. Polish-Lithuanian victory also prompted Sigismund of Luxembourg, king of Germany and later Holy Roman Emperor to recognize Jogaila as a Christian ruler and break his own alliance with the Order in 1412. The issue of the conflict has been brought up on the Council of Constance (famous for the execution of Jan Hus that precipitated Hussite Wars). Johann Falkenberg, Dominican monk and representative of the Order presented their stance in a brochure Tractatus doctoris cuiusdam de Prutenis contra Polonos et paganos de potestate papae et imperatoris respectu infidelium where he claimed that pagans can be killed only because they are pagans, and Poles should be exterminated and their land confiscated because they support pagans and thus are traitors of the Catholic faith and enemies of the Church (what summarized the political stance of the Order whenever the issue of the conflict between Order and Poland or other Christian nation came up and earlier it was often taken at a face value or was not challenged to a significant degree by other powers). Polish representatives exposed Falkenberg's allegations as false, eventually causing Pope Martin V to condemn it (although the official bull was issued only six years later). Two decades later, a Prussian burghers established Prussian Union, and organization reprsenting the interests of the Prussian cities and protect them from the abuse of power exercised by the Order. The latter attempted to limit its power up to and including asking Holy Roman Emperor for the formal delegalization of the Union, but were declined, what shows that they have already fallen from the Imperial favour. In 1454 the Prussian cities rebelled against the Order, asking Polish king, Kazimierz IV for support. The latter officially incorporated Prussia to Poland, what was approved by all Prussian cities save for Marienburg, Konitz and Stuhm. Teutonic Order responded by attempting to pacify the rebellion, what prompted Poland to invade, starting the Thirteen Years War that ended with Order losing large part of its territory, including Pomerelia, Chełmno and Michałów Land, Upper Vistula and Warmia. The remaing parts of the Order land became a vassal state of Poland. Even though the subsequent Grandmasters attempted to shake the Polish domination, they were unable to do so, as the Order was only a shadow of its former self. The last Grandmaster, Albrecht von Brandenburg-Ansbach, adopted Lutheranism and transformed the Teutonic State into secular Ducal Prussia (thus creating the first Lutheran state in history) and paid homage to the Polish king, effectively ending the Teutonic military presence in Baltic area. So to sum it up, the Teutonic Order arrived in Prussia with a plan to establish an independent state, using their diplomatic support of the German nobility, Holy Roman Emperor and the Pope. The war against Prussians was eventually considered a Crusade, what attracted many Western knight who helped the Teutonic Order in their mission of subjugating Prussian territory. But the Teutonic idea o Christianization of the pagan areas, although honest, was a mean to an end that was the formation of an independent monastic state. When this goal was achieved, Teutonic Order started to behave like any other state, making allies and enemies in the attempts to solidify their holdings, secure borders and expand into the neighbouring territory, what sooner or later put them at odds with other powers in the region, namely Poland, Lithuania and the archbishopric of Riga. Relative military and political weakness of these polities made it easier to use military power against them with little risk. But as soon as the Poland and Lithuania unified and began to cooperate, also gaining political influence, it was harder for the Order to both fight them effectively and portray their expansion as crusading effort, as both countries were established as Christian powers. The great war of 1409-1411 and Thirteen Years War were regular political and territorial conflicts, as any other war in Europe at that time. Dollinger, P., The German Hansa, Stanford University Press, 1970. Jähnig, B., Vorträge und Forschungen zur Geschichte des Preußenlandes und des Deutschen Ordens im Mittelalter [Lectures and research concerning history of the Prussian lands and the Teutonic Order in the Middle Ages], Copernicus Association of History and National Studies of Western Prussia, Münster 2011. Morton, N., The Teutonic Knights in the Holy Land, The Boydell Press, Woodbridge 2009. Selart, A., Livonia, Rus' and the Baltic Crusades in the Thirteenth Century. Brill, Leiden 2015.
If I had a nickel for every time a bunch of crusaders established a country that would eventually become really important in the future, I’d have 2 nickels, which isn’t a lot, but it’s strange that it happened twice
@WrinkledPaper674 To be fair, I think nearly all of the larger Crusading forces had significant impacts on socio-political borders. Between Prussia, the Levant, Anatolia, Lisbon and the Occitan speaking lands, they changed a lot of them. I'd actually think Portugal would be a more muted example as I thought it was mostly the native Orders or chapters that had the most decisive impact given that when the foreign ("Frankish") Crusaders started looting and pillaging on their own the Iberians promptly dissuaded them
the Hospitallers were the best, they were true defenders of Christianity like in Rhodes or Malta, meanwhile the Teutons were genocidal maniacs who after slaughter of Prussians started to fight with christian Poland and Novgorod and partly christian Lithuania
@forgott_8182 you have to stop with the anti-German propaganda, every time the Germans do something they are always portrayed badly, but it is the most developed and civilized West in history, its jealous neighbors should be ashamed, so stop your ridiculous propaganda and move on ... France and the English did worse, the Poles were also monstrous at that time but you spend your time watching the wrongs of the Germans, you are jealous 😂😂😂
you can't imagine how different history can be when the opposite sides describe a battle .It can be like a different battle ,it depends on the point of view
@@piotrwojdelko1150you have to stop with the anti-German propaganda, every time the Germans do something they are always portrayed badly, but it is the most developed and civilized West in history, its jealous neighbors should be ashamed, so stop your ridiculous propaganda and move on ... France and the English did worse, the Poles were also monstrous at that time but you spend your time watching the wrongs of the Germans, you are jealous 😂😂😂
As an admitted law student I really appreciated the secular and religious laws in this video on how the order was able to legally secure their land. That grandmaster was a smart dude 🫡
Define legally. And whom can impart this definition onto someone claiming to be Christian yet use the term legal to justify killing others . Well I suppose our American gov't does the same using the term terrorist to justify any means to reach secret goals also. Now any American whom refuses subjugation can be "legally" disposed of also. Guess people never change.
Merry Christmas/Happy Holidays to you guys. You're machines! So many excellent videos it's impossible to get through them all. Currently working my way through the Ottoman stuff. Taking a break from that empire to enjoy this production.
The Teutonic Knights’ campaigns against the pagan Prussians are a stark reminder of how religious motivations were often used as justification for territorial expansion. The sheer organization and strategy they employed are impressive, even if their methods were brutal.
I think it was Real Crusades History that pointed out the nobles of the time did not see any hypocrisy in their actions. They were (in their minds) helping to build Christ's kingdom on Earth. At least in the initial Crusades.
Ah yes, the stunning argument of ‘we only tried to commit a little genocide because they also tried to commit a little genocide, so genociding them is okay’
@@aselliofacchio Compare how the Saracens took Jerusalem twice from the Christians to how the Franks took Jerusalem at 1099 More crimes from the Christians
Medieval 2 vanilla is unplayable. It's all so wrong and nonsensical, like gothic knights being useless and peasant archers being able to destroy the heaviest french knights with a few volleys.
KINGS AND GENERALS best god damm channel !!! If you guys could do a serie on each military order of Europe it would be so damm good !! Got my support as always
9:08 - map is wrong. Gdańsk was part of Poland back then, not the empire. It was part of "Senioral Duchy" by the act of succession ordered by Prince Bolesław III.
Hermann von Salza was one of the greatest men from the Middle Ages - critically underrated. He knew the Crusader states won't hold for long and took his order elsewhere (it was briefly headquarted in Venice before going to Hungary). He was a very shrewd man. He took part of the Fifth Crusade and was taken prisoner in Egypt. He also was a central piece of the negotiations for the treat Frederick II made to get Jerusalem in the Sixth Crusade.
Nothing about Herkus Mantas, Skomantas, Skirmantas, Nameisis and other Prussians, Sudovians, Lithuanians or Semigalians dukes or leaders; nothing about battle at the Durbe (in present-day Latvia) - largest defeat of the knights in the 13th century, which inspired the Great Prussian Uprising, battle of Lubawa, battle of Krucken and many others great Prussians victories; nothing about Sambia, Nadruvia, Natanga, Bartia and other Prussians lands... Yotvingians, Galindians, Skalvians. "Prussian Crusade without Prussians"
My grandpa was preussian , we were never allowed to look at another omce plate at dinner , we always had to have both hands on the table , we had to be close to the table and sit straight , we had to be there when we started. My grandma was amazing , strict but amazing , couldnt be fooled.
14:05 I am sorry, this makes no sense. The exception does not invalidate the rule. Just because the Knights occasionally worked with pagans doesn't mean that there wasn't an overall homogenous struggle.
The European map at 3:36 is wrong as Serbia never had coastal territory all the way to the Croatian port city of Split. In fact, to the right of what is today the town of Dubrovnik (back then the Roman Catholic Independent Republic of Ragusa) is Orthodox Montenegro but during this time it was an inland territory without a coastline as the Roman Catholic Venetians had control of most of the coastline.
@@TheSouth-j7f You don't know the basics of history. The Serbian principalities and later the Serbian kingdom had a border on the Cetina river for centuries.
Always welcome to see a new video upload from the best military history channel on RUclips! Happy Christmas to all you guys, or whatever may bring you joy this season, and thank you for the peerless content🙏
01:02 "The Lord will turn the desert into a garden of delight" Do you believe this poetic vision justified the Teutonic Order’s actions, or was it just a powerful narrative for conquest?
War with Teutonic Order is large part of Polish medieval history taught in polish schools, and invitation by Konrad Mazowiecki is considered as one of the most tragic mistakes in whole history of our country.
He invited them becouse he had attacked the Prussians and they responded with invasion, raiding and devestation. It was an more or less an act of desperation, no Teutonic order probably just means Denmark conquers it instead.
@@hkl2007 The territories of Prussia were dense forests and the tribes waged troublesome guerrilla wars, organized attacks destroying his possessions plundered and avoided general battles, only hiding in the forests and organizing ambushes and it was annoying economically for Mazowieckie who was only prince of one province .
@@hkl2007 There was no method for them even when the Prussians were losing it, not much changed. Of course, they paid tribute and even accepted baptism. But as soon as the enemy left their territory, they denied any obligations.
@@hkl2007 The only way to solve this problem was to introduce permanent occupation troops in whole are and for Mazowiecki the Teutonic Knights seemed to be the perfect solution, unfortunately he did not foresee that they would build their own ecclesiastical state :)))
9:00 🙂 “Exemption from tax and tallage, right of soc and sac, tol and team, blodwit and fledwit, pillory and tumbril, infangentheof and outfangentheof, mundbryce, waifs and strays, flotsam and jetsam and ligan"
In the 20th century, while the N*zis largely appropriated much of the Teutonic Knights' symbolism and lore, the actual order was heavily suppressed and censored under the Thord Reich. The Order still exists today but operates as a charitable organization. Thanks and Merry Christmas Kings And Generals Crew!
My family lineage traces back to this exact moment in history. They lived in villages in Prussia and were pushed out, south and westward (mostly into Poland), during and following the Teutonic invasion.
Two corrections: 1) the maps show Danzig (Gdansk) as seemingly being part of the HRE from the start. In most of the time frame covered, Gdansk was always under the rule of Polish Dukes. Either as part of Poland directly or as splinter Duchies. It only came under Teutonic rule in 1308. 2) Russian Principality? Really? Rus. Not Russian
It's crazy how *Prussia,* the undisputed champion of medieval, early modern and even modern Europe, the unificator of all Germany and one of the predominant great powers of the old world ever since its creation, started out as an order of knights who were assigned pagan-controlled territory to subjugate it. Absolutely crazy, the history of Prussia is insanely cool.
About 1655, after the Thirty Years War in Europe, which Sweden won, that protestant Sweden invaded Poland; the result of this war was that Prussia gained independent from Poland . This invasion of Sweden kill 40 % population in Poland later 100 year wars non stop and attack many side destroy Poland economy and Prussia start slowly to grow on corpse of Poland and in cooperation with Russia .
This Prince in Poland Mazowiecki brought the Teutonic Knights because in Poland there was a division into provinces and there was no centralized authority, it was only divided into duchies. Later Prussia and teuronic knghts lost and paid homage to the King of Poland in medival times .
Prussia was like a cancer on the body of Poland that was not cured because Prussia controlled Gdansk founded by Mieszko I and wanted to strangle the economy of Poland. The division of Poland into regions by one king to his sons led to situtation idiott Mazowiecki coming up with the idea of bringing in the Teutonic Knights.
first of all, Kingdom of Poland as a whole did not invite the Teutonic Knights. It was Konrad, the duke of Mazovia (Poland at the time was split into duchies, and Mazovia was among the last to be reunited into Kingdom). He did not ask to deal specifically with Lithuanians, but with Prussians, which before the German conquest of the land meant a Baltic tribe, related to Lithuanians and Yotvingians. His intention was getting the assistance of the Knights in the colonization of his region (they weren't the first monk order duke Konrad invited), as he was one of the contenders to reunify Poland. The traditional Polish view is that it was the Teutonic Knights that turned on Poland. The German Order almost instantly rejected Konrad's seniority, and begun establishing their own state on the conquered Prussian territories, turning to Pope and Holy Roman Emperor to protect their state, conquering Gdansk less than hundred years after they arrived, and turning it into German city of Danzig. In this way Poland was always going to be surrounded by Germans. As for conversion of Lithuania - again, the traditional Polish view is that the reunified Poland peacefully united with Lithuania by marriage, thus ending the main reason of Teutonic presence in Prussia. For Lithuanian duke Jogaila the peaceful conversion was seen as more beneficial diplomatically. Of course, this meant that the Teutonic Knights would eventually become full-fledged enemies of the new alliance. It's worth noting that Lithuanians were surrounded by two knightly orders (also by Livonian Brothers of the Sword, reason why Latvia today is culturally protestant). As usual, I can recommend God's Playground by Norman Davies (probably the most accessible English-language book on Poland and Polish history).
No wonder Prussia is called a military with a state considering their origins, other then always looking cool as hell with their black colored insignia
Of the three great military orders (the Templars, Hospitallers, and Teutonic Knights), it's difficult to settle on an overall winner in terms of importance. The Temple loses out by having a lifespan some seven centuries shorter than the others. Also, importance is quite difficult to quantify. It is easier, however, to discuss what sort of importance they had across the time period. Until the mid-thirteenth century, the Templars and Hospitallers were both noticeable political and military powers. The Temple was the oldest military order, founded in the early twelfth century. The Hospitallers were older, dating from the late eleventh century, but they didn't militarise until later. Both orders played a major role in the defence of the crusader states and both had lands and brethren across Europe. As the Order's European estates annually sent money to the Holy Land to support their brethren there, the Templars became adept at transporting goods and cash abroad. This led to them providing banking services for European nobles and monarchs. The Hospitallers did the same, eventually, but it was only after the arrest of the Templars in 1307 that this became a more important role for the Hospital. As significant landowners in Europe, the military orders, like most religious orders, began to be relied upon by secular lords and kings. In England and Ireland, the Templars were initially the main military order to act as royal servants, undertaking financial and diplomatic work for the kings of England. For example, the master of the Irish Templars was a regular auditor of royal accounts, whilst in 1234, Templars led negotiations between royal forces and the rebel Richard Marshal, earl of Pembroke. However, by the late-thirteenth century, this position had been taken by the Hospitallers, who by the end of the medieval period were regular royal councillors. The Prior of Ireland, the Order's master in Ireland, served in various high offices, including chancellor and justiciar, the two chief administrators of English Ireland. One Hospitaller, Stephen de Fulbourn, was treasurer of Ireland in 1274 and justiciar from 1281-8. The Prior of England, master of the Hospitallers in England, Wales, and Scotland, became the premier baron in the English parliament, making him the most senior lay lord below an earl. He could also be a close personal councillor. Prior Botyll was among the first councillors allowed to see Henry VI after he recovered from his first bout of madness. Both orders had a pan-European appeal. The Templars and Hospitallers had lands in Germany, France, Italy, Iberia, the British Isles, and the Holy Land, and brethren from the same. In contrast, the Teutonic Knights were rather minor to start with. This order was only founded in the 1190s, and so at first lagged behind the more senior Hospital and Temple. The Teutonic Order, as its name suggests, was also more limited in scope, recruiting donations and membership mostly in 'German' lands. The Order established itself across Palestine, the Low Countries, and what is now Germany and Austria, and held some land in Sweden. However, regions like Iberia, France, and the British Isles did not have Teutonic outposts and seem to have had little contact with the Order (though the Order did trade with these countries and host crusaders from them). It is only when the Teutonic Knights began to conquer territory in the Baltic in the thirteenth century that they seem to become a real force. This made them one of the important orders, as no other military order had established its own independent state. After the Hospitallers conquered Rhodes in around 1310 they joined the Teutonic Knights as one of the two most militarily and politically important military orders. They were the only orders to maintain their own independent states, the Hospital in Rhodes, the Teutonic Knights in the Baltic. In the Mediterranean the Hospitallers always remained a key feature in crusade plans. Their conquest of Rhodes from 1309-10 was itself a papally-approved crusade, with the aim that the island would form a bridgehead for a second expedition to retake to the Holy Land. Meanwhile, in the Baltic the Teutonic Knights continued to grow in power. A system of summer raids called reisen became what can be almost described as a medieval tourist attraction. Crusaders would visit from all over Europe to feast with the Knights, participate in tournaments, receive prizes for valour, and fight the pagan Lithuanians. Famous participants include the Douglas earls of Scotland, Henry IV of England, and Jean le Maingre, marshal of France. However, after the Order's defeat by Polish-Lithuanian forces at Tannenburg in 1410, participants for the reisen dropped off sharply, with the last foreign visitors, a group of Burgundian knights, arriving in 1413. The Lithuanians had long since converted to Christianity and with their alliance and monarchical union with Poland, this could no longer be ignored or considered insincere. The Teutonic Knights had lost their prime purpose of holy war. Attempts were made to recover this by relocating to Translyvania to fight the Turks, something the Order declined (the offer was conditional on giving up Prussia), or by going to war with the schismatic Russians. This second path was fatal, and eventually brought about the end of the Ordensstaat.
"Die kalte Heimat" is what East Prussians called their home country in a poetic way. Many people have heard and repeated it as a household word, but don't know its origin.
When you talk about Old Prussia you need to commemorate most famous pagan Prussian cheef Herkus Mantas or Heinrich Monte(ger.). Who fight against crusaders. This is Epic Story. There is Streets in Lithuania named in honour Herkus Mantas.
Gdańsk/Danzig wasn't a part of the HRE in the 1200s, the map at f.e. 11:45 is wrong (interestingly, the map at 6:42 has it right). It was conquered by the Teutonic Order in 1308. Before that, it was part of the Duchy of Pomeralia, a semi-autonomous state that was created after 1138 when Poland was divided into five principalities. Pomeralia was a part of the Senoriate Province and eventually gained more sovereignty, seceding from it. Gdansk became a part of the HRE only in 1793.
What the Holy Roman Empire is doing in Gdansk Pomerania in the first half of the XIII c.? Before the Teutonic conquest of 1308-1309 this part of Pomerania was ruled alternately by the local Pomeranian dynasties or Polish kings.
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Merry Christmas KNG 🧑🎄🧑🎄🤶🤶🎅🎅🎄🎄🎁🎁
@brokenbridge6316 Merry Christmas!
Merry Christmas..one of the best medieval history Chanel ever!🎄🎄🎄
Even more of an accomplishment is how Prussia flipped from extreme Catholic to radical Lutheran.
like trading gold for copper
Just like Martin Luther😂
@Highestintheroom12 from praying to Mary to God.
After Poland finally united under Władysław I in 1320, king disputed the Order's action and asked for the papal mediation. In 1321 Pope commanded the Order to return the Pomerelia to Poland, but Order simply ignored the verdict, knowing very well that Pope seems to more sympathetic to them and Poland, still weakened, will not be able to take the disputed land by force. In the early 14th century, Teutonic Order also cooperated with John of Luxembourg, king of Bohemia (known in the West for his death at Crecy, where, then almost completely blind, decided to fight allegedly saying that 'fleeing from the battle is not befitting a monarch'). John laid a claim for the Polish crown (or at least the Greater Poland and Pomerania) as he was an indirect successor or Przemysł II and Wacław II, short-term kings of Poland (Wacław III was not officially crowned). Knowing that Władysław I wants to recreate Poland in its pre-1138 boredrs and unite all the Polish lands, he knew that he has the chance to keep the Greater Poland and Pomerania only through open conflict. Thus, he decided to seek Order's help and supported it in their war with Lithuania that, in turn, was backed by Poland. This resulted in the war of 1329-1331 that ended in a stalemate. This is important event as it clearly shows that at this moment, Teutonic Order evidently considered itself a political power influencing the balance of power in the region. Polish rulers also lacked political presence and acumen to present their situation to Holy Roman Emperor or the Pope, making it easier for the Order to portray the conflict in a biased way, earning the political support of the highest European authorities, what made it simpler for the Teutonic knights to earn favourable verdicts during the mediation in late 13th and early 14th century.
The reign of Kazimierz III, son of Władysław I changed this situation, as the new king turned to be a very good diplomat and politician. In 1335 he made an agreement with John of Luxembourg, giving him Silesia in exchange for a substantial sum of money and formal abandonment of any pretenses to Polish land what also ended the alliance between Order and John against Poland. Stronger, unified Poland was harder to invade, so the Order decided to focus on the Lithuanian lands. The period of greatest tensions between Poland, Lithuania and Teutonic Order came in the late 14th century and early 15th century. Teutonic Order was involved in Lithuanian politics, especially in the conflict between Great Duke Jogaila and his cousin Vytautas, where it supported the latter, especially after the 1386, when Jogaila was crowned as king of Poland and designated his brother Skirgaila to be his regent in Lithuania. Negotiations between Jogaila and Vytautas and the presence of Svitrigaila that was both opposed to Poland and interested in the position of the ruler of Lithuania caused Vytautas to abandon Teutonic Order and tighten his relations with Poland. This, in turn caused Teutonic Order to support Svitrigaila, who however defeated. This shows that Teutonic Order was interested in both preventing the emergence of strong, unified powers in Central Europe and installing or supporting people sympathetic to their cause at the head of neighbouring polities.
The next large conflict between Poland and Teutonic Order was again caused by the expansionist policies of the latter. Attempt to subjugate Samogitia, dividing their possessions in Prussia and Livonia met with local resistance supported by the Great Duke of Lithuania. Unable to dismantle or weaken the Polish-Lithuanian relationship, Order decided to attack the land of Dobrzyń and the attack on Greater Poland by Ulrich von der Osten, ruler of Driesen (now Drezdenko, Poland), an ally and later a vassal of the Order preceded the declaration of war by the Order and quick invasion of the Polish lands immediately bordering with the lands of the Order. It was possible that Grandmaster counted on establishing their presence in the invaded land and then call for negotiations, counting on the Polish and Lithuanian inability or reluctance to perform quick counterattack, but this was a mistake. The area-wide uprising in Samogitia backed by Lithuania drove all Teutonic forces from this realm and the joint strike against the Teutonic heartland resulted in the decisive Polish-Lithuanian victory at Tannenberg (Grunwald) and Koronowo in 1410 broke the Order power. The First Treaty of Thorn signed in 1411 marked the beginning of Order's decline. Polish-Lithuanian victory also prompted Sigismund of Luxembourg, king of Germany and later Holy Roman Emperor to recognize Jogaila as a Christian ruler and break his own alliance with the Order in 1412.
The issue of the conflict has been brought up on the Council of Constance (famous for the execution of Jan Hus that precipitated Hussite Wars). Johann Falkenberg, Dominican monk and representative of the Order presented their stance in a brochure Tractatus doctoris cuiusdam de Prutenis contra Polonos et paganos de potestate papae et imperatoris respectu infidelium where he claimed that pagans can be killed only because they are pagans, and Poles should be exterminated and their land confiscated because they support pagans and thus are traitors of the Catholic faith and enemies of the Church (what summarized the political stance of the Order whenever the issue of the conflict between Order and Poland or other Christian nation came up and earlier it was often taken at a face value or was not challenged to a significant degree by other powers). Polish representatives exposed Falkenberg's allegations as false, eventually causing Pope Martin V to condemn it (although the official bull was issued only six years later).
Two decades later, a Prussian burghers established Prussian Union, and organization reprsenting the interests of the Prussian cities and protect them from the abuse of power exercised by the Order. The latter attempted to limit its power up to and including asking Holy Roman Emperor for the formal delegalization of the Union, but were declined, what shows that they have already fallen from the Imperial favour. In 1454 the Prussian cities rebelled against the Order, asking Polish king, Kazimierz IV for support. The latter officially incorporated Prussia to Poland, what was approved by all Prussian cities save for Marienburg, Konitz and Stuhm. Teutonic Order responded by attempting to pacify the rebellion, what prompted Poland to invade, starting the Thirteen Years War that ended with Order losing large part of its territory, including Pomerelia, Chełmno and Michałów Land, Upper Vistula and Warmia. The remaing parts of the Order land became a vassal state of Poland. Even though the subsequent Grandmasters attempted to shake the Polish domination, they were unable to do so, as the Order was only a shadow of its former self. The last Grandmaster, Albrecht von Brandenburg-Ansbach, adopted Lutheranism and transformed the Teutonic State into secular Ducal Prussia (thus creating the first Lutheran state in history) and paid homage to the Polish king, effectively ending the Teutonic military presence in Baltic area.
So to sum it up, the Teutonic Order arrived in Prussia with a plan to establish an independent state, using their diplomatic support of the German nobility, Holy Roman Emperor and the Pope. The war against Prussians was eventually considered a Crusade, what attracted many Western knight who helped the Teutonic Order in their mission of subjugating Prussian territory. But the Teutonic idea o Christianization of the pagan areas, although honest, was a mean to an end that was the formation of an independent monastic state. When this goal was achieved, Teutonic Order started to behave like any other state, making allies and enemies in the attempts to solidify their holdings, secure borders and expand into the neighbouring territory, what sooner or later put them at odds with other powers in the region, namely Poland, Lithuania and the archbishopric of Riga. Relative military and political weakness of these polities made it easier to use military power against them with little risk. But as soon as the Poland and Lithuania unified and began to cooperate, also gaining political influence, it was harder for the Order to both fight them effectively and portray their expansion as crusading effort, as both countries were established as Christian powers. The great war of 1409-1411 and Thirteen Years War were regular political and territorial conflicts, as any other war in Europe at that time.
Dollinger, P., The German Hansa, Stanford University Press, 1970.
Jähnig, B., Vorträge und Forschungen zur Geschichte des Preußenlandes und des Deutschen Ordens im Mittelalter [Lectures and research concerning history of the Prussian lands and the Teutonic Order in the Middle Ages], Copernicus Association of History and National Studies of Western Prussia, Münster 2011.
Morton, N., The Teutonic Knights in the Holy Land, The Boydell Press, Woodbridge 2009.
Selart, A., Livonia, Rus' and the Baltic Crusades in the Thirteenth Century. Brill, Leiden 2015.
Amazing work as always. I hope your team enjoys its break over Christmas they deserve it
If I had a nickel for every time a bunch of crusaders established a country that would eventually become really important in the future, I’d have 2 nickels, which isn’t a lot, but it’s strange that it happened twice
Wait, which was the other? The Kingdom of Jerusalem fell, afterall. The most important it got was all the genociding it did before being reconquered.
@leonkautz8151 bruh, I was talking about Portugal and Prussia, but I forgot about the crusader states. my bad
@WrinkledPaper674 To be fair, I think nearly all of the larger Crusading forces had significant impacts on socio-political borders. Between Prussia, the Levant, Anatolia, Lisbon and the Occitan speaking lands, they changed a lot of them. I'd actually think Portugal would be a more muted example as I thought it was mostly the native Orders or chapters that had the most decisive impact given that when the foreign ("Frankish") Crusaders started looting and pillaging on their own the Iberians promptly dissuaded them
Reconquesta, that's why Portugal is so significant @@kongming66
@WrinkledPaper674 Portugal wasn't created by crusaders, it was just aided by them in the reconquista
Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays to Everyone.
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!
Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays to you and yours!
@@KingsandGeneralsmerry Christmas and happy new year 🎄
Merry Christmas!
Ah yes, the Teutonic Knights, also known as the Knights of Drip.
their uniforms were hard af
Some Christmas Eve heat from K&G, you love to see it! ⚔️
Merry Christmas!
Fascinating stuff on the political side. You can see how that initial experience in Hungary shaped subsequent actions.
the rise and fall of the teutonic order is always a fascinating topic
Teutonic Order was the most drippiest for sure.
the Hospitallers were the best, they were true defenders of Christianity like in Rhodes or Malta, meanwhile the Teutons were genocidal maniacs who after slaughter of Prussians started to fight with christian Poland and Novgorod and partly christian Lithuania
@@forgott_8182 True, but to be fair hose was solely commending their drip, not their actions
Germans always have the best drip
@forgott_8182
you have to stop with the anti-German propaganda, every time the Germans do something they are always portrayed badly, but it is the most developed and civilized West in history, its jealous neighbors should be ashamed, so stop your ridiculous propaganda and move on ...
France and the English did worse, the Poles were also monstrous at that time but you spend your time watching the wrongs of the Germans, you are jealous 😂😂😂
@leonkautz8151 the best people in the history of the west 🎉🎉🎉Germans are really special !
As a teutonic lover this made my day perfect to actually see anybody make content about them and it being good aswel
Certainly an underrepresented part of crusade history.
I'm so deep into this channel that this got recommended to me in 5 mins 😂
you can't imagine how different history can be when the opposite sides describe a battle .It can be like a different battle ,it depends on the point of view
@@piotrwojdelko1150you have to stop with the anti-German propaganda, every time the Germans do something they are always portrayed badly, but it is the most developed and civilized West in history, its jealous neighbors should be ashamed, so stop your ridiculous propaganda and move on ...
France and the English did worse, the Poles were also monstrous at that time but you spend your time watching the wrongs of the Germans, you are jealous 😂😂😂
@piotrwojdelko1150 let's also talk about the crimes and lies and propaganda of the Poles? do you agree?
As an admitted law student I really appreciated the secular and religious laws in this video on how the order was able to legally secure their land. That grandmaster was a smart dude 🫡
the devil is in the details.
Define legally. And whom can impart this definition onto someone claiming to be Christian yet use the term legal
to justify killing others . Well I suppose our American gov't does the same using the term terrorist to justify any means to reach secret goals also. Now any American whom refuses subjugation can be "legally" disposed of also. Guess people never change.
Amazing work as always! I hope your team enjoys a well-deserved break over Christmas-you’ve truly earned it.
Merry Christmas/Happy Holidays to you guys. You're machines! So many excellent videos it's impossible to get through them all. Currently working my way through the Ottoman stuff. Taking a break from that empire to enjoy this production.
Can we get a full length Teutonic order video? This topic isn’t covered nearly as much . ❤ love the channel
Love the video who ever see this have a merry Christmas
Merry Christmas.
The Teutonic Knights’ campaigns against the pagan Prussians are a stark reminder of how religious motivations were often used as justification for territorial expansion. The sheer organization and strategy they employed are impressive, even if their methods were brutal.
I think it was Real Crusades History that pointed out the nobles of the time did not see any hypocrisy in their actions. They were (in their minds) helping to build Christ's kingdom on Earth. At least in the initial Crusades.
Saracens did way worse to Christians.
Ah yes, the stunning argument of ‘we only tried to commit a little genocide because they also tried to commit a little genocide, so genociding them is okay’
@@aselliofacchio
Compare how the Saracens took Jerusalem twice from the Christians to how the Franks took Jerusalem at 1099
More crimes from the Christians
Was, or currently is Islam any different? And if so, how?
The urge to boot up the Teutonic Campaign in Medieval II grows
Great campaign
Medieval 2 vanilla is unplayable. It's all so wrong and nonsensical, like gothic knights being useless and peasant archers being able to destroy the heaviest french knights with a few volleys.
There is a cool mod called bastle for the baltics. Best teutonic campaign imo.
KINGS AND GENERALS best god damm channel !!! If you guys could do a serie on each military order of Europe it would be so damm good !! Got my support as always
Still they can't get the map right.
Thanks for the video. Merry Christmas to Everyone !
The graphics and storytelling are superb. Merry Christmas 🎉
The OG Christmas Carollers "'Hark, heathen! For 'tis the season to be merry!"
Happy Holidays! Thanks to Kings and Generals for a nice holiday gift of a new video. 😎⚔🎄🎁🔔
Happy holidays!
Nice christmas gift , thank you .
Amazing video as always
Been waiting for this!
9:08 - map is wrong. Gdańsk was part of Poland back then, not the empire. It was part of "Senioral Duchy" by the act of succession ordered by Prince Bolesław III.
Amazing video. Merry Christmas!
Selamat Hari Natal Kings and Generals
Quite a Christmas present. Amazing work as always!!
Merry Christmas guys, thanks for the gift!
Merry Christmas!
If there is one order of knights that makes me think about Christmas, it's Teutonic Order. Merry Christmas 🎄🎁
I came to watch the video after realizing how appealing the Teutonic Knight is in Age of Empires.
A perfect Christmas gift thanks guys
Great work, keep it up! And Merry Christmas!
Merry christmas!
I very much enjoyed your video and I gave it a Thumbs Up
thanks!
This channel is good
Thanks!
Merry Christmas, guys!
PS: Will there be a video on the decline and transformation of the Order in the 15th century and beyond?
Merry Christmas! There will be more on the topic!
Thanks for the Christmas gift!
Have a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!
Hermann von Salza was one of the greatest men from the Middle Ages - critically underrated. He knew the Crusader states won't hold for long and took his order elsewhere (it was briefly headquarted in Venice before going to Hungary). He was a very shrewd man.
He took part of the Fifth Crusade and was taken prisoner in Egypt. He also was a central piece of the negotiations for the treat Frederick II made to get Jerusalem in the Sixth Crusade.
Nothing about Herkus Mantas, Skomantas, Skirmantas, Nameisis and other Prussians, Sudovians, Lithuanians or Semigalians dukes or leaders; nothing about battle at the Durbe (in present-day Latvia) - largest defeat of the knights in the 13th century, which inspired the Great Prussian Uprising, battle of Lubawa, battle of Krucken and many others great Prussians victories; nothing about Sambia, Nadruvia, Natanga, Bartia and other Prussians lands... Yotvingians, Galindians, Skalvians. "Prussian Crusade without Prussians"
learning so much
My grandpa was preussian , we were never allowed to look at another omce plate at dinner , we always had to have both hands on the table , we had to be close to the table and sit straight , we had to be there when we started. My grandma was amazing , strict but amazing , couldnt be fooled.
Great video keep it up you're doing amazing things 😁👍
14:05 I am sorry, this makes no sense. The exception does not invalidate the rule. Just because the Knights occasionally worked with pagans doesn't mean that there wasn't an overall homogenous struggle.
The European map at 3:36 is wrong as Serbia never had coastal territory all the way to the Croatian port city of Split. In fact, to the right of what is today the town of Dubrovnik (back then the Roman Catholic Independent Republic of Ragusa) is Orthodox Montenegro but during this time it was an inland territory without a coastline as the Roman Catholic Venetians had control of most of the coastline.
@@TheSouth-j7f You don't know the basics of history. The Serbian principalities and later the Serbian kingdom had a border on the Cetina river for centuries.
@@komnina99 The Serbian version of events usually has nothing to do with reality.
@@TheSouth-j7f Expected, what else can a Croat write.
When it is necessary to attach evidence and sources, then it willfully disappears.
@TheSouth-j7f Expected answer 🤣
@@komnina99 🚜....
Thank you so much for this amazing video!
Always welcome to see a new video upload from the best military history channel on RUclips!
Happy Christmas to all you guys, or whatever may bring you joy this season, and thank you for the peerless content🙏
01:02 "The Lord will turn the desert into a garden of delight" Do you believe this poetic vision justified the Teutonic Order’s actions, or was it just a powerful narrative for conquest?
thanks for video. I'm into medieval, but i was interested in history of orders lately
This video was a very interesting look into the Teutonic Knights. And Order I've heard little about till now. Great video.
Merry Christmas!!
War with Teutonic Order is large part of Polish medieval history taught in polish schools, and invitation by Konrad Mazowiecki is considered as one of the most tragic mistakes in whole history of our country.
He invited them becouse he had attacked the Prussians and they responded with invasion, raiding and devestation.
It was an more or less an act of desperation, no Teutonic order probably just means Denmark conquers it instead.
The following mistakes were not liquidating Prussia several times, including 1466 and 1525
@@hkl2007 The territories of Prussia were dense forests and the tribes waged troublesome guerrilla wars, organized attacks destroying his possessions plundered and avoided general battles, only hiding in the forests and organizing ambushes and it was annoying economically for Mazowieckie who was only prince of one province .
@@hkl2007 There was no method for them even when the Prussians were losing it, not much changed. Of course, they paid tribute and even accepted baptism. But as soon as the enemy left their territory, they denied any obligations.
@@hkl2007 The only way to solve this problem was to introduce permanent occupation troops in whole are and for Mazowiecki the Teutonic Knights seemed to be the perfect solution, unfortunately he did not foresee that they would build their own ecclesiastical state :)))
Marry Christmas everyone
👍👍👍God Jul og godt nyt år
9:00 🙂 “Exemption from tax and tallage, right of soc and sac, tol and team, blodwit and fledwit, pillory and tumbril, infangentheof and outfangentheof, mundbryce, waifs and strays, flotsam and jetsam and ligan"
Amazing👍
Happy holidays to all you kings and generals out there!
Its christmas not holiday lol
Yessss hope for more Teutonic Order content
Oh now you just HAVE to make a video on the Lithuanian Grand Ducate, the last pagan state in Europe!
We'll get there
In the 20th century, while the N*zis largely appropriated much of the Teutonic Knights' symbolism and lore, the actual order was heavily suppressed and censored under the Thord Reich. The Order still exists today but operates as a charitable organization.
Thanks and Merry Christmas Kings And Generals Crew!
"Vee vill reklaim Jerusalem!"
"Wait, zis iz not ze Outremer?"
The teutons after the subjugation of Prussia primarily campaigned against Russia and Lithuania.
The teutons mainly mission in northern Europe
A Teutonic Knight video ? Merry Christmas to me!
Königsberg is watching
It's Królewiec
@@nilsmadej9091Old Prussian is a Slavic group different from Polish btw
@@guyman1570 ok?
It's still ours.
@@nilsmadej9091 Its still German since they were the founders and develloppers of it into a city.
@@guyman1570 No Old Prussian are a Baltic group and have nothing to with Slavic People.
Very interesting, thank you.
This is a great history video congratulations
Thank you ❤
Fascinating.
8:24 what’s the name of the sword 🗡 with the 2 spikes on each side of the blade?
Nice series
My family lineage traces back to this exact moment in history. They lived in villages in Prussia and were pushed out, south and westward (mostly into Poland), during and following the Teutonic invasion.
step 1 choose a baltic tribe
step 2 defeat christian heathens
step 3 reform romuva faith
step 4 form wendish empire
Merry Christmas to anyone seeing this comment 🎄
17:04 isnt that a Scottish highland claymore?
The Teutonic Knight are my favorite then I would say the Livonian Order but they combined together ⚔️
Can you do more about the Northen Crusades
Two corrections:
1) the maps show Danzig (Gdansk) as seemingly being part of the HRE from the start. In most of the time frame covered, Gdansk was always under the rule of Polish Dukes. Either as part of Poland directly or as splinter Duchies. It only came under Teutonic rule in 1308.
2) Russian Principality? Really?
Rus. Not Russian
It's crazy how *Prussia,* the undisputed champion of medieval, early modern and even modern Europe, the unificator of all Germany and one of the predominant great powers of the old world ever since its creation, started out as an order of knights who were assigned pagan-controlled territory to subjugate it. Absolutely crazy, the history of Prussia is insanely cool.
Prussia undisputed champion of medieval ???
Teutonic Knights later lost with Poland and Jagiełło in 1410 and become part of the Commonwealth
About 1655, after the Thirty Years War in Europe, which Sweden won, that protestant Sweden invaded Poland; the result of this war was that Prussia gained independent from Poland . This invasion of Sweden kill 40 % population in Poland later 100 year wars non stop and attack many side destroy Poland economy and Prussia start slowly to grow on corpse of Poland and in cooperation with Russia .
This Prince in Poland Mazowiecki brought the Teutonic Knights because in Poland there was a division into provinces and there was no centralized authority, it was only divided into duchies. Later Prussia and teuronic knghts lost and paid homage to the King of Poland in medival times .
Prussia was like a cancer on the body of Poland that was not cured because Prussia controlled Gdansk founded by Mieszko I and wanted to strangle the economy of Poland. The division of Poland into regions by one king to his sons led to situtation idiott Mazowiecki coming up with the idea of bringing in the Teutonic Knights.
first of all, Kingdom of Poland as a whole did not invite the Teutonic Knights. It was Konrad, the duke of Mazovia (Poland at the time was split into duchies, and Mazovia was among the last to be reunited into Kingdom). He did not ask to deal specifically with Lithuanians, but with Prussians, which before the German conquest of the land meant a Baltic tribe, related to Lithuanians and Yotvingians. His intention was getting the assistance of the Knights in the colonization of his region (they weren't the first monk order duke Konrad invited), as he was one of the contenders to reunify Poland.
The traditional Polish view is that it was the Teutonic Knights that turned on Poland. The German Order almost instantly rejected Konrad's seniority, and begun establishing their own state on the conquered Prussian territories, turning to Pope and Holy Roman Emperor to protect their state, conquering Gdansk less than hundred years after they arrived, and turning it into German city of Danzig. In this way Poland was always going to be surrounded by Germans.
As for conversion of Lithuania - again, the traditional Polish view is that the reunified Poland peacefully united with Lithuania by marriage, thus ending the main reason of Teutonic presence in Prussia. For Lithuanian duke Jogaila the peaceful conversion was seen as more beneficial diplomatically. Of course, this meant that the Teutonic Knights would eventually become full-fledged enemies of the new alliance.
It's worth noting that Lithuanians were surrounded by two knightly orders (also by Livonian Brothers of the Sword, reason why Latvia today is culturally protestant).
As usual, I can recommend God's Playground by Norman Davies (probably the most accessible English-language book on Poland and Polish history).
nice video
Thank you
So is it safe to say military culture of later Prussia roots in Teutonic Order?
It's not. Its poverty and the agony of the Thirty-Years-War made Brandenburg/Prussia a country that afterwards sought refuge in an oversized military.
Hungarians did a really smart thing in not letting them take a root.
No wonder Prussia is called a military with a state considering their origins, other then always looking cool as hell with their black colored insignia
Of the three great military orders (the Templars, Hospitallers, and Teutonic Knights), it's difficult to settle on an overall winner in terms of importance. The Temple loses out by having a lifespan some seven centuries shorter than the others. Also, importance is quite difficult to quantify. It is easier, however, to discuss what sort of importance they had across the time period.
Until the mid-thirteenth century, the Templars and Hospitallers were both noticeable political and military powers. The Temple was the oldest military order, founded in the early twelfth century. The Hospitallers were older, dating from the late eleventh century, but they didn't militarise until later. Both orders played a major role in the defence of the crusader states and both had lands and brethren across Europe. As the Order's European estates annually sent money to the Holy Land to support their brethren there, the Templars became adept at transporting goods and cash abroad. This led to them providing banking services for European nobles and monarchs. The Hospitallers did the same, eventually, but it was only after the arrest of the Templars in 1307 that this became a more important role for the Hospital.
As significant landowners in Europe, the military orders, like most religious orders, began to be relied upon by secular lords and kings. In England and Ireland, the Templars were initially the main military order to act as royal servants, undertaking financial and diplomatic work for the kings of England. For example, the master of the Irish Templars was a regular auditor of royal accounts, whilst in 1234, Templars led negotiations between royal forces and the rebel Richard Marshal, earl of Pembroke. However, by the late-thirteenth century, this position had been taken by the Hospitallers, who by the end of the medieval period were regular royal councillors. The Prior of Ireland, the Order's master in Ireland, served in various high offices, including chancellor and justiciar, the two chief administrators of English Ireland. One Hospitaller, Stephen de Fulbourn, was treasurer of Ireland in 1274 and justiciar from 1281-8. The Prior of England, master of the Hospitallers in England, Wales, and Scotland, became the premier baron in the English parliament, making him the most senior lay lord below an earl. He could also be a close personal councillor. Prior Botyll was among the first councillors allowed to see Henry VI after he recovered from his first bout of madness.
Both orders had a pan-European appeal. The Templars and Hospitallers had lands in Germany, France, Italy, Iberia, the British Isles, and the Holy Land, and brethren from the same. In contrast, the Teutonic Knights were rather minor to start with. This order was only founded in the 1190s, and so at first lagged behind the more senior Hospital and Temple. The Teutonic Order, as its name suggests, was also more limited in scope, recruiting donations and membership mostly in 'German' lands. The Order established itself across Palestine, the Low Countries, and what is now Germany and Austria, and held some land in Sweden. However, regions like Iberia, France, and the British Isles did not have Teutonic outposts and seem to have had little contact with the Order (though the Order did trade with these countries and host crusaders from them). It is only when the Teutonic Knights began to conquer territory in the Baltic in the thirteenth century that they seem to become a real force. This made them one of the important orders, as no other military order had established its own independent state.
After the Hospitallers conquered Rhodes in around 1310 they joined the Teutonic Knights as one of the two most militarily and politically important military orders. They were the only orders to maintain their own independent states, the Hospital in Rhodes, the Teutonic Knights in the Baltic. In the Mediterranean the Hospitallers always remained a key feature in crusade plans. Their conquest of Rhodes from 1309-10 was itself a papally-approved crusade, with the aim that the island would form a bridgehead for a second expedition to retake to the Holy Land. Meanwhile, in the Baltic the Teutonic Knights continued to grow in power. A system of summer raids called reisen became what can be almost described as a medieval tourist attraction. Crusaders would visit from all over Europe to feast with the Knights, participate in tournaments, receive prizes for valour, and fight the pagan Lithuanians. Famous participants include the Douglas earls of Scotland, Henry IV of England, and Jean le Maingre, marshal of France. However, after the Order's defeat by Polish-Lithuanian forces at Tannenburg in 1410, participants for the reisen dropped off sharply, with the last foreign visitors, a group of Burgundian knights, arriving in 1413. The Lithuanians had long since converted to Christianity and with their alliance and monarchical union with Poland, this could no longer be ignored or considered insincere. The Teutonic Knights had lost their prime purpose of holy war. Attempts were made to recover this by relocating to Translyvania to fight the Turks, something the Order declined (the offer was conditional on giving up Prussia), or by going to war with the schismatic Russians. This second path was fatal, and eventually brought about the end of the Ordensstaat.
Please do a video on Götz’s battle with the Ottomans
You just don't hear about Prussian uprisings like you used too....different times I guess.
"Die kalte Heimat" is what East Prussians called their home country in a poetic way. Many people have heard and repeated it as a household word, but don't know its origin.
Does that mean that Technically Poland didn’t have a coast line! And was given a coast line at the expense of Germany?
When you talk about Old Prussia you need to commemorate most famous pagan Prussian cheef Herkus Mantas or Heinrich Monte(ger.). Who fight against crusaders. This is Epic Story. There is Streets in Lithuania named in honour Herkus Mantas.
Lithuanian-rus wars next please
Gdańsk/Danzig wasn't a part of the HRE in the 1200s, the map at f.e. 11:45 is wrong (interestingly, the map at 6:42 has it right). It was conquered by the Teutonic Order in 1308. Before that, it was part of the Duchy of Pomeralia, a semi-autonomous state that was created after 1138 when Poland was divided into five principalities. Pomeralia was a part of the Senoriate Province and eventually gained more sovereignty, seceding from it. Gdansk became a part of the HRE only in 1793.
1:24 I believe paganism didn’t go away fully but many practiced the faiths in secret.
The clock of the Great Trial breathes its first
Great trial?
Am curious, would Jomsborg be in similar geographic region as Prussia?
What the Holy Roman Empire is doing in Gdansk Pomerania in the first half of the XIII c.? Before the Teutonic conquest of 1308-1309 this part of Pomerania was ruled alternately by the local Pomeranian dynasties or Polish kings.
please continue history of Prussia, how it becomes unifying power of Germany