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Revision as of 19:54, 1 December 2008 editSkäpperöd (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers18,457 editsm East German part of Pomerania: ref format← Previous edit Revision as of 21:12, 1 December 2008 edit undoSkäpperöd (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers18,457 edits East German part of Pomerania: add, refNext edit →
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The Pomeranian counties had already undergone changes in 1950: Randow county, recreated in 1945, was dissolved, the southern parts with ] joined ].<ref name="Buchholz, p.519"/> Thus, ] lost the last link with the ] river, the historical eastern border. Ueckermünde county was renamed Pasewalk county and 22 Brandenburgian communities were merged in.<ref name="Buchholz, p.519"/> The Pomeranian town ] was fused with the ]ian town ] to ], thus Western Pomerania's historical western boirder (] river, flowing between Ribnitz and Damgarten) vanished from the administartive maps.<ref name="Buchholz, p.519"/> The Pomeranian counties had already undergone changes in 1950: Randow county, recreated in 1945, was dissolved, the southern parts with ] joined ].<ref name="Buchholz, p.519"/> Thus, ] lost the last link with the ] river, the historical eastern border. Ueckermünde county was renamed Pasewalk county and 22 Brandenburgian communities were merged in.<ref name="Buchholz, p.519"/> The Pomeranian town ] was fused with the ]ian town ] to ], thus Western Pomerania's historical western boirder (] river, flowing between Ribnitz and Damgarten) vanished from the administartive maps.<ref name="Buchholz, p.519"/>


In 1952, another county reform made other parts of the historical Mecklenburgian and Pomeranian frontier vanish from the maps. The nam "Pomerania" was now only used by the ], which had to change this name in "Evangelical Church Greifswald" in 1968.<ref name="Buchholz, p.521">Werner Buchholz, Pommern, Siedler, 1999, p.521, ISBN 3886802728</ref>
Throughout the 1950s, small farms including those created in the previous land reform were forced to group to Socialist-style ] units. In ], private property of housing was turned over to the state. From this stock, various state organizations ran the GDR's seaside resort.


Throughout the 1950s, small farms including those created in the previous land reform were forced to group to Socialist-style ] units. In 1986, 90 LPGs ran close to 90% of the farmland, in addition there were the state estates (VEG, "Volkseigenes Gut"). An LPG had an average size of 4,700, a VEG 5,000 hectar. Agriculture was characterized by huge fiels up to a hundred hectar, the use of large machines and an industrial way to work. Fertilizer was in many cases applied by planes.<ref name="Buchholz, p.521"/>
The Western Pomeranian areas retained their agricultural character, yet the farms were reorgainzed by a ], splitting the large estates into small units distributed to land-less peasants and expellees from the ] who by then made up for about 40% of the population. The peasants were then forcibly grouped into Communist-style ] units. The East German policy of industrialization led to the establishement of a ] in ] near ] and the development of the ] ] ] as well as the ] ferry terminal directly linking Western Pomerania to the ] via ].

In ], private property of housing was turned over to the state. From this stock, various state organizations ran the GDR's seaside resort, serving 75%<ref name="Buchholz, pp.521,522"/> of the East German Baltic coast tourists.

The East German policy of industrialization led to the establishement of a ] in ] near ], the ] ] ], and the ] ferry terminal directly linking Western Pomerania to the ] via ]. The ] was the main industry of Western Pomerania with 8,000 employees. One third of the Soviet fish trawlers were build in Stralsund. Another shipyard set up during the Communist era was the ] in ], where East German navy ships were build. In ], industry constructing electronical supplies for the shipyards was settled, employing 4,000 people.<ref name="Buchholz, pp.521,522">Werner Buchholz, Pommern, Siedler, 1999, pp.521,522, ISBN 3886802728</ref>


{{seealso|History of East Germany}} {{seealso|History of East Germany}}

Revision as of 21:12, 1 December 2008

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History of Pomerania
DUCATUS POMERANIAE Tabula Generalis, in qua sunt DUCATUS POMERANIAE, STETTINENSIS CASSUBIAE, VANDALIAE et BARDENSIS, PRINCIPATUS RUGIAE ac INSULAE, COMITATUS GUSKOVIENSIS
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History of Pomerania (1950-present) covers the History of Pomerania during the Communist and Democratic era.

With the consolidation of Communism in East Germany and Poland, Pomerania became part of the Eastern Bloc. In the 1980s, the Solidarnosc movement in Gdansk (Danzig) and the Wende movement in East Germany forced the Communists out of power and led to the establishment of democracy in both the Polish and German part of Pomerania.

Communist era

Polish part of Pomerania

The situation changed for the worse in 1948, when all countries of the Eastern Bloc had to adopt Soviet economic principles. Private shops were banned and most farmers were forced to join agricultural cooperatives, managed by local communists.

In 1953 Poland was forced to accept the end of war reparations, which previously were solely placed on East Germany, while West Germany enjoyed the benefits of the Marshall Plan. In 1956 Poland was on the verge of a Soviet invasion, but the crisis was solved and the Polish government's communism developed a more human face with Władysław Gomułka as the head of politburo. Poland developed the ports of Pomerania and restored the destroyed shipyards of Gdańsk, Gdynia and Szczecin.

These were organised as two harbour complexes: one of Szczecin port with Swinoujscie avanport and the other was Gdańsk-Gdynia set of ports. Gdańsk and Gdynia, along with the spa of Sopot located between them, became one metropolitan area called Tricity and populated by more than 1,000,000 inhabitants.

In 1970, after putting an end to the uncertain border issue with West Germany under Willy Brandt, the massive unrest in the coastal cities marked the end of Władysław Gomułka's rule. The new leader, Edward Gierek, wanted to modernize the country by the wide use of western credits. Although the policy failed, Poland became one of the main world players in the shipyard industry. Polish open sea fishing scientists discovered new species of fish for the fishing industry. Unfortunately, countries with direct access to the open seas declared 200 mile (370 km) economic zones that finally put the end to the Polish fishing industry. Shipyards also came under growing pressure from the subsidized Japanese and Korean enterprises.

During 1970, Poland built also the Northern Harbour in rebuilt Gdańsk, which allowed the country independent access to oil from OPEC countries. The new oil refinery had been built in Gdańsk, and an oil pipeline connected both with main Polish pipeline in Płock.

East German part of Pomerania

Further information: Mecklenburg-Vorpommern and Western Pomerania

The part of Pomerania west of the Oder Neisse line was attached to Mecklenburg by a SMAD order of 1946 to form the Land of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. This Land was renamed Mecklenburg in 1947, became a constituent state of the German Democratic Republic (East Germany) in 1949 and was dissolved by the GDR government in 1952, when the East Berlin government abandoned "states" in favour of districts (German: Bezirke). The area of Western Pomerania was split into the eastern Kreis districts of the newly established Bezirk administrative GDR subdivisions Bezirk Rostock and Bezirk Neubrandenburg, Gartz (Oder) joined Bezirk Frankfurt (Oder). The administrative changes also made the historical border between Mecklenburg and Pomerania vanish from the maps.

The Pomeranian counties had already undergone changes in 1950: Randow county, recreated in 1945, was dissolved, the southern parts with Gartz (Oder) joined Brandenburg. Thus, Western Pomerania lost the last link with the Oder river, the historical eastern border. Ueckermünde county was renamed Pasewalk county and 22 Brandenburgian communities were merged in. The Pomeranian town Damgarten was fused with the Mecklenburgian town Ribnitz to Ribnitz-Damgarten, thus Western Pomerania's historical western boirder (Recknitz river, flowing between Ribnitz and Damgarten) vanished from the administartive maps.

In 1952, another county reform made other parts of the historical Mecklenburgian and Pomeranian frontier vanish from the maps. The nam "Pomerania" was now only used by the Pomeranian Evangelical Church, which had to change this name in "Evangelical Church Greifswald" in 1968.

Throughout the 1950s, small farms including those created in the previous land reform were forced to group to Socialist-style LPG units. In 1986, 90 LPGs ran close to 90% of the farmland, in addition there were the state estates (VEG, "Volkseigenes Gut"). An LPG had an average size of 4,700, a VEG 5,000 hectar. Agriculture was characterized by huge fiels up to a hundred hectar, the use of large machines and an industrial way to work. Fertilizer was in many cases applied by planes.

In Aktion Rose, private property of housing was turned over to the state. From this stock, various state organizations ran the GDR's seaside resort, serving 75% of the East German Baltic coast tourists.

The East German policy of industrialization led to the establishement of a nuclear power plant in Lubmin near Greifswald, the Stralsund Volkswerft shipyard, and the Sassnitz ferry terminal directly linking Western Pomerania to the Soviet Union via Klaipeda. The Volkswerft was the main industry of Western Pomerania with 8,000 employees. One third of the Soviet fish trawlers were build in Stralsund. Another shipyard set up during the Communist era was the Peenewerft in Wolgast, where East German navy ships were build. In Greifswald, industry constructing electronical supplies for the shipyards was settled, employing 4,000 people.

See also: History of East Germany

Democratic era

Polish part of Pomerania

Pomeranian Voivodship, established in 1999, comprising Eastern Pomerania and the right bank of the Vistula river
West Pomeranian Voivodship, established in 1999, compromising most of pre-1945 German Province of Pomerania.
Main articles: Pomeranian voivodship and West Pomeranian voivodship

In 1980, Polish Pomeranian coastal cities, notably Gdańsk, became the place of birth for the anticommunist movement, Solidarity. Gdańsk become the capital for the Solidarity trade union. In 1989 it was found that the border treaty with the Communist German Democratic Republic had one mistake, concerning the naval border. Subsequently, a new treaty was signed.

The West Pomeranian Voivodeship's rural countryside from 1945 until 1989 remained underdeveloped and often neglected, as the pre-1945 German structures of Prussian-style nobility leading and steering agricultural cultivation had been destroyed by expulsion and communism.

German part of Pomerania

Main articles: Mecklenburg-Vorpommern and Western Pomerania

In 1990, after the GDR regime was overthrown by the peaceful Wende revolution, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern was reconstituted and joined the Federal Republic of Germany. Since then, the region suffers from a population drain as mostly young people migrate to the West due to high unemployment rates.

See also: Die Wende and Reunification of Germany

Pomerania euroregion

Main article: Pomerania euroregion

The Pomerania euroregion was set up in 1995 as one of the euroregions, thought to connect regions divided between states of the European Union. The name is taken from the region of Pomerania, yet the euroregion is of a different shape than the historical region. It comprises German Western Pomerania and Uckermark, Polish Zachodniepomorskie, and Scania in Sweden.

See also

History of Pomerania
Administrative
Western Pomerania
Farther Pomerania
Lauenburg-Bütow
classified as
Farther Pomerania
or Pomerelia
Pomerelia
(Kashubia,
Kociewie,
Tuchola Forest,
Chełmno Land)
Ecclesiastical
Roman Catholic
Historical
Extant
Protestant
Historical
Extant
Demography and anthropology
Archaeological cultures
Peoples
Major demographic events
Languages and dialects
West Germanic
West Slavic
Treaties
1200–1500
1500–1700
1700–present

References

  1. ^ Werner Buchholz, Pommern, Siedler, 1999, p.519, ISBN 3886802728
  2. ^ Werner Buchholz, Pommern, Siedler, 1999, p.521, ISBN 3886802728
  3. ^ Werner Buchholz, Pommern, Siedler, 1999, pp.521,522, ISBN 3886802728
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