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Prussian Confederation
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The Prussian Confederation (German: Preußischer Bund, Polish: Związek Pruski) was an organization formed on 21 February 1440 at Marienwerder (present-day Kwidzyn) by a group of 53 nobles and clergy and 19 cities in Prussia, to oppose the arbitrariness of the Teutonic Knights. It was based on an earlier similar organization, the Lizard Union established in 1397 by the nobles of Chełmno Land.
In 1454, the leader of the Confederation, Johannes von Baysen (Jan Bażyński), formally asked King Casimir IV Jagiellon, to incorporate Prussia into the Kingdom of Poland. This marked the beginning of the Thirteen Years' War between the Order's State and Poland, with the cities co-financing the military costs of the latter.
Background
[edit]According to the 1411 First Peace of Thorn, which followed the Teutonic Knights' defeat in the Battle of Grunwald, the Teutonic Order had to pay high reparations to the Kingdom of Poland. The monastic state imposed high taxes on the cities to raise the funds as well as to re-arm for another war against Poland. In the 1420s, Grand Master Paul von Rusdorf brought stability to the Order and its relations, but fighting with Poland resumed in 1431, when the Knights' invasion into Poland during the Lithuanian Civil War sparked another Polish-Teutonic conflict.
Establishment
[edit]
After about three decades of growing discontent, the burghers, nobility and landowners from the Teutonic state (see Prussian estates) organized themselves to oppose the rule of the order more effectively. The decision to establish the organization was made at a convention held in Elbing (Elbląg) on February 21, 1440.[1] The convention was attended by representatives of the cities of Kulm (Chełmno), Elbing, Thorn (Toruń), Danzig (Gdańsk), Braunsberg (Braniewo), Königsberg (Królewiec), and Kneiphof (Knipawa) as well as nobles from various areas.[1] On 14 March 1440, a group of 53 nobles and clergy and 19 cities, under the leadership of the Hanseatic cities of Danzig, Elbing, Thorn and Königsberg, founded the Prussian Confederation in Marienwerder (Kwidzyn). More towns joined later on (see Participating towns below). In Danzig, the new members signed a document[2] which was kept in the archives of Thorn. The official representatives of the Confederation were the city councils of Kulm (Chełmno) and Thorn (Toruń), and the knights of Chełmno Land.[3]

After Grand Master Paul von Rusdorf died in 1441, his successor, Konrad von Erlichshausen, continued to negotiate a compromise until his own death in 1449. The confederation lobbied for support against the Teutonic Order within the Holy Roman Empire. Ludwig von Erlichshausen, Grand Master from 1450 to 1467, took a more aggressive stance towards the confederation. He filed a lawsuit at the court of Emperor Frederick III. In response, the organization established a secret council to confer during the trial.[4] The secret council held talks with Poland, and organized forces to revolt against the Teutonic Knights.[5] The verdict of the Imperial court of 1453 declared the confederation illegal, however, the verdict was not recognized by the organization nor by Poland.[6]
Thirteen Years' War
[edit]In February 1454, the Prussian Confederation rose against the Teutonic Order's rule. Gabriel von Baysen and Johannes von Baysen, now leading the confederation with the support of Jan de Jani and Mikołaj Szarlejski, both of the Clan of Ostoja, requested the protection of King Casimir IV Jagiellon of Poland, and the incorporation of the region to the Kingdom of Poland, to which the King agreed and signed an act of incorporation in Kraków in March 1454.[7] They also asked for, and received, a guarantee of their continued city rights and privileges for the nobility. Delegates and officials of the Confederation pledged allegiance to the Polish King during the incorporation in Kraków,[8] and also in the following months.

The resulting Thirteen Years' War ended in the defeat of the Teutonic Order and the 1466 Second Peace of Thorn. The Order renounced any claims to the territories of Gdańsk Pomerania and Chełmno Land, which were reintegrated with Poland,[9] and the region of Elbląg and Malbork, and Warmia, which were also recognized as part of Poland.[10] These regions formed the new Polish province of Royal Prussia, with some local rights of autonomy. Stibor of Poniec of the Clan of Ostoja become Lord of tregality[check spelling] of Malbork. Much of the eastern territories, in historic Prussia, remained with the Teutonic Order, although as a fief and protectorate of Poland, also considered an integral part of "one and indivisible" Kingdom of Poland.[11] The Prussian Confederation, with its members now practically divided, ceased to exist as such.
Aftermath
[edit]Both the Polish and Teutonic sides agreed to seek the confirmation of the Second Peace of Thorn from Emperor Frederick III and Pope Paul II, but they also agreed that this confirmation would not be needed for validation of the treaty. Soon after, however, a dispute about the status of the Prince-Bishopric of Warmia started a smaller conflict called the War of the Priests.
Participating towns
[edit]Towns which founded the Prussian Confederation on 14 March 1440:[2][12]
| Name |
|---|
| Thorn (Toruń) including "New Town" |
| Culm (Chełmno) |
| Elbing (Elbląg) including "New Town" |
| Danzig (Gdańsk) |
| Braunsberg (Braniewo) |
| Königsberg (Królewiec, now Kaliningrad), including Kneiphof (Knipawa) and "Old Town" |
| Graudenz (Grudziądz) |
| Strasburg (Brodnica) |
| Neumark (Nowe Miasto Lubawskie) |
| Löbau (Lubawa) |
| Rehden (Radzyń Chełmiński) |
| Wehlau (Welawa, now Znamensk) |
| Allenburg (Alembork, now Druzhba) |
| Zinten (Cynty, now Kornevo) |
| Heiligenbeil (Święta Siekierka, now Mamonovo) |
| Landsberg (Górowo Iławeckie) |
Towns which joined the Prussian Confederation in 1440:
| Name | Date of accession |
|---|---|
| Starogard | 31 March 1440[13] |
| Morąg | 3 April 1440[13] |
| Pasłęk | |
| Miłakowo | |
| Tolkmicko | |
| Młynary | |
| Tczew | |
| Gniew | |
| Old Town of Gdańsk | |
| Nowe | |
| Lębork | |
| Łeba | |
| Hel | |
| Puck | |
| Kwidzyn | 17 April 1440[13] |
| Chojnice | 1 May 1440[13] |
| Malbork | 5 May 1440[13] |
| Bartoszyce | |
| Sępopol | |
| Rastembork (Kętrzyn) | |
| Friedland (Frydląd, now Pravdinsk) | |
| Orneta | |
| Lidzbark Warmiński | |
| Reszel | |
| Dobre Miasto | |
| Wartembork (Barczewo) | |
| Jeziorany | |
| Bisztynek | |
| Olsztyn | |
| Frombork | |
| Melzak (Pieniężno) | |
| Tuchola | 6 May 1440[13] |
| Kreuzburg (Krzyżbork, now Slavskoye) | 30 May 1440[14] |
| Domnau (Domnowo, now Domnovo) | |
| Sztum | 21 June 1440[14] |
| Gerdauen (Gierdawy, now Zheleznodorozhny) | 18 October 1440[14] |
Further towns joined in the following years, including Człuchów, Pasym, Nidzica, Działdowo, Dąbrówno, Olsztynek, Prabuty, Chełmża.[14][15]
Further nobles joined following the outbreak of the Thirteen Years' War, and the towns of Dzierzgoń, Łuczany (now Giżycko) and Nowy Staw also sided with Poland in the war,[16][17][18] and several more also recognized Polish rule and pledged allegiance to Poland, including Czarne, Debrzno, Golub, Kowalewo, Lidzbark, Łasin, Susz, Wąbrzeźno.[19][20][21][22]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Górski 1949, p. XXXI.
- ^ a b Leba im Preußischen Bund, "Lawrenz - Preußischer Bund" (in German). Archived from the original on 2008-02-05. Retrieved 2007-10-07.
- ^ Górski 1949, p. XLI.
- ^ Górski 1949, p. XLII.
- ^ Górski 1949, p. XLIV.
- ^ Górski 1949, p. XLV.
- ^ Górski 1949, p. 54.
- ^ Górski 1949, pp. 71–72.
- ^ Górski 1949, pp. 88–90, 206–207.
- ^ Górski 1949, pp. 91–92, 209–210.
- ^ Górski 1949, pp. 96–97, 214–215.
- ^ Kętrzyński, Wojciech (1882). O ludności polskiej w Prusiech niegdyś krzyżackich (in Polish). Lwów: Zakład Narodowy im. Ossolińskich. p. 608.
- ^ a b c d e f Górski 1949, p. XXXVII.
- ^ a b c d Górski 1949, p. XXXVIII.
- ^ Słownik geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego i innych krajów słowiańskich, Tom I (in Polish). Warszawa. 1880. pp. 569, 862.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Słownik geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego i innych krajów słowiańskich, Tom II (in Polish). Warszawa. 1881. p. 281.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Słownik geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego i innych krajów słowiańskich, Tom V (in Polish). Warszawa. 1884. p. 113.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Słownik geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego i innych krajów słowiańskich, Tom VII (in Polish). Warszawa. 1886. p. 161.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Górski 1949, p. 76.
- ^ Słownik geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego i innych krajów słowiańskich, Tom I (in Polish). Warszawa. 1880. p. 743.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Słownik geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego i innych krajów słowiańskich, Tom II. p. 417.
- ^ Nowak, Zeno (1963). "Rozwój przestrzenny miasta Susza". Komunikaty Mazursko-Warmińskie (in Polish). No. 1. p. 65.
Bibliography
[edit]- Górski, Karol (1949). Związek Pruski i poddanie się Prus Polsce: zbiór tekstów źródłowych (in Polish). Poznań: Instytut Zachodni.
Prussian Confederation
View on GrokipediaHistorical Context
Establishment of Teutonic Rule in Prussia
The Teutonic Order's involvement in Prussia originated from Duke Konrad I of Masovia's invitation in 1226 to counter raids by pagan Prussian tribes into his territories along the Vistula River.[3] In March of that year, Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II issued the Golden Bull of Rimini, authorizing the Order to conquer, Christianize, and govern Prussian lands as an imperial fief, independent of local Polish rulers.[4] This imperial grant provided the legal foundation for expansion, framing the enterprise as a crusade against paganism.[5] The Knights, led by Grand Master Hermann von Salza, arrived in the region in 1230, crossing the Vistula to secure Chełmno Land (Kulmerland), which Konrad formally ceded via the Treaty of Kruszwica. Initial campaigns focused on fortifying key sites, such as Thorn (Toruń), and subduing tribes like the Pomesanians (1233–1237) and Pogesanians (1237).[5] Papal support followed in 1234 with Pope Gregory IX's Bull of Rieti (Pietati proximum), which confirmed the Order's possession of conquered territories under direct papal overlordship, exempting them from episcopal interference and reinforcing crusading indulgences for participants.[6] The Prussian Crusade, spanning 1230 to 1283, involved systematic conquest of Prussian clans through military expeditions bolstered by European crusaders, sieges, and reprisals against resistance.[7] Major uprisings, including the Great Prussian Uprising from 1260 to 1274 led by figures like Herkus Monte, prompted brutal suppressions that decimated native populations via warfare, enslavement, and forced deportations, followed by German settlement and assimilation policies.[8] By 1283, after quelling the final revolts in Sambia and Nadruvia, the Order had consolidated control over Old Prussia, establishing a monastic state with a network of castles, bishoprics, and administrative districts governed from centers like Marienburg.[9] This rule transformed the region into a militarized theocracy, prioritizing defense, conversion, and economic exploitation over native autonomy.[7]Economic Exploitation and Administrative Abuses
The Teutonic Order's financial obligations following the Battle of Grunwald on July 15, 1410, and the ensuing Peace of Thorn on February 1, 1411, necessitated the payment of a massive war indemnity estimated at one million gulden, a sum equivalent to roughly ten times the annual revenue of the King of England. To finance this and ongoing military recoveries, the Order escalated taxation across Prussian territories, imposing higher rates on land (Schoss), customs duties on Baltic trade, and extraordinary levies on urban commerce, which disproportionately affected affluent towns like Danzig, Thorn, and Elbing. These measures, compounded by the Order's monopolistic control over key trade routes and mills, stifled local economic growth and fueled resentment among burghers who had previously benefited from chartered privileges limiting such impositions.[1][10] Administrative practices under the Order exacerbated economic strains through systemic mismanagement and favoritism. Officials, often German knights with limited local knowledge, prioritized knightly estates over urban development, leading to inefficient land use, neglected infrastructure, and arbitrary confiscations of merchant properties under pretexts of debt or disloyalty. Currency debasement, including reductions in silver content in Prussian coinage during the 1420s and 1430s, further eroded purchasing power and trade confidence, as the Order sought short-term liquidity at the expense of long-term stability.[11] Violations of foundational charters like the Kulmer Handfeste, originally promulgated in 1233 to encourage settlement and grant towns self-governance, tax exemptions, and judicial autonomy, represented core administrative abuses. By the 1440s, successive grand masters routinely ignored these rights, intervening in municipal elections, enforcing unpaid corvée on town citizens for Order fortifications, and extracting forced loans without repayment, actions that undermined the contractual basis of Teutonic rule and alienated Prussian nobility and clergy who invoked the Handfeste in petitions. Such practices reflected a broader decay in governance, where corruption among comturs (regional commanders) involved embezzlement of tax revenues and extortion, prioritizing military expenditures over subject welfare.[11]Broader Geopolitical Pressures
The Teutonic Order's geopolitical position deteriorated significantly following its catastrophic defeat at the Battle of Grunwald on July 15, 1410, against the combined forces of Poland and Lithuania under Władysław II Jagiełło of the Jagiellonian dynasty, which shattered the Order's military prestige and exposed its vulnerabilities in the Baltic region.[12] This loss, compounded by subsequent conflicts such as the Hunger War (1414) and the Gollub War (1422), eroded the Order's control over key territories and finances, while the Jagiellonian union—formalized through the 1385 Union of Krewo and strengthened by Lithuania's Christianization—projected expanding Polish-Lithuanian power eastward and northward, viewing the Order's Prussian state as an illegitimate interloper blocking natural expansion and trade dominance.[13] The Order's original crusading mandate, justified by pagan conquests, lost legitimacy as the region's Christianization advanced, leaving it increasingly isolated without ideological or imperial backing to counter Jagiellonian encroachments.[8] Simultaneously, the Holy Roman Empire offered only nominal suzerainty over the Order's Prussian lands, with Emperor Sigismund (r. 1410–1437) preoccupied by Hussite Wars in Bohemia (1419–1434) and internal fragmentation, providing minimal military or diplomatic reinforcement against Polish aggression despite papal bulls urging crusades.[14] Frederick III's accession in 1440 further diluted imperial intervention, as Habsburg priorities shifted to Austrian inheritance disputes, allowing Poland to exploit the Empire's disunity; the Prussian Confederation's 1452 appeal to Frederick for arbitration underscored this abandonment, as the emperor prioritized balance-of-power concerns over defending the faltering Order.[15] Neighboring powers like Brandenburg also exerted claims on western Prussian enclaves, amplifying external fragmentation risks and incentivizing local elites to seek alternatives to Teutonic rule amid stalled imperial protection.[15] These pressures converged in the 1440s, as Baltic trade rivalries—fueled by Hanseatic interests in free navigation—clashed with the Order's monopolistic policies, while Jagiellonian diplomacy courted Prussian dissidents, framing incorporation into Poland as a bulwark against further isolation.[16] The Order's failure to secure reliable alliances left its state geopolitically untenable, priming the ground for the Confederation's defiance as a pragmatic response to encirclement by a resurgent Poland-Lithuania and indifferent imperial oversight.Formation and Structure
Specific Grievances Against the Teutonic Order
The Prussian Confederation compiled a detailed catalog of abuses by the Teutonic Order, most notably in a 1453 submission of 66 specific complaints to Holy Roman Emperor Frederick III, seeking imperial intervention against the Order's rule. These grievances, articulated by Prussian cities such as Danzig, Thorn, and Elbing alongside local nobility, highlighted systemic economic exploitation, administrative interference, judicial arbitrariness, and outright violence, which had intensified following the Order's defeat at the Battle of Grunwald in 1410 and the subsequent curtailment of crusading revenues and papal indulgences by 1413. The complaints reflected a broader erosion of chartered privileges originally granted to urban centers under earlier Teutonic grand masters, privileges that had fostered Hanseatic trade but were increasingly disregarded to fund the Order's military recoveries.[17] Economically, the Order imposed burdensome new taxes and repeatedly devalued the coinage, undermining merchant stability and local commerce; for instance, they seized goods washed ashore from shipwrecks—traditionally salvage rights of coastal towns—and shuttered city-operated mills to favor Order-controlled facilities, thereby extracting rents and stifling urban autonomy. Administratively, the grand masters encroached on municipal self-governance by dismissing elected councilors, as in Thorn where officials were forcibly replaced, and demanding the Pfundzoll—a one-percent excise duty on goods—explicitly for financing wars, which clashed with Hanseatic League exemptions and diverted trade revenues away from Prussian burghers. Judicially, the cessation of annual public court sessions by the grand master enabled opaque, unilateral rulings that confiscated properties and lands without due process, fostering perceptions of capricious tyranny over longstanding customary laws.[17] Particularly egregious were documented acts of brutality, including the 1411 execution of Danzig's burgomasters on fabricated charges, which remained unredressed and symbolized the Order's contempt for civic leadership; similar outrages involved the torture of critics by officials like Rabensteiner, who robbed detainees, and the Komtur of Thorn, Wilhelm vom Steine, who allegedly drowned citizens to enable assaults on their families. These incidents, drawn from Confederation records and eyewitness accounts, underscored a pattern of personal vendettas and coercion that alienated both German settlers and Prussian natives, eroding loyalty to the Order's theocratic regime. While the Teutonic Knights maintained these measures were necessary for state survival amid geopolitical threats from Poland-Lithuania, the Confederation viewed them as violations of feudal oaths and imperial protections, justifying their 1440 formation at Marienwerder as a defensive league.[17]Organization and Key Figures
The Prussian Confederation, formally known as the Bund vor Gewalt und Unrecht (League against Violence and Injustice), was founded on 14 March 1440 in Kwidzyn (German: Marienwerder) as a defensive alliance of Prussian estates opposing the Teutonic Order's administration. It comprised representatives from 19 cities, including leading Hanseatic ports such as Danzig (Gdańsk), Thorn (Toruń), and Elbing (Elbląg), alongside 53 nobles and members of the clergy, primarily from the Vistula Pomerania region under Teutonic control. The organization functioned as a confederation with collective decision-making through assemblies, coordinated from Thorn, where a directorate managed administrative and diplomatic affairs, enabling unified resistance without immediate open rebellion.[18] Key figures included Hans von Baysen (c. 1390–1459), a knight from the Ostróda district and standard-bearer who emerged as a primary leader, instrumental in forging the alliance's ideology against Order abuses and later directing appeals for external support.[19] Other prominent members encompassed city councilors like those from Danzig and Thorn, who provided financial and logistical backing, as well as nobles such as those signing the foundational act, reflecting a broad coalition of urban merchants and landed gentry united by economic grievances.[18] By 1454, under Baysen's guidance, the Confederation escalated to formal incorporation with the Polish Crown, marking the transition from oppositional league to revolutionary force.[20]Act of Incorporation and Initial Appeals
![Prussian estates delivering their lands to King Casimir Jagiellonczyk][float-right] The Prussian Confederation, frustrated by unsuccessful legal challenges against the Teutonic Order through appeals to the Holy Roman Emperor Frederick III in 1452 and other authorities, shifted strategy in late 1453 toward seeking alliance with the Kingdom of Poland. Secret negotiations with King Casimir IV Jagiellonczyk ensued, culminating in a formal delegation dispatched from Toruń to Kraków on 10 February 1454, shortly after the Confederation's diet convened in Toruń to authorize the move. Led by prominent figures including Jan Bażyński (Johannes von Baysen), the envoys petitioned for the incorporation of Prussian territories into Poland, invoking historical Polish claims to the region based on prior conquests by Polish rulers and disputed treaties like the Treaty of Christburg (1385).[21][22] King Casimir IV, motivated by longstanding dynastic interests in reclaiming Prussian lands lost to the Teutonic Knights, initially required a public and explicit request to legitimize intervention. On 4 February 1454, the Confederation's Secret Council had already issued a formal act of disobedience to the Teutonic Order, signaling rebellion. The Kraków delegation reinforced this by submitting detailed appeals emphasizing economic grievances, administrative abuses, and the Order's violations of privileges granted to Prussian towns and nobility. Despite counsel from advisors cautioning against immediate war, Casimir accepted the overture, and on 6 March 1454, he promulgated the Act of Incorporation in Kraków.[23][24] The Act explicitly incorporated the Chełmno Land (Kulmerland), Gdańsk Pomerania, and associated Prussian districts under Confederation control into the Polish Crown as hereditary domains, while promising to preserve existing municipal charters, noble immunities, and ecclesiastical rights. It committed to eliminating the most onerous Teutonic-imposed fiscal burdens, such as arbitrary tolls and monopolies, and to establishing free trade access for Pomeranian goods across Polish territories. The envoys, representing over 90 member entities including major Hanseatic cities like Gdańsk and Toruń, swore fealty to Casimir during the ceremony, formalizing the Confederation's allegiance. This document not only validated the Confederation's structure and aims but also constituted a casus belli, empowering the rebels and obligating Polish military support against the Order.[25][26][27]The Thirteen Years' War
Outbreak and Alliance with Poland-Lithuania
Escalating disputes over governance, taxation, and failed mediations with Emperor Frederick III prompted the Prussian Confederation to initiate open rebellion against the Teutonic Order in early 1454. On February 4, 1454, the Confederation's Secret Council dispatched a formal act of disobedience to Grand Master Konrad von Erlichshausen, effectively renouncing obedience to the Order and igniting the Thirteen Years' War.[28][29] Confederation forces promptly seized several Teutonic castles and arsenals, including initial assaults on strongholds in western Prussia, consolidating control over key urban centers like Danzig (Gdańsk) and Thorn (Toruń).[21] To counter the Order's military superiority, Confederation leaders, including Johannes von Baysen (Jan Bażyński), petitioned King Casimir IV Jagiellon of Poland for incorporation into the Polish Crown, offering territorial submission in return for protection, privileges, and confirmation of local autonomies such as municipal self-governance and noble exemptions.[30] Casimir, ruling a personal union of Poland and Lithuania since 1447, viewed the opportunity as a means to reclaim historic Polish claims on Pomerelia and weaken the Teutonic state, which had long contested Polish influence in the Baltic region.[31] On March 6, 1454, Casimir issued the Act of Incorporation, formally accepting the Prussian lands—encompassing approximately 57 towns and castles under Confederation control—into the Kingdom of Poland, while pledging to uphold existing rights and provide armed assistance against the Order.[29][21] This alliance integrated the rebellion into Polish foreign policy, with Casimir mobilizing levies and resources; however, Lithuanian forces under the Jagiellonian union played a limited direct role initially, as primary commitments focused on Polish mobilization.[28] The pact provoked Teutonic retaliation, including alliances with Denmark by mid-1455, escalating the conflict beyond a mere provincial uprising.[28] Early confederate successes, such as the February 27 siege of Marienburg (Malbork) Castle—the Order's headquarters—underscored the strategic value of Polish backing, though supply strains and Order counteroffensives tested the alliance's resilience from the outset.[32]Major Military Engagements and Strategies
The Thirteen Years' War commenced with the Prussian Confederation's declaration of independence from the Teutonic Order on February 21, 1454, prompting immediate seizures of Order-held castles such as those in Gniew and Tczew by confederate militias from towns like Danzig and Thorn. These early actions, supported by local nobles and burghers, secured western Prussian territories and disrupted Teutonic supply lines, though they relied heavily on ad hoc urban levies rather than professional forces.[33] The Confederation's initial strategy emphasized rapid uprisings to exploit grievances against Order garrisons, coordinating with Polish royal armies for broader offensives while funding mercenaries through town contributions.[34] A pivotal early engagement occurred at the Battle of Konitz (Chojnice) on September 18, 1454, where a coalition force of approximately 20,000 Poles, Prussians, and mercenaries under Lawrence of Różnowiec clashed with a smaller Teutonic contingent of about 5,000 knights and levies led by Dietrich von Bernheim. The Teutonic heavy cavalry's disciplined charges routed the allies, inflicting up to 15,000 casualties and temporarily halting confederate momentum, though it failed to reverse the loss of key castles.[35] This defeat underscored the Confederation's vulnerabilities in open-field warfare, prompting a shift toward defensive fortifications and siege support rather than independent field armies. The war's character evolved into protracted sieges of over 50 Teutonic castles, with confederate forces from Hanseatic ports providing artillery, sappers, and naval blockade assistance to Polish operations. A turning point came at the Battle of Świecino on September 17, 1462, where 2,000 Polish mercenaries and levies under Piotr Dunin ambushed and annihilated a 3,300-strong Teutonic field army commanded by Fritz von Rauscheneck (Racibórz), killing the grand master and shattering Order cohesion in the field. Complementing land efforts, the Confederation's naval strategy leveraged Danzig's shipyards to field a fleet that decisively defeated the Teutonic squadron at the Battle of Vistula Lagoon (Frisches Haff) on September 15, 1463, sinking or capturing nearly all enemy vessels and securing Baltic dominance.[36] Overall, Confederation strategies prioritized economic attrition—via trade embargoes and mercenary hiring funded by urban taxes—over decisive battles, integrating town militias with Polish royal campaigns to isolate and starve Order strongholds like Marienburg. This hybrid approach, emphasizing naval superiority and siege warfare, compensated for limited standing armies but strained confederate unity due to varying town commitments.[34] By 1466, cumulative losses forced Teutonic capitulation, validating the alliance's emphasis on sustained pressure rather than knightly confrontations.[33]Contributions and Internal Dynamics of Member Towns
The member towns of the Prussian Confederation provided essential financial, military, and naval contributions to the Polish-Lithuanian war effort against the Teutonic Order during the Thirteen Years' War (1454–1466. Beginning in early 1454, burghers in major Hanseatic cities such as Danzig (Gdańsk), Thorn (Toruń), and Elbing (Elbląg) seized local Teutonic castles, securing western Prussia for the Confederation and enabling the alliance with Poland formalized on March 6, 1454.[17] In Elbing, townspeople captured the castle after a five-day siege and demolished it to prevent its reuse by the Order.[37] These actions neutralized key Order fortifications and provided initial rebel forces, supplemented later by mercenaries funded by the cities.[1] Financially, the towns shouldered the primary burden of the war, levying heavy taxes to co-finance Polish operations and mercenaries, with Danzig leading efforts including funding the 1457 bid to purchase Marienburg Castle from defecting Teutonic commander Heinrich Reuß von Plauen.[17] Navally, Danzig constructed a fleet under Polish orders that defeated the Teutonic navy at the Battle of Bornholm in August 1457, disrupting Order supply lines.[1] Danzig and Elbing further supported Polish naval victories, such as the 1463 Battle of Zatoka Świeża, which severed Teutonic maritime access.[38] Internally, the Confederation exhibited strong cohesion driven by shared economic grievances against Teutonic rule, with leadership concentrated among patrician merchants in Danzig and other leading cities prioritizing Hanseatic trade interests.[17] However, prolonged war taxation strained social structures, sparking lower-class revolts in cities like Danzig and contributing to occasional dissent that allowed Teutonic recapture of some towns, such as Königsberg in April 1455.[1] Despite these pressures, inter-town rivalries remained subdued, as unity against the Order outweighed local competitions until the war's resolution.[17]Resolution and Immediate Consequences
Negotiations and the Second Peace of Thorn (1466)
![Second Peace of Toruń][float-right] The negotiations culminating in the Second Peace of Thorn were held in the Hanseatic city of Toruń, which had been under Polish control since the early stages of the Thirteen Years' War, providing a neutral yet advantageous venue for the Polish-led alliance. Following intermittent diplomatic efforts, including failed papal mediations by Aeneas Silvius Piccolomini (later Pope Pius II), substantive talks resumed in 1465 on the Vistula Spit and intensified in Toruń under the auspices of papal legate Rudolf von Rudesheim.[39][40] These discussions involved delegates from the Kingdom of Poland, represented by King Casimir IV Jagiellon and his councilors such as Jan Długosz and Jakub of Szadek; the Teutonic Order, led by Grand Master Henry Reuss von Plauen; and the Prussian Confederation, whose representatives advocated strongly for incorporation into the Polish Crown to secure privileges against the Order's prior oppressions.[39] The Confederation's position, rooted in their 1454 Act of Incorporation, emphasized the restoration of Polish suzerainty over disputed lands and the dismantling of Teutonic monopolies, influencing the Polish stance by highlighting local grievances and military contributions during the war.[40] Major sticking points included the extent of territorial concessions, the Teutonic Order's vassalage to Poland, and financial indemnities, with the Order resisting full subjugation while the Polish side and Confederation demanded irreversible losses to prevent future aggression. The Confederation's active role in capturing key strongholds like Danzig and Thorn bolstered their leverage, ensuring that their member towns—such as Danzig, Thorn, and Elbing—retained significant autonomy under Polish administration rather than reverting to Order control.[39] Negotiations dragged through 1466, with the Teutonic delegates conceding after the prolonged siege of Marienburg and papal pressure for resolution to avert further Ottoman threats in the region.[40] The treaty was formally signed on October 19, 1466, marking a decisive Polish victory facilitated by the Confederation's alliance. Under its terms, the Teutonic Order ceded West Prussia (including Pomorze Gdańskie and the Chełmno Land) to form [Royal Prussia](/page/Royal Prussia) directly under the Polish king, while retaining East Prussia as a fief obligating the Grand Master to render homage and tribute, including an indemnity of one million Hungarian ducats payable over decades.[39] The Bishopric of Warmia gained semi-independence under Polish protection, and Confederation territories were integrated into Royal Prussia with confirmed privileges, such as self-governance for the towns and exemption from certain taxes, fulfilling their demands for liberation from Teutonic rule while binding them to Polish loyalty.[39] Both parties sought ratification from Pope Paul II and Emperor Frederick III, though the treaty's core provisions stood independently, reshaping Baltic power dynamics by securing Polish access to the sea and curtailing the Order's autonomy.[41]Territorial Divisions and Loss of Teutonic Autonomy
The Second Peace of Thorn, concluded on October 19, 1466, formalized the territorial partition of the former Teutonic Ordensstaat following Poland's victory in the Thirteen Years' War. The treaty compelled the Teutonic Order to cede its western provinces to the Polish Crown, encompassing Pomerelia (including the key port city of Danzig, now Gdańsk), the Chełmno Land (Kulmerland) with the cities of Chełmno and Toruń, and the Bishopric of Warmia (Ermland). These territories, collectively organized as Royal Prussia, were placed under direct royal sovereignty, stripping the Order of administrative control over approximately half of its prior holdings west of the Vistula River.[7][16] In the east, the Order retained possession of territories east of the Vistula, including Königsberg (now Kaliningrad) and surrounding areas that would later form the core of Ducal Prussia. However, this remnant was demoted to the status of a Polish fief, with the Grand Master obligated to swear personal homage to the King of Poland upon election, as stipulated in Article 3 of the treaty. This vassalage arrangement dismantled the Order's sovereign independence, subordinating its governance, military obligations, and foreign policy to Polish overlordship, while prohibiting alliances without royal consent.[7] Further eroding Teutonic autonomy, the peace mandated the demolition of fortifications like the castle at Marienburg and imposed a substantial indemnity of one million gulden, payable in installments, which strained the Order's finances and compelled reliance on Polish goodwill for enforcement delays. The Bishopric of Warmia, though geographically eastern, was anomalously granted semi-autonomy under Polish protection, with its prince-bishop swearing fealty directly to the Polish king rather than the Grand Master. These provisions collectively transitioned the Order from a theocratic principality to a diminished, dependent entity, paving the way for its eventual secularization.[7]Punishments and Reintegrations for Confederates
The Prussian Confederation effectively dissolved following the Second Peace of Thorn on October 19, 1466, as its member cities and nobles transitioned into direct incorporation under the Polish Crown, forming the core of the semi-autonomous Royal Prussia province. This reintegration preserved the confederates' legal and administrative autonomy, with towns such as Danzig (Gdańsk), Thorn (Toruń), and Elbing (Elbląg) retaining their municipal charters, Hanseatic trade rights, and local judicial systems largely unchanged from Teutonic-era customs. King Casimir IV Jagiellonczyk reaffirmed privileges originally promised in the 1454 Act of Incorporation, including exemptions from royal taxes on internal trade, freedom to maintain German as the administrative language in urban councils, and representation through the Prussian Estates in regional diets that advised the starosta generalis (chief royal administrator).[42] No collective punishments were imposed on confederate participants, reflecting their alignment with the victorious Polish-Lithuanian forces; the rebellion's leaders, who had driven the anti-Teutonic revolt since 1440, faced no reprisals and instead received appointments within the new Polish framework. Jan Bażyński, the confederation's longtime director and a key diplomat in securing Polish support, was elevated to Starost General of Prussia in 1466, overseeing military and fiscal affairs in Royal Prussia until his death in 1469, thereby exemplifying the rewards for loyalty during the war. Other prominent figures, such as delegates from Thorn and Danzig, integrated into provincial governance without forfeiture of estates or civic roles, as the Polish crown prioritized stability and economic continuity in the reclaimed territories over retribution.[15] Individual cases of defection or opportunism during the Thirteen Years' War prompted limited accountability, primarily through civil fines or temporary exclusion from council seats rather than criminal sanctions; for instance, minor nobles who briefly reconciled with the Teutonic Order mid-conflict were required to swear renewed fealty to Casimir IV and contribute to war reparations proportionally to their estates, but these measures affected fewer than a dozen documented instances and served more as political realignments than punitive justice. The absence of broader inquisitions or executions underscored the pragmatic Polish approach, which viewed the confederates as essential allies whose grievances against Teutonic fiscal exactions and monopolies had justified the uprising, ensuring reintegration emphasized incentives like confirmed land tenures over coercive measures.[42]Long-Term Legacy and Interpretations
Integration into Royal Prussia and Polish Administration
Following the Second Peace of Thorn, ratified on 19 October 1466, the Prussian Confederation's territories west of the Vistula—encompassing Pomerelia, Chełmno Land, and key Hanseatic cities like Gdańsk, Toruń, and Elbląg—were annexed to the Kingdom of Poland as the province of Royal Prussia. The treaty explicitly designated these lands as the exclusive property of the Polish king and Crown, severing Teutonic control and fulfilling the Confederation's 1454 appeal for incorporation.[41] With its anti-Teutonic objectives realized, the Confederation dissolved, and its member entities integrated into Polish structures while retaining privileges from the 1454 Act, confirmed by Casimir IV Jagiellonczyk to secure allegiance amid post-war reconstruction. These included rights to local assemblies, Hanseatic economic practices, and representation via bodies like the Lizard League, fostering autonomy rooted in prior resistance to knightly arbitrariness rather than outright separatism. Royal Prussia's administration featured voivodeships of Chełmno, Malbork, and Pomerania, with royal appointees as voivodes and starosts managing districts, overlaid on persistent town councils and noble estates dominated by German-speaking burghers. The Prussian Landesrat defended corporate rights against Crown demands for taxes, military levies, and parity in land ownership and offices, embodying reciprocal centralism and particularism that delayed full unification until 1569.[43] This setup preserved German laws and urban self-rule, with the king's authority as suzerain checked by privilege confirmations in 1470, ensuring stability through negotiated loyalty rather than coercive assimilation.Path to Secularization and Ducal Prussia
The weakening of the Teutonic Order following its defeat in the Thirteen Years' War, precipitated by the Prussian Confederation's uprising, fundamentally altered its governance structure in the remaining Prussian territories. Under the Second Peace of Thorn signed on October 19, 1466, the Order ceded western Prussian lands to form Royal Prussia directly under Polish control but retained the eastern regions, now designated as a fief of the Polish Crown; the Grand Master was required to render personal homage to the King of Poland, an obligation first fulfilled by Grand Master Henry Reuss von Plauen in November 1467 at Petrikau (now Piotrków Trybunalski).[8][14] This vassalage imposed annual tribute payments of 4,000 gulden from Königsberg and eroded the Order's autonomy, exacerbating financial strains from war indemnities—initially set at 1.25 million gulden, later reduced—and fostering resentment among Prussian nobles and clergy who chafed under monastic rule amid growing influence from the Protestant Reformation.[8] By the early 16th century, the Order's Prussian branch faced mounting internal challenges, including knightly defections, peasant revolts, and ideological shifts driven by Martin Luther's critiques of monastic institutions. Albrecht von Hohenzollern, a Hohenzollern prince and nephew of Elector Joachim I of Brandenburg, was elected the 37th Grand Master in 1511 amid these tensions; influenced by Lutheran theology, he initiated secret negotiations with King Sigismund I of Poland and Prussian estates. In 1523, Albrecht consulted Luther on the feasibility of secularizing the Order's Prussian holdings, receiving endorsement to dissolve the monastic vows and establish a hereditary duchy, which aligned with the estates' demands for relief from ecclesiastical oversight.[44][45] The secularization culminated on February 10, 1525, when Albrecht formally disbanded the Teutonic Order's Prussian state at Königsberg, confiscated church lands for secular administration, and converted to Lutheranism; on April 10, 1525, Sigismund I invested him as Duke Albrecht of Prussia, preserving the territory's status as a Polish fief but granting hereditary rights to the Hohenzollern line under ducal sovereignty. This transformation ended the Order's theocratic rule in Prussia—traces of which persisted only in Livonia until 1561—and integrated Lutheran reforms, including the abolition of knightly obligations and promotion of noble privileges, setting the stage for Ducal Prussia's evolution into a militarized Protestant state that later united with Brandenburg in 1618.[44][45] The Confederation's earlier rebellion thus indirectly catalyzed this shift by shattering the Order's regional dominance, enabling Reformation-era opportunism to replace it with secular Hohenzollern authority.[8]Historiographical Perspectives and Debates
Historiographical interpretations of the Prussian Confederation emphasize its roots in administrative and fiscal grievances against the Teutonic Order rather than primordial ethnic loyalties, though national narratives have shaped earlier accounts.[33] Polish scholars, particularly in the 20th century, have frequently framed the Confederation as a proto-national resistance to Teutonic exploitation, portraying its 1454 appeal for incorporation into the Polish Crown as a reclamation of sovereignty over lands contested since the Order's 13th-century conquests. This view aligns with broader narratives of Polish-Lithuanian triumphs over German expansionism, as seen in analyses of the Order's propaganda failures and the Confederation's defamatory campaigns against knightly rule.[19] However, such interpretations risk anachronism, as the Confederation comprised primarily German-speaking Hanseatic burghers, nobles, and clergy whose primary motives were economic relief from post-Grunwald (1410) indemnities, exorbitant taxes funding futile wars, and the Order's corrupt governance, evidenced by prior peasant uprisings in 1431–1435.[16] Pre-1945 German historiography often depicted the Confederation as a treacherous internal revolt that sabotaged the Order's civilizing mission in the East, attributing it to ingratitude among settled colonists rather than systemic failures. This perspective reflected imperial concerns over border security and the Order's role in Ostsiedlung, downplaying the rebels' legitimate complaints about foreign-dominated knightly councils favoring Livonian interests over Prussian ones. Post-World War II, with East Prussia's expulsion of German populations and incorporation into Poland, German scholarship de-emphasized the topic, sometimes recasting it as an organic outcome of the Order's overextension and financial insolvency, which left castles undefended and mercenaries unpaid by 1454.[33] Modern consensus, informed by socio-economic analysis, rejects ethnic determinism in favor of causal factors like the Order's debt burden—exceeding 500,000 Hungarian ducats from the 1411 Peace of Thorn—and disruptions to Baltic trade, prompting pragmatic realignment with Poland for privileges akin to those in Royal Prussia. Historians debate the Confederation's 'national' character: while some Polish works suggest latent anti-German sentiment among partially Polonized elites, empirical evidence points to class-driven rebellion against theocratic feudalism, with the 1440 league's secrecy underscoring calculated opportunism over ideological fervor. This event is now viewed as emblematic of late medieval shifts from crusading orders to vernacular principalities, foreshadowing the 1525 secularization of remaining Teutonic lands. Controversial claims of inherent Polish patriotism among confederates lack primary support, as charters cite grievances over "oppressions and injuries" without ethnic rhetoric.[16] [19]References
- https://pl.wikisource.org/wiki/Akt_inkorporacji_Prus