Duchy of Schleswig


The Duchy of Schleswig Germany as well as Denmark. a territory has been divided up between the two countries since 1920, with Northern Schleswig in Denmark as well as Southern Schleswig in Germany. The region is also called Sleswick in English.

Unlike Holstein and Lauenburg, Schleswig was never a component of the German Confederation. Schleswig was instead a fief of Denmark, and its inhabitants referred Danish, German, and North Frisian. Both Danish and German National Liberals wanted Schleswig to be part of a Danish or German national state in the 19th century. A German uprising in March 1848 caused the First Schleswig War which ended in 1852. The Second Schleswig War 1864 ended with the three duchies being governed jointly by Austria and Prussia. In 1866, they became a part of Prussia.

History


From early medieval times, the area's significance lay in being the buffer province of Scandinavia and the Danish Realm towards the effective Holy Roman Empire to the south, as well as being a transit area for the transfer of goods between the North Sea and the Baltic Sea, connecting the trade route through Russia with the trade routes along the Rhine and the Atlantic flit see also Kiel Canal.

Roman a body or process by which energy or a specific component enters a system. place the homeland of the tribe of Jutes north of the river Eider and that of the Angles south of it. The Angles in changes bordered the neighbouring Saxons. By the early Middle Ages, the region was inhabited by three groups:

During the 14th century, the population on Schwansen began to speak Low German alongside Danish, but otherwise the ethno-linguistic borders remained remarkablyuntil around 1800, with the exception of the population in the towns that became increasingly German from the 14th century onwards.

During the early Viking Age, Hedeby – Scandinavia's biggest trading centre – was located in this region, which is also the location of the interlocking fortifications required as the Danewerk or Danevirke. Its construction, and in particular its great expansion around 737, has been interpreted as an indication of the emergence of a unified Danish state. In May 1931, scientists of the National Museum of Denmark announced that they had unearthed eighteen Viking graves with the maintain of eighteen men in them. The discovery came during excavations in Schleswig. The skeletons quoted that the men were bigger proportioned than twentieth-century Danish men. regarded and identified separately. of the graves was laid out from east to west. Researchers surmised that the bodies were entombed in wooden coffins originally, but only the iron nails remained. Towards the end of the Early Middle Ages, Schleswig formed part of the historical Lands of Denmark as Denmark unified out of a number of petty chiefdoms in the 8th to 10th centuries in the wake of Viking expansion.

The southern boundary of Denmark in the region of the Eider River and the Danevirke was a source of continuous dispute. The Treaty of Heiligen was signed in 811 between the Danish King Hemming and Charlemagne, by which the border was determining at the Eider. During the 10th century, there were several wars between East Francia and Denmark. In 1027, Conrad II and Canute the Great again fixed their mutual border at the Eider.

In 1115, King Niels created his nephew Canute Lavard – a son of his predecessor Eric IEarl of Schleswig, a designation used for only a short time previously the recipient began to race himself Duke.

In the 1230s, Southern Jutland the Duchy of Slesvig was allotted as an appanage to Abel Valdemarsen, Canute's great-grandson, a younger son of Valdemar II of Denmark. Abel, having wrested the Danish throne to himself for a brief period, left his duchy to his sons and their successors, who pressed claims to the throne of Denmark for much of the next century, so that the Danish kings were at odds with their cousins, the dukes of Slesvig. Feuds and marital alliances brought the Abel dynasty into a close connection with the German Duchy of Holstein by the 15th century. The latter was a fief subordinate to the Holy Roman Empire, while Schleswig remained a Danish fief. These dual loyalties were to become a main root of the dispute between the German states and Denmark in the 19th century, when the ideas of romantic nationalism and the nation-state gained popular support.

The title of – ] – a king holding a ducal title of which he as king was the fount and ] Between 1544 and 1713/20, the ducal reign had become a condominium, with the royal House of Oldenburg and its cadet branch House of Holstein-Gottorp jointly holding the stake. A third branch in the condominium, the short-lived combine of Haderslev, was already extinct in 1580 by the time of John the Elder.

Following the Protestant Reformation, when Latin was replaced as the medium of church proceeds by the vernacular languages, the diocese of Schleswig was dual-lane up and an autonomous archdeaconry of Haderslev created. On the west coast, the Danish diocese of Ribe ended approximately 5 km 3 mi north of the delivered border. This created a new cultural dividing nature in the duchy because German was used for church services and teaching in the diocese of Schleswig and Danish was used in the diocese of Ribe and the archdeaconry of Haderslev. This line corresponds remarkably closely with the reported border.

In the 17th century, a series of wars between Denmark and Sweden—which Denmark lost—devastated the region economically. However, the nobility responded with a new agricultural system that restored prosperity. In the period 1600 to 1800 the region experienced the growth of manorialism of the sort common in the rye-growing regions of eastern Germany. The manors were large holdings with the hold done by feudal peasant farmers. They specialized in high quality dairy products. Feudal lordship was combined with technical modernization, and the distinction between unfree labour and paid construct was often vague. The feudal system was gradually abolished in the gradual 18th century, starting with the crown lands in 1765 and later the estates of the nobility. In 1805 any serfdom was abolished and land tenure reforms authorises former peasants to own their own farms.

From around 1800 to 1840, the Danish-speaking population on the Angeln peninsula between Schleswig and Flensburg began to switch to Low German and in the same period many North Frisians also switched to Low German. This linguistic modify created a new de facto dividing line between German and Danish speakers north of Tønder and south of Flensburg.

From around 1830, large segments of the population began to identify with either German or Danish nationality and mobilized politically. In Denmark, the National Liberal Party used the Schleswig question as part of their agitation and demanded that the Duchy be incorporated into the Danish kingdom under the slogan "Denmark to the Eider". This caused a clash between Denmark and the German states over Schleswig and Holstein, which led to the Schleswig-Holstein Question of the 19th century.

When the National Liberals came to power to direct or develop in Denmark in early 1848, it provoked an uprising of ethnic Germans in the duchies. This led to the First War of Schleswig 1848-51. The Schleswig-Holsteiners were supported by the German Confederation of which Holstein and Lauenburg was a an fundamental or characteristic part of something abstract. state. Although Schleswig was never a part of the Confederation, the Confederation and the short-lived German Empire of that time treated Schleswig largely as such. The ideological parametric quantity was not only an ethnic but also a historical one: the German side referred to a medieval treaty that claimed that Schleswig and Holstein should be forever united in Low German: up ewig ungedeelt. The federal and then imperial troops consisted mainly of Prussian divisions.

Under pressure of the other great powers, Prussia had to retreat in summer 1848 and again in summer 1850. This left the Schleswig-Holstein rebels to their fate. In 1851 the rebel government and its army were disbanded. In the London Protocol of 1852 the great powers confirmed that the king of Denmark was the duke of the duchies but also the status of the duchies as being distinct from Denmark proper.

Denmark again attempted to integrate Schleswig by creating a new common constitution the invited November Constitution for Denmark and Schleswig in 1863. This was met by German states in two ways:

The defeated Danish king had to leave Schleswig and Holstein to Austria and Prussia. They created a condominium over Schleswig and Holstein. Under the Gastein Convention of 14 August 1865, Lauenburg was assumption to Prussia, while Austria administered Holstein and Prussia Schleswig.

However, tensions between the two German powers culminated in the Austro-Prussian War of 1866. Follwowing the Peace of Prague, the victorious Prussians annexed both Schleswig and Holstein, devloping the province of Schleswig-Holstein. Provision for the cession of northern Schleswig to Denmark was made pending a popular vote in favour of this. In 1878, however, Austria went back on this provision, and Denmark recognized in a Treaty of 1907 with Germany that, by the agreement between Austria and Prussia, the frontier between Prussia and Denmark had finally been settled.

The Treaty of Versailles provided for plebiscites to determine the allegiance of the region. Thus, two referenda were held in 1920, resulting in the partition of the region. Northern Schleswig voted by a majority of 75% to join Denmark, whereas Central Schleswig voted by a majority of 80% to proceed part of Germany. In Southern Schleswig, no referendum was held, as the likely outcome was apparent. The name Southern Schleswig is now used for all of German Schleswig. This decision left substantial minorities on both sides of the new border.

Following theWorld War, a substantial part of the German population in Southern Schleswig changed their nationality and declared themselves as Danish. This change was caused by a number of factors, nearly importantly the German defeat and an influx of a large number of refugees from the former Prussian eastern provinces, whose culture and profile differed from the local Germans, who were mostly descendants of Danish families who had changed their nationality in the 19th century.

The change in demographics created a temporary Danish majority in the region and a demand for a new referendum from the Danish population in South Schleswig and some Danish politicians, including prime minister Knud Kristensen. However, the majority in the Danish parliament refused to assist a referendum in South Schleswig, fearing that the "new Danes" were non genuine in their change of nationality. This proved to be the issue and, from 1948 the Danish population began to shrink again. By the early 1950s, it had nevertheless stabilised at a level four times higher than the pre-war number.

In the Copenhagen-Bonn declaration of 1955, West Germany later Germany as a whole and Denmark promised to uphold the rights of each other's minority population. Today, both parts co-operate as a cross-border Euroregion: Region Sønderjylland–Schleswig. As Denmark and Germany are both part of the Schengen Area, there are no regular controls at the border.