History of Friedrich II of Prussia — Volume 02 - Thomas Carlyle - Book

History of Friedrich II of Prussia — Volume 02

The Brandenburg Countries, till they become related to the Hohenzollern Family which now rules there, have no History that has proved memorable to mankind. There has indeed been a good deal written under that title; but there is by no means much known, and of that again there is alarmingly little that is worth knowing or remembering.
In the Fourth Century of our era, when the German populations, on impulse of certain Huns expelled from the Chinese frontier, or for other reasons valid to themselves, began flowing universally southward, to take possession of the rich Roman world, and so continued flowing for two centuries more; the old German frontiers generally, and especially those Northern Baltic countries, were left comparatively vacant; so that new immigrating populations from the East, all of Sclavic origin, easily obtained footing and supremacy there. In the Northern parts, these immigrating Sclaves were of the kind called Vandals, or Wends: they spread themselves as far west as Hamburg and the Ocean, south also far over the Elbe in some quarters; while other kinds of Sclaves were equally busy elsewhere. With what difficulty in settling the new boundaries, and what inexhaustible funds of quarrel thereon, is still visible to every one, though no Historian was there to say the least word of it. All of Sclavic origin; but who knows of how many kinds: Wends here in the North, through the Lausitz (Lusatia) and as far as Thuringen; not to speak of Polacks, Bohemian Czechs, Huns, Bulgars, and the other dim nomenclatures, on the Eastern frontier. Five hundred years of violent unrecorded fighting, abstruse quarrel with their new neighbors in settling the marches. Many names of towns in Germany ending in ITZ (Meuselwitz, Mollwitz), or bearing the express epithet Windisch (Wendish), still give indication of those old sad circumstances; as does the word SLAVE, in all our Western languages, meaning captured SCLAVONIAN. What long-drawn echo of bitter rage and hate lies in that small etymology!

Thomas Carlyle
Содержание

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FREDERICK THE GREAT


Volume II. (of XXI.)


Contents


BOOK II. — OF BRANDENBURG AND THE HOHENZOLLERNS. - 928-1417.


Chapter I. — BRANNIBOR: HENRY THE FOWLER.


Chapter II. — PREUSSEN: SAINT ADALBERT.


Chapter III. — MARKGRAVES OF BRANDENBURG.


END OF THE FIRST SHADOWY LINE.


SECOND SHADOWY LINE.


SUBSTANTIAL MARKGRAVES: GLIMPSE OF THE CONTEMPORARY KAISERS.


Chapter IV. — ALBERT THE BEAR.


Chapter V. — CONRAD OF HOHENZOLLERN; AND KAISER BARBAROSSA.


CONRAD HAS BECOME BURGGRAF OF NURNBERG (A.D. 1170).


OF THE HOHENZOLLERN BURGGRAVES GENERALLY.


Chapter VI. — THE TEUTSCH RITTERS OR TEUTONIC ORDER.


HEAD OF TEUTSCH ORDER MOVES TO VENICE.


TEUTSCH ORDER ITSELF GOES TO PREUSSEN.


Chapter VII. — MARGRAVIATE OF CULMBACH: BAIREUTH, ANSPACH.


BURGGRAF FRIEDRICH III.; AND THE ANARCHY OF NINETEEN YEARS.


KAISER RUDOLF AND BURGGRAF FRIEDRICH III.


Chapter VIII. — ASCANIER MARKGRAVES IN BRANDENBURG.


OF BERLIN CITY.


MARKGRAF OTTO IV., OR OTTO WITH THE ARROW


Chapter IX. — BURGGRAF FRIEDRICH IV.


OF KAISER HENRY VII. AND THE LUXEMBURG KAISERS.


Chapter X. — BRANDENBURG LAPSES TO THE KAISER.


Chapter XI. — BAYARIAN KURFURSTS IN BRANDENBURG.


A RESUSCITATED ASCANIER; THE FALSE WALDEMAR.


MARGARET WITH THE POUCH-MOUTH.


END OF RESUSCITATED WALDEMAR; KURFURST LUDWIG SELLS OUT.


SECOND, AND THEN THIRD AND LAST, OF THE BAVARIAN KURFURSTS IN BRANDENBURG.


Chapter XIII. — LUXEMBURG KURFURSTS IN BRANDENBURG.


Chapter XIV. — BURGGRAF FRIEDRICH VI.


SIGISMUND IS KURFURST OF BRANDENBURG, BUT IS KING OF HUNGARY ALSO.


COUSIN JOBST HAS BRANDENBURG IN PAWN.


SIGISMUND, WITH A STRUGGLE, BECOMES KAISER.


BRANDENBURG IS PAWNED FOR THE LAST TIME.


THE SEVEN INTERCALARY OR NON-HAPSBURG KAISERS.

О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2008-06-16

Темы

Social problems; Frederick II, King of Prussia, 1712-1786; Prussia (Germany) -- History -- Frederick II, 1740-1786

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