Reichsgau Wartheland territory of Greater Poland

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Reichsgau Wartheland (initially Reichsgau Posen, sometimes briefly called Warthegau) was the name given by Nazi German government to the largest subdivision of the territory of Greater Poland which was directly incorporated into the German Reich after defeating the Polish army in 1939. The name "Wartheland" refers to the German name given to the Warta river. Its territory roughly corresponded to the previous Province of Posen of the German Empire. Historically, the main parts of the area had been annexed already by Prussia from 1793 until 1807. During the period 1815-1849 an autonomous Polish region linked with Prussia had been formed. The Poles regained independence in 1918-1919 (refer to "Greater Poland through history" section below).

  • Area: 43,905 km²
  • Population: 4,693,700 (1941)

The territory was inhabited by Poles and a German minority (16.7 % of total population in 1921). During World War II many Poles and Jews (297.000) were expelled from the territory into the occupied General Government (more than 70,000 from Poznań alone) in actions called the Kleine Planung.

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[edit] Invasion

A series of staged attacks near the German-Polish border provided a pretext for invasion of Polish territory in 1939.

After the invasion of Poland, the conquered territory was partitioned among four different Reichsgau and the General Government area further east. Militärbezirk Posen was created in September 1939 and as Reichsgau Posen annexed to Germany on October 8, 1939, with SS Obergruppenfuhrer Arthur Greiser as the first and only Gauleiter. The name Reichsgau Wartheland was introduced on January 29, 1940.

[edit] Occupation

Image:Poles-expulsion-1939.jpg
Poles led to the trains under German army escort, as part of the Nazi German ethnic cleansing of western Poland annexed to the Reich immediately following the invasion of 1939.

In the Wartheland, the Nazis' goal was complete "Germanization", the political, cultural, social, and economic assimilation of the territory into the German Reich. In pursuit of this goal, the installed bureaucracy renamed streets and cities and seized tens of thousands of Polish enterprises, from large industrial firms to small shops, without payment to the owners.

The Germanization of the annexed lands also included an ambitious program to resettle Germans from the Baltic and other regions on farms and other homes formerly occupied by Poles and Jews. By the end of 1940, the SS had expelled 325,000 Poles and Jews from the Wartheland and the Danzig corridor and transported them to the General Government, confiscating their belongings. Many elderly people and children died en route or in makeshift transit camps such as those in the towns of Potulice, Smukal, and Toruń. In 1941, the Nazis expelled a further 45,000 people.

[edit] End of war

At the beginning of 1945, Russian forces drove the retreating Germans through the Polish lands. Caught in severe winter temperatures, most resident German citizens fled, many too late due to restrictions by their own government. An estimated 50,000 of the former German residents perished, some from flight conditions, some from the atrocities committed by conquering Soviet soldiers. The remaining German population was expelled to present Germany.[1]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Naimark, Russian in Germany. p. 75 reference 31

[edit] See also

fr:Reichsgau Wartheland it:Reichsgau Wartheland nl:Wartheland pl:Kraj Warty sv:Reichsgau Wartheland

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