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  1. Germanisation of Prussia. The intermittent Germanisation of Prussia was a historical process that resulted in the regions inclusion in various German states. Originating with the arrival of ethnically German groups in the Baltic region, it progressed sporadically with the development of the Teutonic Order and then much later ...

  2. Germanisation of Poles during the Partitions. After partitioning Poland at the end of the 18th century, the Kingdom of Prussia and later the German Empire imposed a number of Germanisation policies and measures in the newly gained territories, aimed at limiting the Polish ethnic presence and culture in these areas.

  3. Germanisation in its modern form was conducted from the beginning of the 19th century as a set of Prussian/German and (to a lesser degree and for a shorter time) Austrian state policies of forceful imposition of German culture, language and people upon non-German people, Slavs in particular.

  4. 1. Oppression and Self-assertion. 1.3 Intensification of the "Germanization policy" Polish rebels once again took up arms against their Russian occupiers in early 1863. In order to solidify their relations, Prussia and Russia signed the "Alvensleben Convention," in which they agreed to coordinate their actions with respect to the rebellious Poles.

  5. 1. Jan. 2015 · The bedrock supposition of Germanization (as well as Polish resistance to it) was that nationality was not innate (much less biologically inescapable), but could be inscribed and reinscribed through political, social, and cultural pressure. Correspondingly, all German citizens were subjected to homogenizing political measures that ...

  6. 6. Feb. 2020 · Making sure that only those inhabitants that did not oppose becoming German would stay, however, was just the first step. The imperial authorities designed a number of policies to transfer German identity to the new territories, a project known as ‘Germanization’.

  7. This article seeks to disentangle the knots of anachronisms that underlie the Polish national master narrative, in order to present a clearer picture of the interplay between the policies of Germanization, Polonization, and Russification as they unfolded in the lands of the partitioned Poland-Lithuania during the long nineteenth century. Keywords: