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New East Prussia

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(Redirected from New East Prussia Province) Province of the Kingdom of Prussia (1795-1807)
Province of New East PrussiaProvinz Neuostpreußen (German)
Province of Kingdom of Prussia
1795–1807

New East Prussia in 1806
CapitalBiałystok
Area 
• 180655,000 km (21,000 sq mi)
Population 
• 1806 914,610
History 
• Third Partition 24 October 1795
• Treaty of Tilsit 9 July 1807
Political subdivisionsBialystok
Plozk
Preceded by Succeeded by
Masovian Voivodeship (1526–1795)
Podlaskie Voivodeship (1513–1795)
Trakai Voivodeship
Duchy of Warsaw
Russian Empire
Today part ofPoland
Lithuania
Belarus¹
¹ Sopoćkinie area

New East Prussia (German: Neuostpreußen; Polish: Prusy Nowowschodnie; Lithuanian: Naujieji Rytprūsiai) was a province of the Kingdom of Prussia from 1795 to 1807. It was created out of territory annexed in the Third Partition of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and included parts of Masovia, Podlaskie, Trakai voivodeship and Žemaitija. In 1806 it had 914,610 inhabitants with a territory of less than 55,000 km (21,000 sq mi), mainly Poles, Lithuanians, Jews and Belarusians.

Geography

New East Prussia encompassed territory between East Prussia and the Vistula, Bug, and Neman rivers.

1807 Treaties of Tilsit

Following Napoleon Bonaparte's victory in the War of the Fourth Coalition and the Greater Poland Uprising of 1806 the Province of New East Prussia was ceded according to the 1807 Treaties of Tilsit:

Administrative divisions

New East Prussia (Neuostpreußen) and the Departments of Płock and Bialystok, 1801–1807

New East Prussia was divided into the Kammerdepartements of Bialystok and Płock which were divided into the following Kreise (districts):

References

  1. Finkel, Evgeny (2017-02-21). Ordinary Jews: Choice and Survival during the Holocaust. Princeton University Press. ISBN 9781400884926.

External links

Territories and provinces of Prussia (1525–1947)
Before 1701
After 1701
Post-Congress of
Vienna
(1814–15)
Territorial reforms
after 1918
Became Province of Posen in 1848.    From the Lower Rhine and Jülich-Cleves-Berg.
Historical administrative divisions of Greater Poland
12–13th century
until 1768
until 1793
until 1806
until 1815
  • until 1837
  • 1848
until 1918
until 1939
until 1945
until 1975
until 1998
since 1999

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