Anonymous

Difference between revisions of "Prussia"

From BiblePortal Wikipedia
100 bytes removed ,  14:06, 12 October 2021
no edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_57081" /> ==
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_57081" /> ==
<
<
          
          
== The Nuttall Encyclopedia <ref name="term_78400" /> ==
== The Nuttall Encyclopedia <ref name="term_78400" /> ==
<p> The leading [[State]] of the German Empire, occupies about two-thirds of the imperial territory, and contributes three-fifths of the population; it stretches from [[Holland]] and [[Belgium]] in the W. to [[Russia]] in the E., has [[Jutland]] and the sea on the N., and Lorraine, Bavaria, Hesse-Darmstadt, Saxony, and [[Austria]] on the S.; the SW. portion is hilly and the soil often poor, but containing valuable mineral deposits; the N. and E. belongs to the great European plain, devoted to agriculture and grazing; [[Hesse-Cassel]] is extremely fertile, and [[Nassau]] produces excellent wine; in the E. and in [[Hanover]] are extensive forests; Silesia, Westphalia, and Rhenish [[Prussia]] contain the chief coal-fields, and are consequently the chief industrial provinces; half the zinc of the world is mined in Prussia; lead, iron, copper, antimony, &c., are also wrought; the Hartz Mountains are noted for their mines; Salt, amber, and precious stones are found on the Baltic shores; textiles, metal wares, and beer are the main industries; Berlin and [[Elberfeld]] are the two chief manufacturing centres on the Continent; the great navigable rivers, Niemen, Vistula, Oder, Elbe, Weser, Rhine, and their tributaries and canals, excellent railways, and her central European position all favour Prussia's commerce, while her coast-line, harbours, and growing mercantile fleet put her in communication with the markets of the world; seven-eighths of the people are Germans; Slavonic races are represented by Poles, Wends, Lithuanians, and Czechs, while the Danes appear in Schleswig-Holstein; the prevailing religion is Protestant; education is compulsory and good; there are ten universities, and many great libraries and educational institutions; the Prussian is the largest contingent in the German army; the king of Prussia is emperor of Germany. The basis of the Prussian people was laid by German colonists placed amid the pagan [[Slavs]] whom they had conquered by the Teutonic knights of the 13th century; in 1511 their descendants chose a Hohenzollern prince; a century later the Hohenzollerns of [[Brandenburg]] succeeded; despite the [[Thirty]] Years' War Prussia became a European State, and was recognised as a kingdom in 1703; Frederick the [[Great]] (1740-1786) enlarged its bounds and developed its resources; the successive partitions of [[Poland]] added to her territory; humiliated by the peace of [[Tilsit]] 1807, and ruined by the French occupation, she recovered after Waterloo; [[William]] I. and Bismarck still further increased her territory and prestige; by the Austrian War of 1866 and the French War of 1870-71 her position as premier State in the German Confederation was assured. </p>
<p> The leading State of the German Empire, occupies about two-thirds of the imperial territory, and contributes three-fifths of the population; it stretches from Holland and Belgium in the W. to Russia in the E., has [[Jutland]] and the sea on the N., and Lorraine, Bavaria, Hesse-Darmstadt, Saxony, and [[Austria]] on the S.; the SW. portion is hilly and the soil often poor, but containing valuable mineral deposits; the N. and E. belongs to the great European plain, devoted to agriculture and grazing; [[Hesse-Cassel]] is extremely fertile, and [[Nassau]] produces excellent wine; in the E. and in Hanover are extensive forests; Silesia, Westphalia, and Rhenish Prussia contain the chief coal-fields, and are consequently the chief industrial provinces; half the zinc of the world is mined in Prussia; lead, iron, copper, antimony, &c., are also wrought; the Hartz Mountains are noted for their mines; Salt, amber, and precious stones are found on the Baltic shores; textiles, metal wares, and beer are the main industries; Berlin and [[Elberfeld]] are the two chief manufacturing centres on the Continent; the great navigable rivers, Niemen, Vistula, Oder, Elbe, Weser, Rhine, and their tributaries and canals, excellent railways, and her central European position all favour Prussia's commerce, while her coast-line, harbours, and growing mercantile fleet put her in communication with the markets of the world; seven-eighths of the people are Germans; Slavonic races are represented by Poles, Wends, Lithuanians, and Czechs, while the Danes appear in Schleswig-Holstein; the prevailing religion is Protestant; education is compulsory and good; there are ten universities, and many great libraries and educational institutions; the Prussian is the largest contingent in the German army; the king of Prussia is emperor of Germany. The basis of the Prussian people was laid by German colonists placed amid the pagan [[Slavs]] whom they had conquered by the Teutonic knights of the 13th century; in 1511 their descendants chose a Hohenzollern prince; a century later the Hohenzollerns of Brandenburg succeeded; despite the Thirty Years' War Prussia became a European State, and was recognised as a kingdom in 1703; Frederick the Great (1740-1786) enlarged its bounds and developed its resources; the successive partitions of Poland added to her territory; humiliated by the peace of [[Tilsit]] 1807, and ruined by the French occupation, she recovered after Waterloo; William I. and Bismarck still further increased her territory and prestige; by the Austrian War of 1866 and the French War of 1870-71 her position as premier State in the German Confederation was assured. </p>
          
          
==References ==
==References ==