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The Teutonic Order (German: Deutscher Orden, Latin: Ordo domus Sanctæ Mariæ Theutonicorum) was a crusading order of knights under Roman Catholic religious vows which was formed at the end of the 12th century in Palestine to give medical aid to pilgrims to the holy places. They received Papal orders for crusades to take and hold Jerusalem for Christianity. They were based at Acre (Akko). They wore white coats with a black cross.
When the mission of the order in Palestine was nearing its end, the Teutonic Knights moved their headquarter to Venice and offered their services to Christian rulers confronted with hostile non-Christian neighbors. In 1211, Andrew II of Hungary accepted their services and granted them district of Burzenland in Transylvania. Andrew had been involved in negotiations for the marriage of his daughter with the son of Hermann, the Landgrave of Thuringia, whose vassals included the family of Hermann of Salza, the new grand master of the Teutonic Order. Led by a brother called Theoderich, the Order defended Hungary against the neighbouring Cumans. In 1224 they petitioned Pope Honorius III to be placed directly under the authority of the Papal See, rather than of the King of Hungary. King Andrew responded by expelling them in 1225.
At that time Konrad I Mazowiecki, duke of Mazovia in what is now east-central Poland, appealed to the Knights to defend his realm and to subdue the native tribes in Prussia, giving the Order the Chelmno Land as a fief (1226) for the time until the conquest was over. Soon the Teutonic knights annexed part of the smaller order of Bracia Dobrzynscy and their Dobrzyn Land. The conquest of Prussia was accomplished with great bloodshed over more than 50 years, during which the Prussians were subjugated and forced to adopt Christianity. Eventually the Order transferred its headquarters to a huge brick castle it built at Malbork (Marienburg) on the Nogat River south of Gdansk (Danzig). The Order did not conquer Prussia in order to incorporate it into Poland, but instead ruled it under permits issued by both the Pope and the Holy Roman Emperor as a sovereign Teutonic Order state, comparable to the arrangement of the Knights Hospitallers in Rhodes and later in Malta.
The Order induced the immigration of many thousands of colonists from Germany and the Netherlands, founded numerous towns and cities, and built a number of castles (Order Castles (Ordensburgen in German), to defend the territory against attacks from Lithuania and Poland, with which the Order was at war many times during the 14th and 15th centuries. Among the cities founded by the Order was Königsberg (1255), later capital of the German province of East Prussia (Ostpreussen) and, after World War II, the Soviet Russian city of Kaliningrad. Many knights from western Europe, including some from England and France, journeyed to Prussia to participate in the wars with Lithuania, which remained non-Christian until the end of the 14th century, much later than the rest of eastern Europe.
When the order of the Livonian Brothers of the Sword was absorbed into the Teutonic Order in 1237, its territorial rule extended over Prussia, Livonia, Semigalia, and Estonia. Their next aim was to convert Russia to the Roman Catholicism, but that idea had to be dropped in the wake of the disastrous Battle on the Ice (1242).
The crusading rationale for the Teutonic Order's state finally ended when Lithuania officially converted to Christianity after 1386. The grand duke of Lithuania, Jogaila, was baptised, married the queen of Poland Jadwiga, and became king Ladislaus II of Poland. This initiated an alliance between the two countries and created a formidable opponent for the Teutonic Knights.
King Albert of Sweden conceded Gotlandia to the Teutonic Order as a pledge (similar to a fiefdom), with the understanding that they would eliminate the piratical Victual Brothers from their strategic island base. An invasion army under Grand Master Konrad of Jungingen conquered the island in 1398, destroyed Visby and drove the Victual Brothers out of Gotland.
In 1410 at the Battle of Grunwald (also known as the battle of Tannenberg), a Polish-Lithuanian army decisively defeated the Order's army and broke its military power. The Grand Master, Ulrich von Jungingen, and most of its higher dignitaries fell on the battlefield. The Polish-Lithuanian army then besieged the capital of the Order, Malbork castle, but was unable to take it. When peace was made, the Order managed to retain essentially all of its territories.
In 1454 gentry and the burghers of western Prussia rose up against the Order in the "War of the Cities" or Thirteen Year War, at the end of which the Order recognized Polish crown rights over Prussia's western half (subsequently Royal Prussia) while retaining eastern Prussia under nominal Polish overlordship (Second Treaty of Thorn, 1466). Eastern Prussia (subsequently Ducal Prussia) was also lost to the Order when in 1525 its grand master, Albert of Brandenburg, converted to Lutheranism and assumed the title and rights of hereditary Duke of Prussia.
The new Grand Magistery was then established in Mergentheim in Württemberg, and members of the Habsburg family continued as grand masters over the Order's considerable holdings in Germany until 1809, when Napoleon ordered its dissolution and the Order lost its last secular holdings. The order continued to exist, headed by Habsburgs through the First World War, and today operates primarily as a charitable organization.
The Order and its relations with its neighbours (Poland, the Duchy of Masovia and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania) are the main motive in a novel by the Polish author Henryk Sienkiewicz, called Krzyzacy (or, in English, The Teutonic Knights).
Grand Masters (Hochmeister) of the Teutonic Order, 1198-present
Heinrich I Walpot von Bassenheim 1198-1200
Otto von Kerpen 1200-1206
Heinrich II von Tunna 1206-1209
Hermann von Salza 1209-1239
Konrad I of Thuringia 1239-1240
Gerhard von Malberg 1241-1244
Heinrich III von Hohenlohe 1244-1249
Günther von Schwarzenberg 1249-1253
Poppo von Osterna 1253-1257
Hanno von Sangershausen 1257-1274
Hartmann von Helbrungen 1274-1283
Burkhard von Schwanden 1283-1290
Konrad II von Feuchtwangen 1290-1297
Gottfried von Hohenlohe 1297-1302
Siegfried von Feuchtwangen 1302-1310
Karl Bessart 1311-1324
Werner von Orselen 1324-1330
Lothar von Braunschweig 1331-1335
Dietrich von Altenburg 1335-1341
Ludolf Konig von Wattzau 1342-1345
Heinrich IV Dusener von Arfberg 1345-1351
Winrich von Kniprode 1351-1382
Konrad III Zollner von Rothstein 1382-1390
Konrad IV von Wallenrode 1391-1393
Konrad V von Juningen 1393-1407
Ulrich von Jungingen 1407-1410
Heinrich von Plauen 1410-1413
Michael Kuchenmeister von Sternburg 1414-1422
Paul Belenzer von Ruszdorf 1423-1440
Konrad VI von Erlichshausen 1441-1449
Ludwig von Erlichshausen 1450-1467
Heinrich VI von Reuss 1467-1470
Heinrich VII Reffle von Richtenberg 1470-1477
Martin Truchsetz von Wetzhausen 1477-1489
Johann von Tieffen 1489-1497
Friedrich of Saxony 1497-1510
Albrecht of Brandenburg 1510-1525
Walter von Cronberg 1527-1543
Wolfgang Schutzbar 1543-1566
Georg Hundt von Weckheim 1566-1572
Heinrich VIII von Bobenhausen 1572-1590
Maximilian of Austria 1590-1618
Karl I of Austria 1619-1624
Johann Eustach von Westernach 1625-1627
Johann Kaspar I von Stadion 1627-1641
Leopold Wilhelm of Austria 1641-1662
Karl Josef of Austria 1662-1664
Johann Kaspar II von Ampringen 1664-1684
Ludwig Anton of Palatinate-Neuburg 1685-1694
Ludwig Franz of Palatinate-Neuburg 1694-1732
Clemens August of Bavaria 1732-1761
Charles Alexander of Lorraine 1761-1780
Maximilian Franz of Austria 1780-1801
Karl II of Austria 1801-1804
Anton Viktor of Austria 1804-1835
Maximilian of Austria-Este 1835-1863
Wilhelm Franz Karl of Austria 1863-1894
Eugen Ferdinand Pius Bernhard of Austria 1894-1923
Dr. Norbert Klein 1923-1933
Paul Heider 1933-1936
Robert Schälzky 1936-1948
Dr. Marian Tumler 1948-1970
Ildefons Pauler 1970-1988
Dr. Arnold Othmar Wieland 1988-2000
Bruno Platter 2000-present
See also
Knights Templar
Knights Hospitaller (Knights of Rhodes and Knights of Malta)
Livonian Brothers of the Sword (Sword Brethren)
External links
Category:Baltic states
Category:Crusades
Category:Orders of knighthood
Category:Prussian history
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