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WEST PRUSSIA (Ger. Westpreussen)

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Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 559 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WEST PRUSSIA (Ger. Westpreussen)  , a province of Prussia, bounded on the N. by the Baltic, on the E. by East Prussia, on the S. by
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Russian Poland and the province of Posen, and on the W. by
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Brandenburg and Pomerania . The
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area is 9862 sq. m . The greater
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part is occupied by the low Baltic plateau, intersected by a network of streams and lakes, and rising to the Turmberg (Io86 ft.) near Danzig . East of
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Konitz is an extensive moorland, 70 M. long, called the Tucheler
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Heide . The lakes, though very numerous, are not large . The Vistula, here of
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great width, and subject to destructive floods, enters the province near Thorn, and flowing north in a valley which divides the plateau, enters Danzig
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Bay by a large delta, the Werder . The other rivers are chiefly tributaries of the Vistula, as the
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Drewenz on its right
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bank and the Brahe on its
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left . In general
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physical characteristics the province resembles East Prussia, but the
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climate is less harsh and the fertility of the
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soil greater . Arable
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land and gardens occupy 55.6% of the area, meadows and pastures 12'9%, forests 21'7%, and the rest is mostly waste . The valley and delta of the Vistula are very fertile, and produce good crops of wheat and pasturage for horses, cattle and sheep . Besides cereals, the chief crops are potatoes, hay,
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tobacco, garden produce, fruit and
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sugar-
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beet . Poultry, fish and
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timber are important
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sources of
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wealth .

Cavalry horses (especially at the government
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stud
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farm of
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Marienwerder) and
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merino sheep are reared . The minerals are unimportant, except
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amber, peat and clay .
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Shipbuilding is carried on at Danzig and
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Elbing, and in various places there are iron and glass
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works, saw-mills, sugar factories and distilleries . Much of the trade passes through the ports of Danzig and Elbing . The population in 1905 was 1,641,746, showing a mean density of 166 to the sq. m . Of these 567,318 or 34.5 0/,, were Poles, a larger proportion than in any other Prussian province except Posen . They are increasing somewhat faster than the Germans, and the efforts of the colonization commission have done little to promote the immigration of German farmers . The
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Kashi'bes (q.v.), nearly all of whom (less than 200,000) live in W . Prussia, chiefly in the west, from Putzig to Konitz, are here reckoned with the Poles . The Poles proper chiefly inhabit the centre of the province, and the
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borders of Russian Poland . Among the Germans, who are most numerous in the north-east, Low German dialects are spoken, except in a Swabian colony round
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Kulmsee .
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Roman Catholics number 51.4% and Protestants 46.6% of the population, and there are 16,000 Jews .

The Poles are almost all Roman Catholics . The province is divided into the governmental departments of Danzig and Marienwerder . It returns twenty-two members to the Prussian

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Lower House and thirteen to the Reichstag . Danzig is the capital, and the only large
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town . West Prussia, with the exception of
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southern Pomerania' (around Marienwerder) which belonged to Prussia, was a possession of Poland from 1466 till the first
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partition of Poland in 1772, when it was given to Prussia with the exception of Danzig and Thorn, which Poland retained till 1793 . The
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present province was formed in 18o8, but from 1824 to 1878 was
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united with East Prussia . For its
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history see also PRUSSIA and POLAND . See K . Lohmeyer, Geschichte von Ost- and Westpreussen (part i., 3rd ed.,
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Gotha, 1908) ; Vallentin, Westpreussen seit den ersten Jahrzehnten dieses Jahrhunderts (
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Tubingen, 1893) ; Ambrassat, Westpreussen, ein Handbuch der Heimatkunde (Danzig, 1906) .

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