Baltic German
The
Baltic Germans (
German:
Deutsch-Balten,
Deutschbalten, sometimes
Baltendeutsche), were
ethnically German inhabitants of the eastern shore of the
Baltic Sea, which today forms the countries of
Estonia and
Latvia.
In Baltic German settlement patterns, the Baltic area consisted of the following territories:
Estland (
Latin: Estonia), roughly the northern half of present-day Estonia; major towns:
Reval (
Tallinn),
Narwa (
Narva).
Livland (Latin: Livonia), roughly the southern half of present-day Estonia and the northern half of today's Latvia; major towns:
Riga,
Dorpat (
Tartu).
Kurland (Latin: Couronia, also English: Courland), roughly the southern half of present-day Latvia; major towns:
Mitau (
Jelgava),
Windau (
Ventspils),
Libau (
Liepāja).
*the island of
Ösel (
Saaremaa) present-day Estonia; major town:
Arensburg (
Kuressaare).
Occasionally, ethnic Germans from
East Prussia are considered
Baltic German for reasons of cultural, linguistic, and historical affinities. In contrast, the
Old Prussians spoke a
Baltic, not
Germanic, language.
Middle ages
Ethnic Germans began to settle in the
Baltic region in the
12th century when traders and missionaries began to visit the coastal lands inhabited by tribes who spoke
Finnic and Baltic languages. Systematic settlement as the dominating class by the first "Baltic Germans" dates from
1199, when
Albert von Buxhoeveden from
Bremen became the first
Bishop of Livonia. Two years later he founded Riga and the
crusading Order of the Sword Brothers (
Livonian Order) to protect the mission against the local
heathens. The knights quickly began to administer the territory instead of turning the land over to the bishop. At the same time, German-speaking merchants and craftsmen constituted the majority of the quickly growing urban population in the area. The Sword Brothers became part of the
Teutonic Order in
1236. For 200 years, the knights on the shores of the eastern Baltic had support from the
Holy Roman Empire.
As the Teutonic Knights were weakened during the
15th century through wars with
Poland and
Lithuania, the Livonian branch in the north began to pursue its own policies. When the Prussian branch of the Order secularized in
1525 and became the
Duchy of Prussia, the Livonian Order remained independent, although surrounded by aggressive neighbors. In
1558 Russia's invasion of Livonia began the
Livonian War between Russia, Poland, Sweden, and
Denmark which lasted for 20 years. In course of the war, the state was divided between Denmark (which took Ösel), Sweden (which took Estland), Poland (which took Livland), and the
Protestant state of Courland, a fief of Poland.
Reformation
The Baltic provinces, like many other German-led states, became Protestant during the
Reformation, and the secularized land was split up among the remaining
aristocratic knights.
Kurland existed as a country dominated by German-speakers for over 200 years, while Livland was once again split. Sweden controlled Estland between
1561 and
1710 and Livland between
1621 and
1710, having signed an agreement not to undermine Baltic German autonomy. The German-language
University of Dorpat (
University of Tartu), the foundation of which was supported by King
Gustav II Adolf of Sweden (himself a native German-speaker), remained the only one in the Baltic region for centuries and became the intellectual focus of the Baltic Germans, both nobles and intellectuals.
Russian control
Between
1710 and
1795, following Russia's success in the
Great Northern War and the
Partitions of Poland, the areas inhabited by Baltic Germans became
provinces of
Imperial Russia.
However, the Baltic provinces remained dominated and self-governed by the local German-speaking
aristocracy. This
Ritterschaft was based on the former knights but also included immigrants from the German principalities to the west. Most of the professional classes in the region, the
literati, were German-speakers. Government, however, was in the hands of the
Ritterschaft of each province, in which only members of the
matriculated nobility held membership.
Autonomy was guaranteed by the various rulers, especially during Russian times. Germans, other than the estate-owners, mainly settled in the cities, such as
Riga,
Reval (
Tallinn),
Dorpat (
Tartu), and
Pernau (
Pärnu); as late as the mid-
19th century the population of many of these municipalities still had a German majority with an Estonian or Latvian minority.
The region's
indigenous rural population enjoyed fewer rights under the Baltic German nobility compared to the farmers in Germany, Sweden, or Poland.
Serfdom was officially abolished in the Baltic provinces in the beginning of 19th century, about half a century before in Russia proper. There was less tension between the German-speakers and indigenous urban residents.
German
cultural autonomy ceased in the
1880s, when
Russification replaced German administration and schooling with the usage of the
Russian language. The
Revolution of 1905 led to attacks against the Baltic German landowners, the burning of manors, and the killing and torture of members of the nobility, if usually not by the local inhabitants but by outside revolutionary bands. Owing to their German heritage, during
World War I Baltic Germans were sometimes seen as the enemy by
Russians, yet also as traitors by the
German Empire if they remained loyal to Russia. As a result of the
Russian Revolution of 1917 and the subsequent
Russian Civil War, many Baltic Germans fled to
Weimar Germany.
Post WWI
When the Republics of
Estonia and
Latvia were founded in
1918-
19, the Baltic German estate owners were largely expropriated in a
land reform, although the Germans were given considerable cultural autonomy.
Estonia's Baltic German population was smaller, so as Estonians continued to fill professional positions such as law and medicine, there was less of a leadership role for the Baltic Germans. Many Baltic Germans began to leave during the interwar era. No precise numbers are available for the emigration during this period.
In Latvia, Baltic Germans were the most politically active and organized ethnic group, although they lost some influence after
Karlis Ulmanis' coup in
1934. As a result of the
Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact between
Nazi Germany and the
Soviet Union (
1939), Estonia and Latvia were "restored" to Russian control; the remaining Baltic Germans were evacuated and resettled into the
Warthegau and other areas that were parts of occupied
Poland.
Some 21,400 Baltic Germans were resettled from Estonia to Germany in late 1939. Close to 50,000 were resettled from Latvia by late 1939.
The Soviet advance into Poland and East Prussia in
1945 resulted in their having to trek to the West. Many Baltic Germans were onboard the
KdF Ship Wilhelm Gustloff when it was sunk by a Soviet submarine on
January 30, 1945 in the worst loss of life from a single vessel in maritime history. Additional Baltic Germans died during the sinking of the
SS General von Steuben on
February 10, 1945.
After Estonia had regained independence from the
Soviet Union on
August 20 1991, the exiled association of the German Baltic nobility sent an official message to the president-to-be
Lennart Meri that no member of the association would claim proprietary rights to their former Estonian lands. This, and the fact that the first German ambassadors to
Estonia and
Latvia were both Baltic Germans, helped to further reconcile the Baltic Germans with Estonians and Latvians.
Baltic Germans played leading roles in the society of what are now Estonia and Latvia throughout much of these countries' history, with many of them becoming noted scientists or explorers. A number of Baltic Germans served as ranking generals in the Russian Imperial army. Several Baltic Germans sided with the
Whites during the
Russian Civil War, and with the
Third Reich during
World War II.
*
Karl Ernst von Baer, biologist
*
Michael Andreas Barclay de Tolly, field marshal and Minister of War (Russia)
*
Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen, admiral and naval explorer (Russia)
*
Alexander von Benckendorff, general and statesman (Russia)
*
Konstantin von Benckendorff, general and diplomat (Russia)
*
August Johann Gottfried Bielenstein, linguist, folklorist, ethnographer, and theologian
*
Johann Christoph Brotze, pedagogue and ethnographer
*
Georg Dehio, art historian
*
Heinz Erhardt, comedian, musician, entertainer and actor
*
Johann Friedrich von Eschscholtz, botanist and naturalist
*
Gregor von Helmersen, geologist
*
Alexander Keyserling, geologist, paleontologist
*
Lionel Kieseritzky, chess master
*
Otto von Kotzebue, naval officer and explorer (Russia)
*
Adam Johann von Krusenstern, admiral and naval explorer (Russia)
*
Ernst Gideon Freiherr von Laudon, field marshal and commander-in-chief of the armed forces (Austria)
*
Heinrich Lenz, physicist
*
Eugene Miller, general and counterrevolutionary (Russia)
*
Vladimir Dmitrievich Nabokov, politician, son of a Russian and a Baltic German noblewoman
*
Vladimir Nabokov, writer, his son
*
Alexander von Oettingen, theologian
*
Wilhelm Ostwald, chemist
*
Johann Patkul, nobleman of Livonia
*
Alexander Pilar von Pilchau, painter
*
Wolter von Plettenberg, Master of the Livonian Order
*
Georg Wilhelm Richmann, physicist
*
Alfred Rosenberg, Nazi defendant at the
Nuremberg Trials*
Thomas Johann Seebeck, physicist
*
Jakob von Uexküll, biologist, semiotician
*
Roman von Ungern-Sternberg, commander of White Russian forces, warlord
*
Edgar von Wahl, creator of
Interlingue*
Peter P. von Weymarn, chemist in colloid science (
von Weimarn law)
*
Gero von Wilpert, writer
*
Ferdinand von Wrangel, admiral and naval explorer (Russia)
*
Pyotr Nikolayevich Wrangel (
German: Peter von Wrangel),
Lieutenant General, one of the leaders in
White movement in Southern
Russia.
*
Estonia*
Northern Crusades*
Teutonic Knights*
Latvia*
Courland*
Livonia*
Livonian Confederation*
History of Germans in Russia and the Soviet Union*
A Baltic German site.*
The association of German Baltic Nobility (rulers of Estland, Livland and Kurland between 1252 and 1918) - also see
English language version