MUSEUM OF THE FALLEN
Dominance is not eternal.

The Wall/ Vanished Worlds/ Kingdom of Prussia
Sanssouci, the rococo summer palace of Frederick the Great, completed 1747, Potsdam.

Till Krech, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY 2.0

Vanished Worlds

Kingdom of Prussia

1701 CE 1947 CE

The militarized German state that unified Germany under its kings, then was legally abolished after its army outlived its monarchy.

Born
1701 CE
Died
1947 CE
Lived
246 years
Dead for
79 yrs
Cause of death
Conquest
Replaced by
states of Germany; territory divided among Germany, Poland, and the USSR
The Obituary

Prussia began in 1701 as a modest north German kingdom and grew, through the disciplined drill of its army and the ambitions of rulers like Frederick the Great, into one of Europe’s great powers. In the 19th century, under Bismarck, it defeated Austria and France and forged the German Empire in 1871, with the Prussian king as kaiser. The monarchy fell with Germany’s defeat in 1918, but the Prussian state survived as a republic within the Weimar system. After the Second World War the Allies blamed Prussian militarism for German aggression and abolished the state outright in 1947, partitioning its lands.

Worth remembering

  • It was said Prussia was not a state that had an army, but an army that had a state.
  • Under Otto von Bismarck, Prussia engineered the unification of Germany in 1871, with its king becoming German emperor.

Sources

  1. Kingdom of Prussia (1701) led German unification in 1871; formally abolished in 1947 Wikipedia
  2. Allied Control Council Law No. 46 abolished the Prussian state on 25 February 1947 Wikipedia

A graveyard tradition: leave a stone to show you came, and remembered.

Buried nearby