:''"Drang nach Osten" is also a game in the "
Europa" wargame series.''
'''Drang nach Osten''' (
German for "Drive towards the East") was a term used by 19th century intellectuals and later by
Nazi propaganda to explain
Germany's desire for land and influence in
Eastern Europe (see ''
Lebensraum''). After
World War II, the term was used by
Polish propaganda to corroborate anti-German sentiments. In some instances, ''Drang nach Osten'' refers to the
medieval German eastern colonization itself.
Background
Main articles: Ostsiedlung
''Drang nach Osten'' is connected with the medieval German ''
Ostsiedlung''. This "east colonization" referred to the expansion of German culture, language, states, and settlement into eastern European regions inhabited by
Slavs and
Balts.
Population growth during the
High Middle Ages stimulated movement of peoples from the
Rhenish,
Flemish, and
Saxon territories of the
Holy Roman Empire eastwards into the less-populated Baltic region and
Poland. These movements were supported by the German nobility, the Slavic kings and dukes, and the medieval Church. The majority of this settlement was peaceful, although it sometimes took place at the expense of
Polabian Slavs and pagan Balts (see
Northern Crusades).
The future state of
Prussia, named for the conquered
Old Prussians, had its roots largely in these movements. As the Middle Ages came to a close, the
Teutonic Knights, who had been invited to northern Poland by
Konrad of Masovia, had assimilated and forcibly converted much of the southern Baltic coastlands. The Teutonic Knights became a Polish vassal in 1466.
After the
Partitions of Poland by the
Kingdom of Prussia,
Austria, and the
Russian Empire in the late 18th century, Prussia gained much of western Poland. The Prussians, and later the Germans, engaged in a policy of
Germanization in Polish territories. Russia and
Sweden eventually conquered the lands taken by the
Livonian Order in
Estonia and
Livonia.
''Drang nach Osten''
With the development of
romantic nationalism in the 19th century, Polish and Russian intellectuals began referring to the German ''Ostsiedlung'' as a ''Drang nach Osten'', or drive to the east. The
German Empire and
Austria-Hungary attempted to expand their power eastward; Germany by gaining influence in the declining
Ottoman Empire (the
Eastern Question) and Austria-Hungary through the acquisition of territory in the
Balkans (such as
Bosnia and Herzegovina). Alongside the
Kulturkampf policies directed against Catholics, Imperial Germany tried to recolonize its eastern (mostly-Catholic) Polish-inhabitated territories with Germans.
Halford John Mackinder's ''
The Geographical Pivot of History'' pointed out the strategic position of Eastern Europe. German
nationalists pointed to the historic and contemporary movements towards Eastern Europe as proof of German "vitality", while critics claimed it was another example of German imperialistic tendencies which contributed to the outbreak of
World War I (see also
Geopolitik).
The war ended with the
Treaty of Versailles, by which most or parts of the
Imperial German provinces of
Posen,
West Prussia, and
Upper Silesia were given to
reconstituted Poland; the West Prussian city of Danzig became the
Free City of Danzig. Poland at this stage was in an expansionist nationalist phase under Marshal
Józef Piłsudski, and, according to some writers, used the opportunity for a first wave of assimilation and expulsion of German populations, thus reversing the trend of German eastward expansionism.
[1]
Adolf Hitler, dictator of
Nazi Germany from 1933-1945, called for a ''Drang nach Osten'' to acquire territory for German colonists at the expense of eastern European nations (''
Lebensraum''). The term by then had gained enough currency to appear in foreign newspapers without explanation.
[1] His eastern campaigns during
World War II were initially successful with the conquests of Poland and much of
European Russia by the
Wehrmacht;
Generalplan Ost was designed to remove the native Slavs from these lands and replace them with Germans. However, the
Soviet Union began to reverse the German conquests by 1943, and Nazi Germany was defeated by the
Allies in 1945.
Not only was the ''Drang nach Osten'' reversed, but the ''Ostsiedlung'' was as well. The
massive expulsion of German populations east of the
Oder-Neisse line in 1945-48 on the basis of decisions of the
Potsdam Conference were later justified by their beneficiaries as a rollback of the ''Drang nach Osten''.
Historical Eastern Germany was split between
Poland,
Russia, and
Lithuania and the boundaries of the German states (
East Germany and
West Germany) generally became that of before the ''Ostsiedlung'' began.
References
;Inline
1. Carlson, 233.
;General
★
Loan-Words from German, , Harold G., Carlson, American Speech, 1937
See also
★
Ostforschung
★
Expulsion of Germans after World War II
★
Generalplan Ost
★
Kulturkampf