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This week’s episode is about the Teutonic Knights and was suggested by Mark, right up the road from me in Wiesbaden, Germany. The Teutonic Knights are known in German as the Orden der Brüder vom Deutschen Haus St. Marien in Jerusalem. They were formed in 1198, during the Third Crusade, to run a field hospital in Acre of Akka, in Israel. Like their counterparts, the Knights Templar, the Teutonics had holdings all over Europe. However, unlike the Templars, there was a much stronger ethnic identity with the Teutonics. At the time of their establishment, there was already a strong French and English presence in the Holy Land. With the coming of more German forces, the Teutonics were created to care for them. The Teutonis combined the military elements of the Templars and the non-military elements of the Hospitallers, in taking care of charity.
The formation was a few years in the making and had the backing of three popes. Pope Clement III approved the order in 1191. Pope Celestine III granted the order more privileges in 1196 and Pope Innocent III made the Teutonics a full military order in 1198.
In 1226, their leader, Grand Master Hermann von Salza became the lord of Southern Prussia. Part of the deal was that the Teutonics would then defend the Christian Polish areas against pagan Prussian tribes. Eleven years later, in 1237 the order acquired Livonia, which is comprised of modern day Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania. In 1242, the Teutonics invaded Orthodox Christian Russia, but the Russian army, under the lead of Alexander Nevsky, pushed them back. This battle helped show that the Teutonics were not just fighting to eliminate paganism and promote Christianity, but they had an underlying aim of conquering lands in general. Granted, Russia followed a variation of Western European Christianity and this put Eastern Europe and Western Europe at odds with each other over hundreds of years.
The success of the Russians to push back the Teutonics has been a source of pride for centuries. There is a film, made in 1938, called Alexander Nevsky, which depicts the battle and was directed by Sergei Eisenstein. For those of you who follow old movies, Eisenstein is famous for the 1925 silent film, Battleship Potemkin. Even today a friend of mine has seen the Russian dislike for the Teutonics continues. My friend in the SCA portrays a Teutonic Knight and when he was dressed in his full outfit with the Teutonic Cross on his surcoat, he came across some Russians who were also in a Medieval recreation group. In their eyes, he was scum of the earth for even dressing as he did. This isn’t to say the average Russian youth on the streets hates Teutonics, but those who study the history and have a strong sense of Russian pride, don’t have good thoughts about the old German order.
Jumping back to 1231, “the Teutonic Knights crossed the Vistula and occupied the lands to the east in a series of campaigns extending over the next thirty years. The pagan inhabitants were converted at the point of the sword or driven off the land and replaced by German settlers.” (Tierney 380) The Vistula is the longest river in Poland, so this is when the Teutonics crossed through Poland and began their assault on the Baltic region.
In 1291, the Christian rule of Jerusalem ended, as the Muslims retook control. The Teutonics then moved their base of operations from Acre, to Venice, Italy. However, the Teutonics began to feel the same pressure the Templars did, by the Church and moved to safer grounds in Prussia, in 1309. By the 1330s, the Teutonics began selling their possessions elsewhere in Europe, so they were focused in southern Germany. They colonized Prussia and established thousands of towns. (Cantor 405)
After they moved out of the rest of Western Europe, the Teutonics put their sole interest in Eastern Europe with conquering and control. They alienated their former ally, Poland and even when Lithuania converted to Christianity in 1386, they did not ease up on the Lithuanians. Hostilities grew to the point, that the Lithuanian Grand Duke, Wladyslaw made an alliance with the Teutonics’ enemies. In 1410, a combined force of Lithuanians, Poles, Hungarians, Cossacks, Tatars and a few other groups, crucshed the Teutonic Knights in battle. They continued to hold on to Prussia until 1467, when they lost to Poland and only held Prussia as a vassal for Poland.
Their status changed again in 1525, when the Grand Master, Albrecht von Brandenburg converted to Lutheranism. Now the Teutonics became a strictly secular order and temporarily served as Albrecht’s military when he was made the Duke of Prussia.
“After the nationalization of it’s remaining possessions in France following the French Revolution and its dissolution throughout the Napoleonic empire in 1809, it survived only in Austria, and there only covertly.” (Cantor 405) In 1809, Napoleon officially abolished the order.
The order was officially reestablished in 1834, as the Order of the Teutonic Knights and served no military purpose what-so-ever. (Gies 135) They were strictly a charitable organization. They are still based in Austria, though there has been a branch in Germany, since 1929.
I’m not going to suggest a book this week, but a film instead. Die Kreutzritter, or The Crusaders in English.
Ed. Cantor, Norman, The Pimlico Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages. London: Pimlico, 1999.
Gies, Frances, The Knight in History. New York: Harper Perennial, 1984.
Tierney, Brian, Western Europe in the Middle Ages: 300-1475. Boston: McGraw-Hill College, 1999.