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- Published: 2008-02-12
- Uploaded: 2010-08-27
- Author: bloodlustsheep
Conventional long name | Reichsgau Wartheland |
---|---|
Common name | Reichsgauau Wartheland |
Subdivision | Gau |
Nation | Nazi Germany |
Image coat | Reichsadler.svg |
Image map caption | Map of Nazi Germany showing its administrative subdivisions, the Gaue and Reichsgaue |
Capital | Posen |
P1 | Second Polish Republic |
Flag p1 | Flag of Poland.svg |
S1 | People's Republic of Poland |
Flag s1 | Flag of Poland.svg |
Event start | Establishment |
Year start | 1939 |
Event end | Disestablishment |
Year end | 1945 |
Date event1 | 2 November 1939 |
Date event2 | 8 May 1945 |
Title leader | Gauleiter |
Leader1 | Arthur Greiser |
Year leader1 | 1939–1945 |
The bulk of the area had been annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia from 1793 until 1807 as South Prussia. From 1815 to 1849, the territory was within the autonomous Grand Duchy of Posen, which was the Province of Posen until Poland was reestablished in 1918–1919 following World War I.
After the invasion of Poland, the conquered territory was partitioned among four different Reichsgaue and the General Government area further east. Militärbezirk Posen was created in September 1939 and as Reichsgau Posen annexed by Germany on 8 October 1939, with SS Obergruppenfuhrer Arthur Greiser as the only Gauleiter. The name Reichsgau Wartheland was introduced on 29 January 1940.
The Wehrmacht established Wehrkreis XXI based at Poznań. This Wehrkreis was under the command of General der Artillerie Walter Petsel, and its primary operational unit was the XXXXVIII Panzer Korps. Poznań was responsible for the Militärische Unterregion-Hauptsitze at Poznań, Leszno, Inowrocław, Włocławek, Kalisz, and Łódź. It maintained training areas at Sieradz and Biedrusko.
In the Wartheland, the Nazis' goal was complete "Germanization", or political, cultural, social, and economic assimilation of the territory into the German Reich. In pursuit of this goal, the installed bureaucracy renamed streets and cities and seized tens of thousands of Polish enterprises, from large industrial firms to small shops, without payment to the owners.
The Germanization of the annexed lands also included an ambitious program to resettle Germans from the Baltic and other regions on farms and other homes formerly occupied by Poles and Jews. By the end of 1940, the SS had expelled 325,000 Poles and Jews from the Wartheland and the Polish Corridor and transported them to the General Government, confiscating their belongings. Many elderly people and children died en route or in makeshift transit camps such as those in the towns of Potulice, Smukal, and Toruń. In 1941, the Nazis expelled a further 45,000 people, and from autumn of that year they "began killing Jews by shooting and in gas vans, at first spasmodically and experimentally." Greiser wrote in November 1942: "I myself do not believe that the Führer needs to be asked again in this matter, especially since at our last discussion with regard to the Jews he told me that I could proceed with these according to my own judgement." By 1945 nearly half a million Volksdeutsche Germans had been resettled in the Gau.
Category:Former administrative regions of Greater Poland Wartheland, Reichsgau Wartheland Category:Nazi Gaue Category:Germany–Poland relations
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