Poland 4K - Beautiful Amber city Gdansk + Malbork Castle Drone Video. Dji Mavic Pro

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  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2024
  • A solo trip to Northern Poland- the beautiful Amber city of Gdansk and Malbork Castle! (UNESCO)
    2017/05/11~2017/05/14 for four days three nights
    Experienced Spring of Northern Poland
    Shot by Dji Mavic Pro with 4K
    波蘭Gdansk+ Malbork獨自旅行

Komentáře • 75

  • @olasiaaisalo264
    @olasiaaisalo264 Před 4 lety +5

    GDAŃSK - POLSKA.

  • @fqqm3404
    @fqqm3404 Před 6 lety +12

    Beautiful castle

  • @skiddokic8447
    @skiddokic8447 Před 5 lety +15

    Gdańsk es maravillosamente hermoso, me encanta ese lugar de Polonia.

    • @TWOCOWS1
      @TWOCOWS1 Před 3 lety +1

      Danzig, hombre, Danzig

    • @Johnnygold332
      @Johnnygold332 Před 2 lety +2

      @@TWOCOWS1 Gdanks polish City🇵🇱🇵🇱💪💪💪

  • @marcinerdmann5110
    @marcinerdmann5110 Před 7 lety +10

    The most adorable cities in Poland:
    1. Toruń (WORLD HERITAGE LIST)
    2. Gdańsk
    3. Jelenia Góra
    4. Poznań
    5. Tarnów
    6. Grudziądz

    • @Ki3rko
      @Ki3rko Před 7 lety

      Marcin Erdmann Sopot?

    • @Ki3rko
      @Ki3rko Před 7 lety

      Kraków?

    • @roberts6270
      @roberts6270 Před 6 lety +4

      Breslau
      Danzig
      Rosenberg
      Stettin
      Allenstein

    • @cloroxbleach9612
      @cloroxbleach9612 Před 6 lety +2

      T K Joseph stalin
      Vladimir Lenin
      Leon trotsky
      Iron felix
      Your great grandpa maybe?Nah otherwise he would have starved in the gulags.

    • @jankowalski5170
      @jankowalski5170 Před 6 lety +2

      und Auschwitz und ... czcams.com/video/tZz5hKaw2d4/video.html

  • @rosmariebrandstetter4067

    wonderful...thanks.

  • @robertmiler9227
    @robertmiler9227 Před 6 lety +8

    Wow! Gdańsk + Malbork! Wow!!! :-)

  • @Claude9211
    @Claude9211 Před 7 lety +4

    Thank’you, i’ll apreciate a lot your video.Thi summer I went in the same place....I love the Castel , and beautifull to inside

  • @robertkamil2279
    @robertkamil2279 Před 5 lety +3

    Great job!!! 💪👌❤
    Popozdrawiam w 2019 roku z Finlandii.
    Urodziłem się w Gdańsku 👍❤

  • @FernandoFornerod
    @FernandoFornerod Před 5 lety +2

    Great! Thank so much!

  • @alelawr
    @alelawr Před 6 lety +25

    Gdańsk (Polish) Kashubian: Gduńsk; German: Danzig is one of the oldest cities in Poland. Founded by the POLISH ruler Mieszko I in the 10th century (980´s), the city was for a long time part of POLISH Piast
    state either directly or as a fief. In 1308 the city became part of the Monastic State of the Teutonic Knightsuntil the 15th century (At the beginning of the 14th century, the region was plunged into war involving Poland and the Margraviate of Brandenburg. Because King Władysław I of Poland's troops were unable to relieve Gdańsk from a siege by
    Brandenburg, the city's Pomeranian judge, Bogusza, appealed to the Teutonic Knights of the Teutonic Monastic State of Prussia for assistance. The Knights expelled the Brandenburgers in 1308, but did not relinquish the city to Poland. The townspeople rebelled in an uprising bloodily repressed by the Knights. The royal garrison was attacked and expelled and the suburban populace was slaughtered, with the suburbs subsequently destroyed) Thereafter it became part of Poland again, although with increasing autonomy. A vital naval city for Polish grain trade it attracted people from all over the European
    continent, including Germans and Scots. The city was taken over by Prussia during the Second Partition of Poland in 1793 and subsequently lost its importance as a trading port. Briefly becoming a free city during Napoleonic wars, it was again Prussian after Napoleon's defeat, and later became part of the newly created German Empire.... To make it short - before the end of World War II, the Yalta Conference had agreed to place the city, under Polish name Gdańsk, under de facto administration of Poland, and this decision was confirmed at the Potsdam Conference... With the German defeat the planned genocide of the Polish population was averted and Poles returned to Gdańsk

    • @larsonpartisan2855
      @larsonpartisan2855 Před 6 lety +4

      You forgot to mention that Danzig was 97% German and voted to become part of the German Empire again, which was rejected by the poles.

    • @danzigdeutschegeschichtele9332
      @danzigdeutschegeschichtele9332 Před 5 lety +1

      Die polnische Bevölkerung hatte keinen Anteil an der Entwicklung Danzigs. Die polnischen Könige waren nur zum Schutz und zum Frieden "Verbündete". Die Deutschen hielten ihre souveränen Rechte in Ehren und verteidigten sie bis zur völkerrechtswidrigen Vertreibung. Danzig war stets eine deutsche Stadt und später eine freie deutsche Hansestadt, die einen Sonderstatus hatte. Die Einverleibung durch Polen war ein völkerrechtswidriger Akt. Die Ethnische Vertreibung der deutschen war beispiellos. Die Geschichtsfälschungen der heutigen Zeit sind erschreckend. Die schulische Aufklärung findet in der BRD nicht mehr statt. Vergessen ist die Parole unserer Tage. Die deutsche Geschichte Ostdeutschlands verschwindet.

    • @lblair1354
      @lblair1354 Před 5 lety +5

      @@larsonpartisan2855 Gdansk is Polish, Auschwitz is German - how about sticking to proven ? Auschwitz is 500% German, so stick to it. Lay off the Polish Gdansk.

    • @Maczeta_Pompa
      @Maczeta_Pompa Před 4 lety +2

      Larson Partisan u forgot to tell us the reason of it. Hmmmm... maybe germanization. Also sow me at least one German. Monument

    • @larsonpartisan2855
      @larsonpartisan2855 Před 4 lety +4

      @@Maczeta_Pompa Marienburg Castle. Biggest German Monument in modern day Poland , lol.

  • @PhilippePhotographie
    @PhilippePhotographie Před 6 lety +6

    Wow... Fantastic...! Piękny ...!

  • @fdorit
    @fdorit Před 6 lety +4

    O.m.g ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @milamedia491
    @milamedia491 Před 6 lety +2

    Dobre wideo, Gdańsk wygląda świetnie z lotu ptaka. Mam tylko jedną uwagę natury technicznej. Zauważyłem ,że nagrywasz na automatycznym balansie bieli co jest bardzo widoczne w wielu scenach. Polecam ustawienia manualne, filtry szare lub obróbkę w programach do edycji wideo a będzie sztos.

  • @Mirramour
    @Mirramour Před 4 lety +1

    amazing!

  • @arkadyzz8023
    @arkadyzz8023 Před 5 lety +4

    Dziękuję za Malbork

  • @PashaDefragzor
    @PashaDefragzor Před 6 lety +3

    Great

  • @hatofflab
    @hatofflab Před 6 lety +2

    Nice video. Have you had any troubles flying the drone in near Malbork Castle? I'll be going there next week and want to take some shots of my own.

  • @HaraldBecker
    @HaraldBecker Před 7 lety +4

    Klasse

  • @travellover8509
    @travellover8509 Před 4 lety +8

    Is actually disgusting, seeing all these German comments, this is why ww2 happend as Germany wanted all these polish cities. Stop with this take ,take mentality. I actually thought Germany had moved on from being aggressive, I guess not.

  • @beatabasiak3212
    @beatabasiak3212 Před 4 lety

    Super Film. May you send the film on Facebook and TV ?

  • @JoeDoeOutdoors
    @JoeDoeOutdoors Před 6 lety +2

    Hey great channel ☺ Keep it up!

  • @arkadyzz8023
    @arkadyzz8023 Před 5 lety +1

    👍👌👌✨✨

  • @timmo5192
    @timmo5192 Před 4 lety

    Hi I just read drone rules you can't fly over roads or In Malbork as near airport? I want to fly drone here myself.

  • @AntonioFlores-fz6zc
    @AntonioFlores-fz6zc Před 10 měsíci

    Novigrad in Real Life

  • @danzigdeutschegeschichtele9332

    Die Liste der Bürgermeister enthält die Bürgermeister der Stadt Danzig im heutigen Polen vom 14. Jahrhundert bis zur Gegenwart.
    Strukturen
    Danzig bestand im 14. und frühen 15. Jahrhundert aus drei Städten: der Rechtstadt, der Altstadt und der Jungstadt. Diese hatten eigene Stadtverwaltungen mit eigenen Bürgermeistern. 1457 wurden die Städte zusammengelegt.
    Jede Stadt hatte vier Bürgermeister, von denen einer als Präsident amtierte.
    Deutschordensstaat 1308-1454
    Rechtstadt
    1342-1347: Dettloff von der Osten
    1342-1354: Henrich Burmeister der Ältere
    1346-1355: Steffen von der Osten
    1354-1374: Hillebrand Müntzer
    1356-1360: Johan von Stein
    1359-1372: Johann Wallrabe der Ältere
    1361-1362: Casper Bock
    1362-1390: Gottschalck Naase
    1368-1387: Paul Jann
    1372-1385: Johann Wallrabe der Jüngere
    1379-1386: Johann Wackaw
    1381-1384: Nicklaus Gottsknecht
    1384-1392: Herman Rolberg
    1392-1405: Reinhold Hittfeld
    1395-1399: Lubbert Haacke
    1399-1404: Peter Fürstenau
    1402-1418: Tideman Huxer
    1405-1411: Conrad Letzkau
    1407-1410: Peter Vorraht
    1408-1411: Arnold Hecht
    1411-1417: Herman Hittfeld
    1412-1413: Albrecht Dödorff
    1413-1430: Gert von der Becke
    1415-1416: Steffen Plötzker
    (vorher 1436): Nicklaus Rogge
    1419-1433: Johann Beisener
    1430-1441: Peter Holste
    1431-1432: Albrecht Huxer
    1433-1446: Lucas Meckelfeld
    1433-1443: Heinrich Vorraht
    1436-1449: Meinert Cölmer
    1442-1456: Martin Cremon
    1445-1454: Albrecht Huxer
    1447-1480: Reinhold Niederhoff
    1452-1462: Herman Stargardt
    Altstadt
    1377 Walter Olsleger
    1377-1380 Claus Lange
    1399-1404 Matthias Stubbe
    1399-1405 Matthias Lange
    1405 Peter Schifhower
    1406-1407 Matthias Stubbe
    1418-1420 Johann Bloding
    1419-1437 Peter Becker
    1420-1436 Jordan Lovenstein
    1430-1433 Nicolaus Wilde
    1430-1434 Klaus Witte
    1437-1438 Hans Gödeke (Jodeke)
    1438-1454 Nicolaus Friedland
    1439-1448 Nicolaus Fischer
    1442-1454 Baltazar Gute
    1451-1454 Nicolaus Zankenczin
    1454 Martin Kandeler
    Jungstadt
    1400-1407 Siegfrid Koch
    1405-1407 Johann Zedeler
    1406? Herman Schröder
    1408? Herman Schröder
    1408 Johann Lepil
    1409 Siegfrid Koch
    1409 Fridrich Böttcher (= Fridrich Wittenburg)
    1410 Johann Lepil
    1410 Johann Monch
    1411 Siegfrid Koch
    1411-1414 Johann Zedeler
    1412 Hans Wittenburg
    1413-1414 Fridrich Wittenburg
    1415 Arnold Metzner
    1415 Peter Clettendorf
    1416-1417 Klaus Kiel
    1416 Michael Kosker
    1417-1418 Peter Clettendorf
    1418-1419 Michael Kosker
    1419-1420 Klaus Kiel
    1420-1422 Peter Clettendorf
    1421-1434 Walter Schönau
    1434 Paul Bener
    1435 Peter Stoltzefuß
    1435-1437 Heinrich Ewerd
    1436 Walter Schönau
    1437-1439 Paul Bener
    1438-1440 Walter Schönau
    1440-1441 Peter Stoltzefuß
    1441-1442 Paul Bener
    1442-1443 Augustin Glibitz
    1443-1444 Walter Schönau
    1444-1445 Paul Bener
    1445-1446 Augustin Glibitz
    1446-1447 Walter Schönau
    1447-1448 Paul Bener
    1448-1449 Augustin Glibitz
    1449-1452 Hans Wagemann
    1450 Walter Schönau
    1451-1454 Augustin Glibitz
    1453-1454 Nicolaus Stoltzefuss = Nicolaus Heyland
    Königreich Polen 1454-1791
    Königliches Preußen (Königreich Polen) 1454-1569
    1454-1461: Wilhelm Jordan
    1457-1461: Jacob Falcke
    1461-1475: Johann von Scheren
    1462-1478: Johann von Walde
    1462-1478: Johann Veere
    1470-1483: Philipp Bischoff
    1477-1483: Johann Angermünde
    1479-1501: Johann Ferber
    1483-1485: Marten Bock
    1484-1502: George Buck
    1484-1490: Johann Schewecke
    1489-1505: Henrich Falcke
    1492-1501: Henrich von Süchten
    1502-1513: George Mand
    1503-1512: Johann Schewecke der Jüngere
    1504-1513: Matthias Zimmerman
    1506-1507: Antoni Backelman
    1510-1526: Eberhard Ferber
    1513-1525: Greger Brand
    1514-1524: Henrich Wiese
    1517-1535: Philipp Bischoff
    1524-1529: Matthias Lange
    1525-1538: Cordt von Süchten
    1526-1535: Edward Niederhoff
    1526-1554: Johann von Werden
    1531-1547: George Schewecke
    1536-1539: Peter Behme
    1538-1549: Barthell Brand
    1540-1560: Tiedemann Giese der Jüngere
    1548-1577: Johann Brandes
    1550-1554: Johann Stutte
    1555-1588: Constantin Ferber
    1557-1578: Johann Proite
    1558-1576: Georg Kleefeld
    Königliches Preußen (Polen-Litauen) 1570-1792
    1577-1585: Reinhold Möllner
    1578-1592: George Rosenberg
    1581-1619: Johann von der Linde
    1586-1602: Daniel Zierenberg
    1589-1605: Constantin Giese
    1592-1612: Gerhard Brandes
    1603-1611: Johann Thorbecke
    1605-1614: Barthell Schachtmann
    1612-1616: Andreas Borkmann
    1612-1625: Johann Speymann
    1615-1617: Barthell Brandt
    1617-1629: Arnold von Holten
    1618-1636: Eggert von Kempen
    1619-1635: Valentin von Bodeck
    1626-1620: Ernst Kroll
    1630-1642: Johann Zierenberg
    1630-1631: Adrian von der Linde
    1632-1654: Constantin Ferber
    1636-1644: Hanss Rogge
    1637-1639: Johans Ernst Schröder
    1640-1649: Nicklas Pahl
    1643-1644: Elert von Bobart
    1645-1646: Daniel Falcke
    1645-1682: Adrian von der Linde
    1647-1654: Henrich Freder
    1650-1665: Friederich Ehler
    1655-1663: Nathanaël Schmieden
    1655-1673: George von Bömelen
    1664-1675: Nicklas von Bodeck
    1666-1685: Gabriel Krumhausen
    1677-1701: Christian Schröder
    1677-1686: Daniel Proite
    1683-1700: Barbiel Schuhman
    1686-1704: Constantin Ferber
    1692-1707: Johann Ernst von Schmieden
    1702-1707: Reinhold Wieder
    1704-1722: Andreas Borkman
    1707-1716: Friedrich Gottlieb Engelcke
    1708-1712: Joachim Hoyge
    1708-1740: Gabriel von Bömeln
    1712-1721: Ernst von der Linde
    1716-1710: Carl Ernst Bauer
    1720-1745: Johann Gottfried von Disseldorff
    1722-1720: Salomon Gabriel Schumann
    1723-1734: Gottfried Bentzmann
    1730-1739: Carl Groddeck
    1735-1757: Johann Wahl
    1740-1753: Carl Gottlieb Ehler
    1741-1746: Joachim Jacob Schwacher
    Christian Gabriel von Schröder (Kupferstich, 1764)
    1746-1748: Johann Carl Schwartzwald
    1746-1755: Nathanael Gottfried Ferber
    1750-1753: Fridrich Krüger
    1754: Christian Gabriel von Schröder (1692-1762)
    1754: Michael Schmidt
    1756: Johann Kenner
    ?: Johann Ernst von der Linde
    1762-1776: Gottlieb G. Weickhmann
    1763-1767: Daniel Gralath
    1777: Gottfried Schwartz
    1780-1793: Johann Gottfried Reyger
    1787: Johann Bentzmann
    1790: Zernecke
    1793: Eduard Friedrich von Conradi
    Königreich Preußen 1793-1806
    1794: von Lindenow
    Freistaat Danzig 1807-1814
    1807-1808: Carl Friedrich von Gralath
    1808-1810: Gottlieb Hufeland
    1810-1814: Johann Willhelm Wernsdorff
    Königreich Preußen 1814-1919
    1814-1849: Joachim Heinrich von Weickhmann
    1847-1862: Samuel Friedrich Schumann
    1850-1862: Carl August Groddeck
    1863-1891: Leopold von Winter
    1891-1896: Karl Adolf Baumbach
    1896-1902: Clemens Delbrück
    1903-1910: Heinrich Otto Ehlers
    1910-1918: Heinrich Scholtz († 8. Oktober 1918)
    Freie Stadt Danzig 1920-1939
    1920-1931: Heinrich Sahm (ab 1920 Präsident des Senats)
    1931-1933: Ernst Ziehm (Präsident des Senats)
    1933-1934: Hermann Rauschning (Präsident des Senats)
    1934-1939: Arthur Greiser (Präsident des Senats)
    Deutsches Reich 1939-1945
    1939-1945: Georg Lippke
    Polen -Danzig- (als Gdańsk) ab 1945
    Volksrepublik Polen 1945--1990
    1945-1946: Franciszek Kotus-Jankowski
    1946-1949: Bronisław Nowicki
    1949-1953: Piotr Stolarek
    1953-1954: Stanisław Schmidt
    1954-1958: Julian Cybulski
    1958-1963: Stanisław Schmidt
    1963-1969: Tadeusz Bejm
    1969-1973: Jan Nikołajew
    1973-1977: Andrzej Kaznowski
    1977-1981: Jerzy Młynarczyk
    1981-1989: Kazimierz Rynkowski
    1989-1990: Jerzy Pasiński
    Republik Polen seit 1990
    1990-1991: Jacek Starościak
    1991-1994: Franciszek Jamroż
    1994-1998: Tomasz Posadzki
    1998-2019: Paweł Adamowicz
    2019-: Aleksandra Dulkiewicz
    An den deutschen Bürgermeistern der deutschen alten Hansestadt Danzig (bis 1945) läßt sich am einfachsten feststellen, daß die Menschen Deutsche waren, die deutsche Sprache sprachen und immer politisch souverän waren. Die Freundschaft und nur die Freundschaft zum polnischen König waren die einzigen politischen Bande mit Polen. Die Stadt Danzig wie wir sie heute sehen steht auf deutschen Fundamenten, über viele Jahrhunderte wurde so eine einmalige Stadt erbaut.
    Weder unbesonnen noch furchtsam, daß war der Schwur der deutschen Bevölkerung.
    Wer heute nachts durch die alten Straßen geht spürt den Hauch der Jahrhunderte langen alten deutschen Vergangenheit.
    Freie deutsche Hansestadt Danzig (bis 1945)

  • @zanebokray
    @zanebokray Před 4 lety

    moja wersja czcams.com/video/7Dltu5v_Lbs/video.html )

  • @andiroth5344
    @andiroth5344 Před 6 lety +8

    Beautiful Amber city "DANZIG" and the castle "MARIENBURG" built by the German Teutonic Knights from the 13th century onwards.

    • @HerrRelke
      @HerrRelke Před 6 lety +17

      Gdańsk was Polish city and it was conquered by German Teutonic Knights in 14th century. Germans have slaughtered Polish population of this city. In 15th century, city was regained by Kingdom of Poland.

    • @andiroth5344
      @andiroth5344 Před 6 lety +4

      That's just another lie to justify the ethnic cleansing of the Eastern Germans from Eastern Germany by the Polish. Eastern Germany was settled by millions of Eastern Germans since 100AD and was called Magna Germania (Germany) while at that time the ancestors of today's Polish were still roaming the Mongolian steppe. Cities like Danzig, Kolberg, Breslau were built and settled almost entirely by Germans until the Polish stole the ancestral homeland of the Eastern Germans.

    • @lukassky9395
      @lukassky9395 Před 6 lety +5

      Go back to school moron.

    • @kamilvariatio6059
      @kamilvariatio6059 Před 6 lety +10

      You forgot to mention the old Slavic city Bralin. Currently under german occupation.

    • @jankowalski5170
      @jankowalski5170 Před 6 lety +1

      +Andi Roth - The ethnic cleansing ? czcams.com/video/tZz5hKaw2d4/video.html

  • @alelawr
    @alelawr Před 6 lety +3

    TO Robert S: Who are the REAL Germans (Saxons) BASED ON DNA AND HISTORY ( and not fairy tales cooked up by the Nazi lovers) - the ancient Jews (some of them, of course) came to Central Europe (read Germany). They mix their genes with local (Germanic) women: the word
    ‘Ashkenaz’ all throughout Jewish Medieval literature and it means one thing and one thing only: Germany. The AsheNAZI are Jews living in Germany and most specifically, the Jews living in what was known as Old Saxony. And Old Saxony is that part of
    Germany where the Saxons, who invaded Britain and‘utterly destroyed’ the druidic Celtic culture in part of Britain where is England now. The Saxons were (are?) the most brutal, savage and blood thirsty of all the Germanic barbarian
    tribes and the etymology of their name might perhaps shed some light on who they really are. Some want to believe the Saxons means the ‘son of Isaac’ but traditionally, it literally means”warrior with knives”or “dagger-men”. As far as I know, there was only one other group of people known as dagger-men: the Sicarii. In other words, Saxons can be and perhaps should be translated as Sicarii. It is the exact same meaning after all.The Saxons-Sicarii-Ashkenazi triangle could explain many things among which:
    1 - why the Kabbalah which was meant to subvert and destroy the Italian and French societies failed miserably while in
    Germany and especially in Old Saxony-Ashkenaz, its success exceeded expectations.
    2 - why the Reformation, triggered by the Saxon Martin Luther, could only have started in Northern Germany-Ashkenaz,
    why it took by storm all the Northern Germanic countries, Southern part of Britain included (England), while Latin and Slavic countries resisted it.
    3 - why there are so many similarities in mindset between the Jews, the Germans and the Anglo-Saxons and why the Anglo-Saxons have been Judea’s favorite attack dog for centuries now.
    I shoud add #4 - Why so much similarities betweet Jews and Germans - their obsession about their "master race" , or "choseness" (what make them above anybody else) ,desire to rule over the rest of the nations, thriving by stealing, looting, pillaging, always bloodthirty and greedy for lands and goods that belong to someone else !? (Beside Germany there is only one other country with so much similarity - look at Israel - and what they are doing to Palestinians)
    Hitler was so obsessed with his imaginary "Arian" race, and in fact - Germans/Saxons(or just be honest - AshkeNAZIS) have no Arian blood at all! The REAL ARIANS - you like it or not - are the Slavic nations! The highest % of Arian blood you can find only amongst Poles and Russians!

  • @TWOCOWS1
    @TWOCOWS1 Před 4 lety +5

    amazing how these historic German cities have been appropriated by the Poles and presented as if they were not fully German (Danzig and Marienburg) for 700 years until 1945!! All the buildings they show, including those gingerbread houses, dockyards, churches--EVERYTHING--are German!!! Rewriting history, the Polish style

    • @UnknownBeats
      @UnknownBeats Před 4 lety +3

      Ty niedouczony bachorze.

    • @Mjak-yd3og
      @Mjak-yd3og Před 3 lety +4

      Well, so what?
      Strasbourg was built by the Germans, but now it is a French city. Hagia Sophia was a great church built by the Greeks in Constantinople, but is now a mosque in Istanbul, Turkey. The Germans might not have started the war, then Gdańsk would still be a German city. But the Germans lost the war and they lost Gdańsk.
      And if you feel so sorry that Poles are happy that Gdańsk is such a beautiful city, then maybe compare Kaliningrad (Königsberg) in Russia and Gdańsk. Both cities were destroyed during the war. The Poles rebuilt Gdańsk and now it is a beautiful city, and the Russians razed Königsberg to the ground and built the Soviet city Kaliningrad. And it happened because Königsberg was never a Russian city, and Gdańsk was founded by Poles in the 10th century and was a Polish city for 700 years, and a German city for only 300 years.

    • @TWOCOWS1
      @TWOCOWS1 Před 3 lety +2

      @@Mjak-yd3og spoken like a Polish nationalist bigot would speak. By the way, you guys still don't have any Polish names for these German cities, using comical mispronunciations for them. "Woroclaw" for Breslau, "Gdansk" for Danzing. (The oldest name was Bratislava for Breslau, and Gdansk simply mean "Danish", because the Danes first built it. So, stop speaking ignorantly. It is Polish now, and I love Polish people. That is the fact. they are kindest, most helpful people. They fully deserve to get those territories and cities, and no need for any false histories

    • @TWOCOWS1
      @TWOCOWS1 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Mjak-yd3og spoken like a Polish nationalist bigot would speak. By the way, you guys still don't have any Polish names for these German cities, using comical mispronunciations for them. "Woroclaw" for Breslau, "Gdansk" for Danzing. (The oldest name was Bratislava for Breslau, and Gdansk simply mean "Danish", because the Danes first built it. So, stop speaking ignorantly. It is Polish now, and I love Polish people. That is the fact. they are kindest, most helpful people. They fully deserve to get those territories and cities, and no need for any false histories

    • @Mjak-yd3og
      @Mjak-yd3og Před 3 lety +4

      @@TWOCOWS1 Gdańsk and the Danes? What are you talking about? And I am so ignorant? in VIII and IX there was a port of Truso near today's Elbląg where a lot of Scandinavians lived. But these were territories belonging to the Prussians - the Baltic peoples who were conquered several hundred years later by the German Teutonic Order.
      Gdańsk had nothing to do with the Danes and was founded by the Polish prince Mieszko in 980, and the Slavic population lived in it. Gdańsk was granted city rights in 1236 by the Pomeranian prince Świętopełek II. After 1308, Gdańsk became a German city when it was captured by the Teutonic Knights. The Polish population was murdered and replaced by colonists brought from Germany. But those German inhabitants of Gdańsk and all Prussia rebelled against their Teutonic rulers in 1454. The delegation of the Confederation of Prussia petitioned the Polish King with a request to regain power over Prussia as the LEGAL ruler. The "Prussian Incorporation Act" was signed in Krakow, recognizing Gdańsk and Pomerania as part of the Kingdom of Poland. The Polish army in the war with the Order was financed by Gdańsk burghers. The war ended in 1466 with the defeat of the Order. Together with the Second Peace of Thorns (1466), Pomerenia and Gdańsk became a province of Poland known as Royal Prussia. And so it was until 1795. At that time, Gdansk was inhabited by Germans, Scots, Dutch, Kashubians and Poles, but the city was Polish, just like Trento and Bolzano are Italian today, although mainly Germans live there.
      Whereas Wrocław was founded by the Czech prince Vratislav in 921 and the Czechs call it Vratislav. As far as I know, the Czechs are a Slavic nation and are not Germans. After Silesia was incorporated into Poland (1000 years ago), Vratislaw was named Wroclaw in Polish. In the 12th and 13th centuries, many settlers from Germany - knights, townspeople and peasants came to Silesia and Wrocław. But still Wrocław was a city belonging to the Kingdom of Poland, and the rulers of Wrocław were the Dukes of the Piast dynasty - the Polish royal dynasty. In the 14th century, the Duchy of Wrocław and other duchies of Silesia were incorporated into the Kingdom of Bohemia and remained a Czech city until 1740. The kings of Bohemia were Luxemburg, Jagiellons, and Habsburgs, the inhabitants were mostly Germans, but Wrocław was called Vratislav or Wratislav. Only after the conquest of Silesia by the Prussians in 1740, the name was changed to Breslau. Interestingly, the German description of Prussia from 1819 mentions two names of the city - Polish and German - in the fragment "Breslau (Polnisch Wraclaw)"