
Gdansk
Portrait of a City
Peter Oliver Loew(Author)
Oxford University Press Inc
Published on 15. September 2024
Book
Hardback
296 pages
978-0-19-760386-4 (ISBN)
Description
It was where World War II began on September 1, 1939. Its wartime experience was immortalized in Guenter Grass`s The Tin Drum. Later it attracted worldwide attention as the site where workers` strikes led by Lech Walesa and the ensuing Solidarity movement led to the fall of Communism in Eastern Europe. Proud Hanseatic port, heart of the Baltic Sea trade, twice a "Free City," present-day liberal, cosmopolitan center: Gdansk's story between Germany and Poland is rich and fascinating.
As Peter Oliver Loew colorfully shows, Gdansk, also known as Danzig, is incomparable not only because of its recent past but also in how it has so uniquely embodied the tensions of the European continent over the last millennium. Situated geographically and culturally within these tensions, the city has developed a fascinating identity amid frequent conflict and shifting national affiliations. From prehistoric amber workers to early Slavic dukes, the conquest of the Teutonic Order, and submission to the Polish crown, Gdansk's development led to a remarkable flowering. Around 1650, no city between Moscow and Amsterdam was bigger or wealthier. As Poland's decline culminated with the Partitions of Poland, the city ultimately found itself annexed into Prussia. The destruction of 1945 brought an almost entirely new Polish population, who rebuilt the historic center, now part of the reconstituted Polish state. Through each historical rupture, and despite the efforts of distant courts and capitals to rewrite its history, Gdansk has maintained--or sometimes rediscovered--a connection to its own past. Today the port city on the Vistula once again thrives, drawing strength from its diversity and history.
Drawing on the latest research of German and Polish historians, Peter Oliver Loew vividly portrays the politics, economy, society, culture, and everyday life of a European city par excellence.
As Peter Oliver Loew colorfully shows, Gdansk, also known as Danzig, is incomparable not only because of its recent past but also in how it has so uniquely embodied the tensions of the European continent over the last millennium. Situated geographically and culturally within these tensions, the city has developed a fascinating identity amid frequent conflict and shifting national affiliations. From prehistoric amber workers to early Slavic dukes, the conquest of the Teutonic Order, and submission to the Polish crown, Gdansk's development led to a remarkable flowering. Around 1650, no city between Moscow and Amsterdam was bigger or wealthier. As Poland's decline culminated with the Partitions of Poland, the city ultimately found itself annexed into Prussia. The destruction of 1945 brought an almost entirely new Polish population, who rebuilt the historic center, now part of the reconstituted Polish state. Through each historical rupture, and despite the efforts of distant courts and capitals to rewrite its history, Gdansk has maintained--or sometimes rediscovered--a connection to its own past. Today the port city on the Vistula once again thrives, drawing strength from its diversity and history.
Drawing on the latest research of German and Polish historians, Peter Oliver Loew vividly portrays the politics, economy, society, culture, and everyday life of a European city par excellence.
Reviews / Votes
This is the best portrait of Gdansk ever written. Peter Oliver Loew vividly recounts the fascinating history of this Baltic town up to the present day. The reader gets a taste of what it meant to live there throughout centuries and can understand the unique position of the city located between Poland and Germany and claimed by both sides. * Pawel Machcewicz, Polish Academy of Sciences and founding director of the Museum of the Second World War in Gdansk * Comprehensive, balanced, accessible, this is a much-needed account of Gdansk's fascinating, over-thousand-year past. Peter Oliver Loew evocatively chronicles Germanic and Slavic influences, changing urban and maritime features, and the sometimes central role this city on the periphery has played in European and world history. * Patrice M. Dabrowski, author of Poland: The First Thousand Years * This is a long-overdue history of Gdansk, a mid-sized, relatively provincial city that for decades became a symbol of some of the most important events in twentieth-century European history. Loew beautifully weaves multiple chapters of the city's history into a powerful narrative of its uniqueness and ordinariness. This rich work should become a must-read for anyone interested in exploring Polish and European history and all its complexity not from the center but rather from its margins. * Anna Mueller, author of If the Walls Could Speak: Inside a Women's Prison in Communist Poland * ...Loew draws on both German and Polish scholarship to craft a nuanced, engaging portrait of a city that richly deserves international attention - also from maritime historians. * Justyna W. Mrozewicz, International Journal of Maritime History *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Illustrations
36 black and white halftones
Dimensions
Height: 245 mm
Width: 162 mm
Thickness: 25 mm
Weight
567 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-760386-4 (9780197603864)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Person
Peter Oliver Loew is Director of the German Institute of Polish Affairs and honorary professor at the Technical University of Darmstadt. The author of several books, he has been instrumental in the foundation of a forthcoming "German-Polish House" in Berlin to serve as a place of remembrance and information.
Content
Translator's Note Acknowledgments Introduction: A Space of European Memory 1: Amber-Gold: Shedding Light on Prehistory 2: Green and Blue: Fishers, Merchants, Dukes, 997-1308 3: Brick-Red: Danzig as a Part of the Teutonic State, 1308-1454 4: Wheat-Gold and Rye-Brown: Danzig's Golden Age, 1454-1655 5: Fading Hues, 1655-1793 6: Prussian Blue: Fall and Rise in the Nineteenth Century, 1793-1918 7: Against a Red Background: From the Free City of Danzig to the Second World War, 1918-1945 8: Variations in White and Red: Gda'nsk, <"Fairer than Ever Before,> " 1945-1980 9: Kaleidoscope: Into the Future with Solidarity and the Discovery of New Pasts Epilogue: Why Gda'nsk? Appendix: Names of Places Notes Selected Bibliography Index

