In 1255, the Teutonic Knights establish the …

Years: 1255 - 1255

In 1255, the Teutonic Knights establish the city of Königsberg, naming it in honor of Ottokar II of Bohemia, situated on the Pregolya River near where it empties into the Vislinsky (Wislany) Lagoon of the Baltic Sea, on the foundations of a destroyed Sambian settlement known as Tvanksta. (Eventually a capital of the monastic state of the Teutonic Knights, the Duchy of Prussia, and the German province of East Prussia, the seaport is today the administrative center of Kaliningrad Oblast, the Russian exclave between Poland and Lithuania on the Baltic Sea.)

The Order of the Teutonic Knights, having moved to Transylvania in 1211 to help defend Hungary against the Cumans after Christian forces were defeated in the Middle East, had been expelled in 1225 after allegedly attempting to place themselves under papal instead of Hungarian sovereignty.

Following the Golden Bull of Rimini, which bestowed on the Order a special imperial privilege for the conquest and possession of Prussia, the Order’s Grand Master Hermann von Salza and Duke Konrad I of Mazovia had made a joint invasion of "Old Prussia" in 1226 to Christianize the Baltic Old Prussians in the Prussian Crusade.

 

 

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