Introduction
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For Arno Surminski on East Prussian mixed blood, see his
Polninken oder Eine deutsche Liebe
(Hamburg 1984), pp. 21 – 2.
1: The Whispering Past
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What remains of the German Königsberg is described in Baldur Köster,
Königsberg: Architectur aus Deutscher Zeit
(Husum 2000); Yuri Ivanov,
Königsberg und Umgebung
(Dülmen 1994); and Veniamin Eremeev,
Monuments of Defensive Architecture
(Kaliningrad 2006). For a guide to Kaliningrad today, see Neil Taylor et al.,
Baltic Capitals
(Chalfont St Peter 2001).
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Otto Lasch published a self-justifying account of the siege in
So fiel Königsberg
(Munich 1959).
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For the House of Commons debate, see Hansard HC vol. 406, 15 December 1944, cols 1477 – 1578. Also Matthew Frank,
Expelling the Germans
(Oxford 2007), p. 75.
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‘this enormous crime’: George Orwell,
Collected Essays
, vol. 3 (London 1968), p. 327.
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Kant’s end features in Manfred Kuehn,
Kant
(Cambridge 2001), pp. 413 – 22. Also Zinovy Zinik, ‘Letter from Kaliningrad’,
Times Literary Supplement
, 26 April 2002.
26 – 27
Alexander Solzhenitsyn,
Prussian Nights
, trans. Robert Conquest (New York 1977). See also Michael Scammell,
Solzhenitsyn
(London 1985) pp. 137 – 48 for the writer’s East Prussian war experiences.
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See Michael Wieck,
A Childhood under Hitler and Stalin
(Madison 2003).
2: A Frontier Land
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For Knox on India, see his speeches in the House of Commons: Hansard HC vol. 252, 13 May 1931, cols,12 81 – 2.
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‘A bold raid into East Prussia’: The National Archives, FO 371/1218 f.387.
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See Knox’s report. FO 371/1218 f 392-411.
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‘Eastern Germany lies outside the range’: Baedeker,
Northern Germany
(London 1913), p. xvii.
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Typescript of Eulenburg’s memoir
Drei Freunde
, in the possession of his descendants at Schloss Hertefeld. I am very grateful to Professor John Röhl for letting me see this.
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For the photograph of Alexander von Dohna and Mr Konarzewski, see Alexander Fürst zu Dohna-Schlobitten,
Erinnerungen eines alten Ostpreußen
(Berlin 1989), p. 327.
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The Duke Albrecht manuscript was lot 25, Sotheby’s London Manuscript sale 7 July 2009.
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Diesch’s obituary: Walter Pause in ‘Nachruf auf Carl Diesch’ in
Tübinger Frankenzeitung
, no. 95, July 1957, p. 16.
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‘common error’: see ‘Prussians aren’t Slavs’ letter from Professor Charles E. Townsend,
New York Times
, 7 September 1991.
52 Kultur
: Fritz Gause,
Die Geschichte der Stadt Königsberg
(Cologne 1968 – 72), vol. 1, p. 5.
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‘meritorious’: ibid., vol. 2, pp. 311 – 13.
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For Knox’s dispatch, see The National Archives, WO 106/1039.
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‘wonderful’ – the start of a ‘great adventure’: Alfred Knox,
With the Russian Army
(London 1921
)
, 1, p. 40.
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Gause on changing names: see Gause,
Die Geshichte der Stadt Königsberg
, vol. 3, p. 3.
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Januschau, lieutenant and ten men: see Elard von Oldenburg-Januschau,
Erinnerungen
(Leipzig 1936), pp. 109 – 11.
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For Lehndorff in 1945, see Lehndorff,
East Prussian Diary
(London 1963), pp. 185 – 249.
3: ‘Talent is a duty’
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‘wept and wept and wept’: Käthe Kollwitz,
Die Tagebücher
(Munich 2007 edn), 1 August 1919, p. 433.
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‘I want to be wild’: ibid., 18 August 1910, p. 80.
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‘Don’t worry, Mother’: Elizabeth Prelinger,
Käthe Kollwitz
(Washington DC 1992), p. 155.
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‘kitsch’: Kollwitz,
Die Tagebücher,
19 August 1909, p. 44.
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‘weeping, weeping’: ibid., 11 August 1914, p. 153.
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‘like Goethe, “I saw the world with eyes filled with love”’: ibid., 27 August 1914, p. 157.
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‘Russia remains’: ibid., p. 157.
4: A Polished Helmet
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‘as so many Russians are’: Knox,
With the Russian Army
, vol. 1, p. 46.
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‘I sit like an old woman’: Wolfram Pyta
, Hindenburg: Herrschaft zwischen Hohenzollern und Hitler
(Munich 2007), p. 42.
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‘Tannenberg! A word pregnant’: Marshal [Paul] von Hindenburg,
Out of my Life
(London 1920), p. 92.
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‘I believe your old man may become famous’: Pyta,
Hindenburg
, p. 55.
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‘We had an ally’: Janusz Tycner,
Auf den Spuren von Tannenberg 1914
(Warsaw 2008), p. 51.
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For statistics of 1914 destruction, see Andreas Kossert,
Ostpreußen, Geschichte und Mythos
(Munich 2007), p. 202, and Kossert,
Masuren
(Munich 2001), p. 236.
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Tilsit, ‘educated’ man and the Lesch story: Tycner,
Auf den Spuren von Tannenberg 1914,
pp. 75 – 81.
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‘the position was very critical’: Knox,
With the Russian Army
, vol. 1, p. 173.
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‘nodal points’: Scammell,
Solzhenitsyn
, p. 730.
5: The Grieving Parents
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‘It is ugly here, very ugly’: Hannelore Fischer (ed.),
Käthe Kollwitz: Die trauernden Eltern. Ein Mahnmal für den Frieden
(Cologne 1999), p. 72.
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‘All a fraud’: ibid., pp. 72 – 3.
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‘the English fellow’: ibid., pp. 72 – 3.
6: Ober-Ost
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‘unbearable demands’: quoted in F. L. Carsten,
A History of the Prussian Junkers
(Aldershot 1989), pp. 124 – 5.
100 – 1
‘the worst thing since Tannenberg’: Knox,
With the Russian Army
, vol. 1, p. 241.
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‘If ever there has been a Government’: ibid., p. 334.
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‘My boy, I am with you’: Kollwitz,
Die Tagebücher
, 12 November 1914, p. 175.
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‘faithful’: ibid, 26 December 1914, p. 180.
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‘hard, awkward, haggard’: quoted ibid., note to diary entry for 10 July 1917, p. 821.
7: ‘Seed corn is not for harvesting’
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‘Russia is a big country’: Knox,
With the Russian Army
, vol. 2, p. 569.
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‘a repulsive individual’: ibid., pp. 712 – 13.
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‘This is a type of British officer’: quoted in Peter Fleming,
The Fate of Admiral Kolchak
(London 1963), p. 129.
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‘Seed corn is not for harvesting’: Kollwitz,
Die Tagebücher
, October 1918, p. 840n.
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‘good and calm’: ibid., 6 November 1917, p. 339.
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‘Bravo Hindenburg’: ibid., 11 November 1918, p. 381.
8: East Prussia’s Versailles
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In 2003, a critic: see Gerrit Walther, ‘Rechnerdaten zum Rittergut’,
Frank furter Allgemeine Zeitung
, 20 October 2003, p. 38. The
Simplicissimus
caricature is shown in Dohna-Schlobitten,
Erinnerungen
, p. 21.
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For the Schlobitten collection, see Dohna-Schlobitten,
Erinnerungen
, p. 21, and also Carl Grommelt and Christine von Mertens,
Das Dohnasche Schloss Schlobitten in Ostpreussen
(Stuttgart 1962), in which Alexander von Dohna wrote the chapter on coins.
118 – 19
For photographs of little boy and shopkeeper Fürst, see Dohna-Schlobittten,
Erinnerungen
, pp. 10 and 319.
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‘Proletarians of the World Unite’: ibid., p. 84.
9: ‘Names that are named no more’
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‘Dodo’ refused to give up her religion: for Marion Dönhoff’s view, see Kilian Heck and Christian Thielmann (eds),
Friedrichstein: Das Schloss der Grafen von Dönhoff in Ostpreussen
(Munich 2006), p. 79.
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Marion Dönhoff wrote about her 1989 visit to Kaliningrad
in ‘Reise ins verschlossene Land oder: eine Fahrt für und mit Kant’,
Die Zeit
, no. 36, 1 September 1989.
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‘I didn’t cry when I was born’: Yuri Ivanov,
Von Kaliningrad nach Königsberg
(Leer 1991), p. 125.
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August’s letters are cited in Marion Dönhoff,
Preußen: Maß und Maßlosigkeit
(Berlin 1994), pp. 8 – 10.
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‘loved’ the place: Klaus Harpprecht,
Die Gräfin: Marion Dönhoff
(Hamburg 2008), p. 91.
10: A Lost Victory
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‘Who rules in Januschau?’: Oldenburg-Januschau,
Erinnerungen
, p. 208.
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‘faithful ones … hasten to my aid!’: ‘Hindenburg’s Call to Arms’,
The Times
, 18 February 1919, p. 7.
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For Walter and Johannes Krüger and their design, see Jürgen Tietz,
Das Tannenberg-Nationaldenkmal
(Berlin 1999), particularly pp. 47 – 85.
11: Fallen Oak Leaves
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‘It is enough’: Käthe Kollwitz,
Die Tagebücher
, notes on July 1925, p. 887n.
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‘soulless’: ibid., 22 October 1929, p. 645.
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‘Yes, yes’: ibid., 14 August 1932, p. 669.
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‘The war was not a pleasant affair’: ibid., July 1932, p. 667.
12: The Need for Order
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‘The Russians were just too simple’: quoted in review ‘An Attaché with the Russian Army’,
Times Literary Supplement
, 24 November 1921, p. 759.
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For Knox’s adoption meeting and Desborough speech, see
Bucks Free Press
, 17 October 1924. Other speeches about
Bolshevism etc. are quoted in ibid., 24 July and 10 October 1924.
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‘completely uneducated’:
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
, entry for Woodhouse (née Bousher), Vera Florence Annie, Lady Terrington.
13: Kantgrad
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‘the world must make up its mind’: ‘Kant Bicentenary’,
The Times
, 23 April 1924, p. 17.
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For Duisburg lectures on Kant, see Lorenz Grimoni and Martina Will (eds),
Immanuel Kant: Erkenntnis, Freiheit, Frieden
(Husum 2004).
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‘To brag of one’s country’: quoted in Isaiah Berlin,
Three Critics of the Enlightenment
(London 2000), p. 181.
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‘I am not here to think’: quoted in Isaiah Berlin,
The Crooked Timber of Humanity
(London 1990), p. 223.
14: ‘May every discord break against this monument’
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‘The accusation that Germany was responsible’: ‘Germany and War Guilt’,
The Times
, 19 September 1927, p. 12.
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‘who have their stronghold in eastern Prussia’: ‘The Tannenberg Speech’,
The Times
, 20 September 1927, p. 14.
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‘quite attractive’: quoted in Andreas Dorpalen,
Hindenburg and the Weimar Republic
(Princeton 1964), p. 432.
171 – 2
‘the affairs of the notorious East Prussian landowner’: Horace Rumbold to Sir John Simon in
Documents on British Foreign Policy 1919 – 1939,
2nd series, vol. 4 (London 1960), p. 393.
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‘accomplished’: ‘A Tannenberg Parade’,
The Times
, 28 August 1933, p. 9.
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‘When I pursue my memories’: ibid.
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‘the last triumph of the old army’: ‘Hindenburg’s funeral’,
The Times
, 8 August 1934, p. 10.
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‘where President Hindenburg rests’: Baedeker,
Germany
(London 1936), p. xiv.
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‘one of the noblest war memorials’: Bernard Newman,
Baltic Roundabout
(London 1939), p. 229.