Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Chełmno Voivodeship

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1466–1793
  

Area
  
4,654 km²

Capital
  
Chełmno Voivodeship

Political subdivisions
  
Two lands divided into 7 counties

The Chełmno Voivodeship (Polish: Województwo chełmińskie) was a unit of administrative division and local government in the Kingdom of Poland since 1454/1466 until the Partitions of Poland in 1772/1795. Together with the Pomeranian and Malbork Voivodeships and the Prince-Bishopric of Warmia it formed the historical province of Royal Prussia. Its capital was at Chełmno (German: Kulm).

Contents

History

The Land of Chełmno (later known in German as Kulmerland) had been part of the Polish Duchy of Masovia since 1138. It was occupied by pagan Old Prussian tribes in 1216, who struggled against their Christianization instigated by Bishop Christian of Oliva. After several unsuccessful attempts to reconquer Chełmno, Duke Konrad I of Masovia in 1226 called for support by the Teutonic Knights, who indeed approached and started a Prussian campaign, after the duke promised them the unshared possession of the Chełmno territory as part of the Order's State.

In the course of the Order's decline after the 1410 Battle of Grunwald, the citizens of Chełmno, Toruń (Thorn) and Lubawa (Löbau) joined the uprising of the Prussian Confederation, which sparked the Thirteen Years' War between the Knights and the Kingdom of Poland. After the Order's defeat, the Chełmno Land fell back to Poland according to the Second Peace of Thorn and together with the adjacent Michelauer land in the east formed the Chełmno Voivodeship of the Polish Crown, since the 1569 Union of Lublin part of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.

The voivodeship was annexed by Prussia during the First Partition of Poland in 1772, except for the city of Toruń, which was not incorporated into the Province of West Prussia until the 1793 Second Partition.

Administration

Voivodeship Governor (Wojewoda) seat:

  • Chełmno
  • Regional council (sejmik generalny)

  • Grudziądz
  • Regional councils (sejmik poselski i deputacki)

  • Kowalewo
  • Radzyń
  • Administrative division:

  • Chełmno Land, (Ziemia Chełmińska), Chełmno
  • Chełmno County, (Powiat Chełmiński), Chełmno
  • Toruń County, (Powiat Toruński), Toruń
  • Grudziądz County, (Powiat Grudziądzki), Grudziądz
  • Radzyń County, (Powiat Radzyński), Radzyń
  • Kowalewo County, (Powiat Kowalewski), Kowalewo
  • Michałowo Land, (Ziemia Michałowska), Lubawa
  • Brodnica County, (Powiat Brodnicki), Brodnica
  • Nowe Miasto County, (Powiat Nowomiejki), Nowe Miasto Lubawskie
  • Voivodes

    1. Augustyn z Szewy, 1454-1455
    2. Gabriel Bażyński, 1455-1474
    3. Ludwik Mortęski, 1475-1480
    4. Mikołaj Dąbrowski, 1480-1483
    5. Karol z Napola, 1484-1495
    6. Jan Dąbrowski, 1498-1513
    7. Jan Luzjański, 1514-1551
    8. Stanisław Kostka, 1551-1555
    9. Jan Działyński, 1556-1583
    10. Mikołaj Działyński, 1584-1604
    11. Maciej Konopacki, 1605-1611
    12. Ludwik Mortęski, 1611-1615
    13. Stanisław Działyński, 1615-1615
    14. Jan Jakub Wejher, 1618-1626
    15. Melchior Wejher, 1626-1643
    16. Mikołaj Wejher, 1643-1647
    17. Jan Działyński, 1647-1648
    18. Jan Kos, 1648-1662
    19. Piotr Działyński, 1663-1668
    20. Jan Gniński, 1668-1680
    21. Michał Działyński, 1681-1687
    22. Jan Kos (died 1702),1688-1702
    23. Tomasz Działyński, 1702-1714
    24. Jakub Zygmunt Rybiński, 1714-1725
    25. Franciszek Bieliński, 1725-1732
    26. Jan Ansgary Czapski 1732-1738
    27. Michał Wiktor Bieliński, 1738-1746
    28. Zygmunt Kretkowski, 1746-1766
    29. Franciszek Stanisław Hutten-Czapski, 1766-1802

    References

    Chełmno Voivodeship Wikipedia


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