Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Kaliningrad
Episode Date: November 8, 2025Located on the Baltic Sea, sandwiched between the nations of Lithuania and Poland, is the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad. Kaliningrad, as it is today, does not have a deep history. For most of its hi...story, it was known as Königsberg. The reason it exists at all dates back to the Teutonic Knights in the Middle Ages and the aftermath of two world wars in the 20th century. Today, its status is unique to say the least, and it has the potential to become a geopolitical flashpoint. Learn more about Kaliningrad and its history on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Mint Mobile Get your 3-month Unlimited wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com/eed Stash Go to get.stash.com/EVERYTHING to see how you can receive $25 towards your first stock purchase. Newspaper.com Go to Newspapers.com to get a gift subscription for the family historian in your life! Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Located on the Baltic Sea, sandwiched between the nations of Lithuania and Poland,
is the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad.
Klinenigrad, as it exists today, does not have a deep history.
For most of its history, it was known as Kuhnenzburg.
The reason it exists at all dates back to the Teutonic Knights in the Middle Ages
and the aftermath of two world wars in the 20th century.
Today, its status is unique to say the least,
and it has the potential to become a geopolitical flashpoint.
Learn more about Klinnigrad.
and its history on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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down the right-wing cult spiral in a search.
for salvation. To understand how Kaliningrad became a Russian ex-slave, we have to go way back in time.
The region currently known as Kaliningrad is situation around the Pragolia River. The region was
originally inhabited by a group known as the Old Prussians, a Baltic tribe with their own
language and pagan culture. They spoke Old Prussian, which was a Western Baltic language closely
related to Lithuanian and Latvian, but now extinct. Before their conquest in the 13th century,
the old Prussians were organized in clan-based societies,
practiced a polytheistic religion centered on nature and ancestor worship,
and were known for farming, amber, trading, and occasional raids on neighboring lands.
It should be noted that the old Prussians were not a Germanic people,
despite the later association of the name with the Kingdom of Prussia.
In the 13th century, the Teutonic Knights expanded along the southeastern Baltic coast during the Northern Crusades.
The Northern Crusades were a series of Christian military campaigns from the late 12th to 14th centuries
in which German, Danish, and Swedish forces, along with the papacy-backed Teutonic and Livonian
Knights, sought to conquer and convert the pagan Baltic and Finnic peoples around the southeastern
Baltic Sea, including the Prussians, Livonians, Lithuanians, and Estonians.
This area around the Baltic Sea was one of the last remaining pagan regions in Europe.
In 1255, the Teutonic Knights founded a fortress on the site of an old Prussian settlement
and named it Kunisberg in honor of Adikhar II of Bohemia, whose forces had joined the campaign.
The name simply means the King's Mountain in German.
The Teutonic Knights systematically colonized the region, bringing in German settlers
and converting or displacing the native Old Prussian population.
By the 16th century, the Old Prussian language and culture had largely dismal.
appeared. Kunisburg had grown into a significant trading city, joining the Hanseatic League in
1340. In 1525, the state run by the Teutonic Order was secularized by Grandmaster Albrecht of
Brandenburg-Ansbach, who became Duke Albrecht and transformed the monastic territory into the Lutheran
Duchy of Prussia under Polish rule. Kunigsberg became a center of the Reformation and a hub of
learning. The University of Kunigsberg, commonly referred to as the Albertina, was founded in
1544 and later gained fame through scholars such as Emmanuel Kant. Kant spent his entire life in
Kunigsburg and never traveled more than 10 miles away from it. And while I'm on the subject
of the university, I feel I should mention the famous Kunigsberg Bridge Problem, as I have no idea
if I'll ever have another opportunity to talk about it. The city of Kunigsberg in the 18th century was built
around the previously mentioned Pragolia River, which split into two branches, forming two
islands. These land masses were connected by seven bridges, linking the North Bank, South Bank,
and the two islands in various combinations. The popular puzzle asked the question,
can a person start anywhere, walk through the city, and cross each bridge exactly once,
without repeating any bridge, and end up in the same place. In 1736, the Swiss mathematician,
Leonard Euler, reduced the problem to an abstraction, where he ignored the geography and just
focused only on how the land areas are connected.
Euler proved that it was impossible, and in the process created the foundation of modern
graph theory and topology in the process.
In 1618, the Duchy passed by inheritance to the Hohen-Zollern family of Brandenburg,
thus creating the kingdom of Brandenburg Prussia.
In 1701, the Holon-Zollern king and elector in the Holy Roman Empire, Frederick III,
crowned himself King of Prussia at Konigsburg,
finalizing the shift from a crusader state to a dynastic state.
During the Seven Years' War,
the city was occupied by Russia from 1758 to 1762,
then returned to Prussia after the death of Empress Elizabeth of Russia.
Throughout the 19th century,
Kunigsberg remained the principal city of East Prussia,
boasting a provincial administration, an active port,
and a growing industrial base.
Here I'd like to provide a brief overview of Prussia.
They've appeared in a few episodes, but I've never really explained what Prussia was.
Prussia became the largest and most powerful of the German kingdoms.
It was spread throughout much of what is today northern Germany,
which included various other duchies and principalities within it, like holes in Swiss cheese.
But it also extended to the east in what is today northern Poland.
When Germany unified in the 19th century, Prussia was the driving force behind unification,
and the Prussian king became the Kaiser of the new German Empire.
The important thing is that the Baltic coast of what is today Poland was part of Prussia,
from Kononsburg to the current German border.
The area was primarily ethnically and linguistically German,
with significant Lithuanian and Polish minorities.
In fact, my ancestors were from Prussia and arrived in the United States before Germany was unified.
On the census form, my great, great, great,
great-grandfather listed Prussia as his country of birth, although it's today part of Poland.
Koenigsberg grew in population and importance throughout the 19th century. By 1910, it had reached
a population of approximately 250,000 people and was a significant Baltic city. During the First World War,
East Prussia was briefly invaded by Russia in 1914, but German forces under Hindenburg and
Ludendorf defeated the Russians at the Battle of Tannenberg, becoming national heroes.
In 1919, the Treaty of Versailles separated East Prussia from the rest of Germany by creating the Polish corridor, also known as the Danzig Corridor and sometimes the Pomeranian Corridor, making Konigsberg and its surrounding province an exclave of Germany.
East Prussia was separated both as a punishment to Germany and to make Poland viable by guaranteeing a seaport and avoiding total dependence on German or Soviet goodwill.
Despite the isolation, the city remained an important German cultural and economic center.
However, the fact that it was cut off from the rest of Germany became a major issue.
The Queen Konensburg and the rest of Germany was some Polish territory and the semi-itonomous city of Danzig, which today is called Gdansk.
Germany resented the customs and passport controls required to go across Poland to reach East Prussia.
Poland resisted German demands for extraterritorial roads and rails to connect
Konigsberg to the rest of Germany.
After 1933 in the rise of the Nazis, Berlin pressed harder.
Hitler demanded the return of Danzig and an extraterritorial highway and railway access
to the corridor.
Warsaw feared that conceding would unravel its position and invite further demands.
In March of 1939, Britain and France guaranteed Poland's independence.
Over the summer of 1939, tensions rose in Danzig and along the border.
On September 1st, 1939, when Germany finally invaded Poland, Berlin framed the corridor dispute
as a key justification for the invasion.
Allied bombing in 1944 devastated the historic center of the city, including much of the medieval
corps, and a prolonged siege by the Red Army ended with the Battle of Konigsburg from the 6th to
the 9th of April of 1945.
The status of Konigsberg changed dramatically with the end of the war.
The Soviets, now occupying it, didn't want to give it back.
However, it wasn't in the same way that they didn't want to give back the rest of Eastern Europe.
The Soviets sought to incorporate Konigsberg and East Prussia into the Soviet Union itself.
The reasons why the Soviets wanted Konigsberg were pretty straightforward.
First, they wanted an ice-free Baltic port.
and naval base. Konigsberg and the nearby port of Palau, now called Baltisk, offered the Soviet
Union its only ice-free year-round port on the Baltic Sea. Leningrad could still freeze up in the winter.
Second, by occupying East Prussia, the USSR gained a fortified wedge between Poland and Lithuania,
pushing its Western military frontier further from Leningrad.
Third, Stalin argued that Germany had invaded Russia twice in 25 years and that the Soviet Union,
Union had suffered the highest casualties of any allied nation. Taking East Prussia, historically
the core of Prussian militarism, was presented as both punishment and compensation. At the Potsdam
Conference, which took place in July and August of 1945, the United States and United Kingdom
accepted Stalin's claims with minimal resistance. Partly because they needed Soviet cooperation in
occupying Germany, they wanted Soviet entry into the war against Japan, and they were already conceding
Poland's borders and didn't want another major fight.
Technically, the final Potsdam wording stated that the area would be placed, quote,
under the administration of the USSR, pending a final peace treaty, which never happened,
effectively making Soviet control permanent.
In 1946, Konigsberg was renamed Kaliningrad in honor of Mikhail Kalinin,
the former titular head of the Supreme Soviet who had just died months earlier.
The Soviets, however, had a problem.
Kaliningrad was filled with Germans, Germans whose families had lived there for generations.
Many Germans had fled when the Red Army was approaching, and more were killed in the fighting.
The remaining Germans were subject to what historians now consider an ethnic cleansing.
Surviving Germans in Kononsburg and the countryside were concentrated, registered, and often pressed into forced labor for clearing ruins and rebuilding.
The NKVD ran camps and holding sites. Food was scarce, disease was common, and mortality rates were high in the first few months.
The Potsdam Conference authorized the transfer of German populations from areas assigned to Poland and the USSR, supposedly in an orderly and humane way.
In practice, it was rough and coercive.
In the new Kaliningrad Oblast, Soviet authorities stripped Germans of property, restricted movement, and organized deportation trains.
Some were sent deeper into the USSR for forced labor, but most were expelled to the Soviet occupation zone in Germany, and from there many of them moved to the west.
By 1948, almost all Germans had been removed from Kaliningrad.
The region was repopulated mainly by Russians with additional Ukrainians and Belarusians.
Place names were changed, German institutions were dissolved, invisible traces of German life were reduced or completely erased.
The next big change to Kaliningrad occurred with the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.
When all of the other Soviet republics gained independence,
Kalinigrad, which was always technically part of the Russian Soviet Republic,
remained part of the new Russian Federation.
The former East Block countries and former Soviet states lined up to join the European Union
and NATO as quickly as possible to distance themselves from Russia and to provide protection.
As a result, Kalinigrad found itself wedged
between Lithuania and Poland, both of which became EU and NATO members.
The gap between Kaliningrad and Belarus, a Russian ally, is known as the Sulawaki gap.
The gap is only 65 kilometers or approximately 40 miles long, and is one of the most
strategically important pieces of real estate in Europe. The gap prevents Russia from having land
to access to Kalinigrad, and if the Russians were to take it, it would cut off the
Baltic states from the rest of Europe.
As the westernmost point of Russia, it has become highly militarized, and it's also believed to be where a great deal of Russian toxic waste is stored.
Today, the Kaliningrad Oblast has approximately a million residents and is predominantly Russian.
The region faces economic challenges due to its isolation, but remains strategically vital to Russia.
The Kaliningrad question, due to its unique geographic position, remains a sensitive geopolitical issue and probably will for quite some time.
The region stands as a unique geopolitical anomaly, a Russian military outposts surrounded by NATO and EU territory, carrying the legacy of its German past while being firmly rooted in its Russian present.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel. The associate producers are Austin Otkin and Cameron Kiefer.
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