GoGuides Verified Text
ERMELAND
SHA-256 integrity check: match
Source
Encyclopaedia Britannica (1911) / britannica_1911
License
public_domain
Chunk ID
1911:ermeland:21f2685d9f59
Section
Hash Algorithm
sha256
Stored Hash
51d2c7c093a8693a31a6f572e6635bab239f24caf5258747636cee74948a43b6
Computed Hash
51d2c7c093a8693a31a6f572e6635bab239f24caf5258747636cee74948a43b6
Normalizer
ggnorm 1.0
Observed
2026-02-08 18:42:49
Source URL
Verified Text
ermeland, or ermland (_varmia_), a district of germany, in east prussia, extending from the frisches haff, a bay in the baltic, inland towards the polish frontier. it is a well-wooded sandy tract of country, has an area of about 1650 sq. m., a population of 240,000, and is divided into the districts of braunsberg, heilsberg, rossel and allenstein. ermeland was originally one of the eleven districts of old prussia and was occupied by the teutonic knights (_deutscher orden_), being made in 1250 one of the four bishoprics of the country under their sway. the bishop of ermeland shortly afterwards declared himself independent of the order, and became a prince of the empire. in 1466 ermeland, together with west prussia, was by the peace of thorn attached to the crown of poland, and the bishop had a seat in the polish senate. in 1772 it was again incorporated with prussia. among the bishops of the see, which still exists, with its seat in frauenberg, may be mentioned aeneas sylvius piccolomini, afterwards pope pius ii., and cardinal stanislaus hosius (1504-1579), the founder of the jesuit college in braunsberg. see hipler, _literaturgeschichte des bisthums ermeland_ (braunsberg, 1873); the _monumenta historiae warmiensis_ (mainz, 1860-1864, and braunsberg, 1866-1872, 4 vols.); and buchholz, _abriss einer geschichte des ermlands_ (braunsberg, 1903.)