Town and Gown Video Recording: 2023 Mary Lindemann, Professor Emerita, University of Miami

I think that few people think of Brandenburg or  Prussia as watery worlds Frederick the great is famous the lights are going out all over Europe  Frederick the Great’s famous description of the   his territory as a Sandbox tends to dominate  our thinking unfortunately and wrongly in fact  

Brandenburg-Prussia was and remains one of  the water richest States in Germany and let   me see the Brandenburg house of rivers Museum  physically represents an understanding of how   modern biospheres revolve around water it  also signals the historical criticality   of water Landscapes scattered across the  modern state of Brandenburg and here is

Not wait a minute this is it’s a very strange  looking Museum and it’s supposed to be a waterfall   and it didn’t really look like a waterfall to  me but I I took the people who were showing it  

To me at their word this is Brandenburg roughly  in the 17th century this actually might be 18th   century this sort of lemon colored up at the  top is Pomerania and then there’s the Kurmark   the middle Mark which is really the heart of  Brandenburg and that purple thing over on the  

Right is Prussia and they weren’t really joined  until later in the 17th century and that political   history is is not massively relevant right now so  scattered across this state and the modern state   of Brandenburg which is where Berlin is lie some  3,000 natural and artificial lakes in addition  

To multiple thousands of smaller ponds numerous  rivers and their innumerable tributaries rivlets   bricks Brooks streams drainage and Boundary  ditches swamps morasses and watery low spots   that have no other name interlocking waterways  mark and mark the physical Topography of virtually  

Every Brandenburg Province okay here’s sort of the  ones that are in what is today Germany the rivers   that are in today’s Germany then you see Poland on  the other side which is where the Oder river is I  

Have to look at both sides and I just couldn’t  get it all on one slide I don’t have that kind   of sophistication here so these interlocking  waterways they Mark and marked the Topography   of virtually every Brandenburg Province and the  structures built on them and around them the Mills  

The dams the dikes the causeways the canals and  the channels really anchored social and cultural   life. water’s presence was all but inescapable one  could not walk or ride very far or perform daily   tasks without encountering a river ford a right  of way perched on the crest of an earthen dam a  

Field inundated by flooding a washed out road a  ditch to be crossed a swamp that impeded progress   and threaten to suck carts horses and people down  into the murky depths Waters and rivers especially   formed sights of memory for everyone and even  the sober soberly meticulous statisticians and  

Topographers of the mid to late 19th century  identified areas in Brandenburg Prussia by the   rivers that ran through or alongside them  they describe the historical province of   Uckermark in the East Northeast of Brandenburg  rather poetically as a land of lakes and rivers

Okay went far too far. This is a picture of  the Elbe river probably not one that anybody   here is so familiar with but this is what the  Elbe looked like before it was canalized and  

Before it had levies built on the side of it and  before it was dredged in many places so this is   a sort of an older picture of the Elbe river  and you can see the banks that kind of come  

Into the Elbe river which is a little bit more  like its quote unquote natural appearance this   is a forest lake in Brandenburg if any of you  are fond of Theodor Fontane stories uh a lot of  

Them are set on lakes like the very the famous one  der Stechlin and then that’s the Spreewald again   and you can see the punt in the middle and that  punt is of course a modern one or a modern one  

That is a replica of an older one but they they  were used for all sorts of Transportation in the   Spreewald because there weren’t any roads there  were only Crossings, causeways and these Rivers okay the Oder River as it flowed through its many  little arms across the landscape formed the huge  

Oder Marsh before the Oder Marsh was drained and  the river rectified that’s the 18th century word   in the 18th century it was often designated  unproductive wasteland yet such areas were   veritable paradises for Flora and Fauna simple  earthen dams like this one with a dam breach all  

Of these are modern pictures of course they’re not  unfortunately I don’t have any photographs from   the 17th century so we have to sort of use these  but these things still exist and this is actually   one that is in the Spreewald so these simple Earth  and dams marked out arable fields from errant  

Waters a sheltered area arable fields from errant  Waters in The somewhat misnamed Spree forest,   Spreewald, that’s today a major Wetland preserve  and a tourist attraction despite the ways in which   such waterways greatly determined many aspects  of early modern life historians have not been  

All that quick to study the history of waters  or landscape history more generally although   environmental history is of course a booming  field a recent survey of environmental history   noted for instance that in studying wars scholars  have talked a lot about causes, origins, courses,  

And resolutions but nature and Landscape are  mostly only mentioned tangentially and then in   most cases merely is the stage upon which military  Maneuvers unfolded. Equally important, landscape   as landscape historians and archaeologists remind  us major Transformations are especially visible   in times of transition during sociocultural  and political changes including the disruptive  

Times of war and also its aftermath despite this  realization Landscapes including waterscapes have   not formed one of the classic themes of historical  writing it is true however that in recent decades   historians have done a great deal to illuminate  the environmental or landscape history of the  

Modern world on one hand those who study the  environment have often pitched their tents in the   field of longue durée in the field of extended  longitudinal history influenced by Ferdinand   Braudel in the annales School much environmental  history has tended to focus on Long acting large  

Scale processes such as climate change in the  little ice age of the 17th through almost the 19th   century but also deforestation desertification  irrigation-caused salinization species extinctions   or near extinctions to the exclusion of addressing  critically important micro-environmental changes   modern local or micro-Environmental Studies  on the other hand often focus on environmental  

Degradation in the development in the interest  of developing public policies of course the idea   that human actions change nature is hardly new the  historian of ancient China Karl Wittfogel writing   over 60 years ago described China and India as  hydraulic Empires because of their need to create  

Large scale irrigation projects thus causally  linking environmental modifications to the rise   of a particular political system there is if you  however if you will pardon the pun I guess it’s a   pun something of a sea change underway and early  modernists are increasingly interested in what  

They off often perhaps somewhat ahistorically  and anachronistically term Resource Management   humanist Scholars have developed an interest in  natural resources only very recently however this   recent research turn defines resources broadly  as the means to create sustain and alter social   relations units and identities within the  framework of cultural ideas and practices  

Still much of this has not yet flowed into the  historical mainstream an excellent study of   wood resources in early modern Germany notes  that students of History are far more likely   to be familiar with witchcraft persecutions than  the management of forests and Woodlands the same  

Can be asserted even more forcefully I would  argue for water thus in writing an alternative   history of Brandenburg-Prussia I do not mean to  reject political narratives or cultural analyses   but rather to draw our attention to things that  deeply concern virtually all of the inhabitants  

The territory’s inhabitants and that bore long  range and critical political implications I am   asking simply what would a history of territories  like Brandenburg and Prussia look like with water   placed at their core the questions of water  management and Water Resources have of course  

Long interested Engineers geographers and policy  makers yet in this still adolescent Century a new   discourse is emerging carried by the humanities  known as the hydro Humanities that focuses on   social political and cultural changes wrought by  water rather obviously bodies of water shaped and  

Defined territories divided them into districts  and provinces and demarcated property boundaries   rivers that formed borders between states often  became bones of contention and even triggered   conflicts the Rhine river is only probably the  most famous example of that in the European  

Framework rivers that capriciously changed course  were viewed as tricksters or endowed with Almost   Human malevolence their apparent stability was  only that apparent and fleeting. Disputes over   boundaries rolled on almost unendingly and were  bitter protracted and often violent ownership   of or rather political control over a river  allowed territories to levy customs and fees  

That generated major sources maybe even the major  source of their income but water shaped the land   in more profound ways an excellent example of  such water determined structural foundations   were the little lands the Ländschen of Brandenburg  and here’s some on this map you can see that the  

Rivers are blue of course and the kind of this  is they’re they’re perched on on a Sandy plateau   and so there’s one up there the Ländschen Rhinow  and then there’s the Ländschen Friesack and then  

Over on the right is Belin and then there’s Glien  on the other side and so what this is this is a   big Marsh and Sandy plateaus upon on which these  little territories and you a village or a city are  

Perched to cross from one to the other or to cross  the whole expanse you had to use a Causeway there   are no really effective roads and there were Parts  with it only could be crossed in punts so this is  

A Marshland this is one of the most famous ones in  Brandenburg it’s by no means the only one there’s   a lot of these marshy areas like this so these  boggy lowlands lacked a natural Waterway they’re   not really affected by the rivers but they have  low spots and rainwater gathers in them and then  

Sometimes the rivers flood but it’s not a constant  stream through the area like it is with the Oder   Brook now of course also you’ll see here things  like the Elbe havel Canal that’s newer but you   still get some idea of the Havelland niederung the  Havelland lowland up here on the upper right so  

It’s a it’s a kind of an interesting area that’s  that’s very watery but it’s not the only one. The   oder River however course through a much larger  area and it became what was known as the Oderbruch  

Or the Oder Marsh and this is what it looked like  where you have basically marshy Islands or islands   of weeds in the river itself. The extensive  construction of a system of canals and drainage   in the 18th century not the 17th century but the  18th century improved that’s in quotation marks on  

My piece of paper here these areas and turned them  into Lush, Lush grass grasslands and arable Fields   yet it would be wrong to characterize the marshes  as wastelands that is as virtually unpopulated   areas or homes of impoverished and disease-ridden  inhabitants. Such negative judgments first formed  

In the late 17th and 18th centuries have persisted  well into the 20th century in fact these marshes   supported a thriving if not a large population  and their watery character shape their social   cultural political and economic lives with his  deep appreciation for landscape and traditions  

The great 19th century German novelist Teodor  Fontana I’ve mentioned him twice he’s one of my   favorite novelists Fontana described these little  lands as centers of culture even before they were   drained the little lands play an important role  in this story their waterscapes formed part of  

What Fontana called the unknown and forgotten  histories of brandenberg and what I have termed   its alternative history here I do not wish  to review this process of amelioration and   Improvement that David Blackbourn So brilliantly  analyzed in his book the conquest of nature rather  

I wish to explore the ways in which people  lived with the Waters of Brandenburg during   what might be called The pre-conquest era. Medieval and Early Modern attempts to control   errant waters to utilize water better or to  protect land and people from water’s damages  

Are perhaps best known from the Dutch story  of winning Land from the North Sea that great   land reclamation project that lasted from the  11th through the 14th century and successfully   created the great green heart of the Netherlands  creation was one thing the preservation was quite  

Another and that’s what windmills were used  for first you know to pump water out of the   land and Regional water boards developed to  facilitate both they also functioned as a type   of Quasi-political organization and in light  of their experiences we should think about how  

Resource Management influence shaped or even  created political structures and not only the   other way around Dike and water boards and similar  organizations also existed in Brandenburg although   they were far less rigorously structured even  while they lacked a formal political character  

They certainly functioned in a similar manner  to the Dutch water boards and all were deeply   implanted in village and local politics it was the  responsibility of those who lived along the dikes   and the levies to participate in their maintenance  a participation largely enforced by villages or by  

The provincial Estates. The repair and here’s  a a modern Monument to the Happy Dyke workers   these guys hated this they absolutely despised  doing it even though they lived along the dikes   and it necessary to protect the land, so you  know this gives you an idea of a very happy  

Cooperative group they weren’t neither happy nor  Cooperative most of the time anyway. The repair   of dikes and dams formed however only one element  in a far more elaborate extensive water system in   speaking of a political economy of water one must  recognize the criticality of what I call Little  

Politics as equally important as large-scale  initiatives Guided by the visible hand of the   state for Brandenburg-Prussia systems for control  and management of water developed in the Middle   Ages and persisted in these traditional forms  throughout the 16th and into the 17th century or  

Even later most if not all of these were local in  origin and range of action of course larger water   related initiatives such as the construction of  canals and dams were often planned and executed   by greater political entities even before 1600  in the middle of the 16th century the Holy Roman  

Emperor Ferdinand I and the Braunschweig elector  Johan Sigismund joined in proposing a canal to   link the Oder River with the spree lack of  funds, this is this is the eternal story,   lack of funds frustrated the completion of the  project during the 30 Years War when the Swedes  

Threatened to blockade the Oder thereby denying  access to Brandenburg the canal project was again   taken into hand the 24 kilometer long Friedrich  Wilhelm Canal soon became the Wonder of all Europe   when it was completed in 1668 and here’s a early  19th century drawing of this canal which goes from  

The Oder to the Spree River and all those little  things there are markers they’re not locks there’s   too many of them, but this is the very famous  canal and this is one of the locks and this lock  

Is kind of like what it was in the 17th century  not necessarily exactly like it was but it’s   made of wood except this one already has a stone  side and after the they built them out of wood  

The wood rotted and they replaced many of them  with stone and then they used wood as the locks And then finally this is what it looks like  today this is where they have bicycle paths   now that’s where all all the old waterways that  are no longer navigable or no longer profitably  

Navigable become bike paths in Germany and in  France too the very famous Canal du Midi in   France a modern picture of it was only completed  a decade later and was not navigable until 1681   the construction of large-scale projects and  even more importantly their maintenance however  

Required the cooperation of locals cooperation  that was not always, hardly ever, forthcoming   and which repeatedly gave rod to disputes over  the allotment of responsibilities and costs but   not only rulers were involved in creating water  related projects everything connected with water  

Gave rise to human intervention from the greats  and not so greats of society individuals and   groups Lords and commoners alike managed used  and misused the Waters of Brandenburg-Prussia   the many tasks involved in preserving waterways  and their para–hydraulic structures that’s a  

Fancy word for dikes Mills locks causeways and  anything that is around and on water or is used   to control water form constant concerns of urban  and especially Rural Life some projects required   major excavations like the canals and even the  rerouting of rivers and streams and the effect  

On Land and Landscape was correspondingly  enormous even in the Middle Ages for example   in the 13th century the monks of the Cistercian  Cloister Chorin had begun to restructure nearby   Lakes a natural Channel running from the Choriner  Lake supplied water to the monastery even at the  

Abbey’s founding in 1258 however the water proved  insufficient and to rectify the problem the monks   dug hand dug of course a 5 km long channel to  obtain a more reliable and abundant source of   water this channel allowed for the drainage and  subsequent cultivation of the surrounding moor and  

This is the Abbey plus its Lake this lake is much  bigger became progressively larger over centuries,   then when the water level in the largest lake in  the area a lake called the Parsteiner lake began   to rise rapidly in the 16th and 17th centuries the  monks went to work again fearing that their newly  

Won land was going to be flooded and diverted  the excess water by cutting an outlet running   from the lake to a nearby River they then filled  in the river’s Southern arm because it had two,   two or three arms actually and thus altered the  entire fluvial landscape for future centuries  

And you see this is the best picture I got of  of the lake but the original Lake that they   had drawn water from was farther Away by the  beginning of the 17th century therefore many   ways existed to tame the Waters of Brandenburg  some were large scale like this one or that  

Of the Canal builders while others involved  lesser but nonetheless important activities   such as the upkeep and timely repair of dams and  causeways. No comprehensive system existed but   the tangle of rules and agreements that  evolved over Generations went far toward   creating a reasonably well-functioning Network for  constructing maintaining and repairing everything  

Involving water tenancy agreements whether they  pertain to a single estate or the governance of   an entire District meticulously catalog the full  range of what belonged to the estate or District   down to individual door handles and broken tools  these documents invariably included all things  

Concerning water, whether those waters were large  small or insignificant including fish ponds, and   specified water rights including fishing rights  in so doing they explicitly testified to the   centrality of water in Rural Life and demonstrated  the way in which estate holders but also Villages  

And towns were intimately and ceaselessly  involved in water management. An example:   an agreement concluded by the the noble von Walden  family and the Electoral government in 1616 made   the soons responsible for maintaining repairing  the bridge and Causeway that allowed Passage  

Through the Havelland Marsh, the first picture I  showed you with the little lands, and linked the   little lands with the rest of Brandenburg. The  cooperation between parties that was envisioned   not surprisingly was not forthcoming instead an  ongoing bitter quarrel arose among all the parties  

Each claiming that the other had failed to fulfill  the bargain struck and this went on for about a   100 years in one form or another these persistent  squabbles may seem pin Pricks in history but they  

Continued to simmer for years they boiled over in  the 1650s in the wake of the 30 Years War and more   violently again in the mid 1670s these three dates  that one 1660 1616 the mid 1650s and 1675 are  

Significant 1616 represented the last years of a  working Arrangements two years later the 30 years   war broke out and by the 1620s Brandenburg was  deeply embroiled in one of the most destructive   Wars in European history over the course of  the next three decades the territory suffered  

Repeated occupations and financial exactions that  were nowhere more serious than among the little   lands the arrangement so laboriously hammered out  with the several interested parties before 1620   dissolved during the continued chaos of War  as these personal and political arrangements  

Unraveled as administrative officials fled or  died as the documents disappeared or went up in   smoke so too did the physical substance of dams  Bridges and causeways disappear like so much that   happened in these War-torn Years A Perfect Storm  of dangerous circumstances blew up it did little  

Good for example to restore Bridge supports if  Waters raged unchecked thus the 1650s seized   with quarrels and even violence newly drafted  agreements came and went seeking a return to   the status quo ante but Swedish invasion in 1675  again threw everything into confusion finally in  

1689 a new ordinance made all the inhabitants of  Belin without exception responsible for upkeep   this solution however only triggered greater  troubles most villages and villagers protested   their allotments complaining that the years of  maladministration had blurred boundaries and   furthermore the exact extent of the causeway that  bridged the marsh and its division into workable  

Sections was really very unclear they had no idea  who was supposed to do what. This is a typical   Causeway this is not the causeway that bridged  the whole Marsh of the little lands this is a   much more primitive one but these kinds of this  one’s actually from Ireland sorry also no good  

Pictures from the 16 17th century in Germany but  this is the kind it’s stones and it’s got a grass   a gravel or grassy path over it and this is how  you crossed over and they broke down after a while  

And they had to be repaired but not everybody was  happy to be involved in doing the work to repair   them who would Supply the stones, who would  bring the the the the dirt necessary it was   a real mess and it was very easy to escape your  obligations The fura never quite disappeared yet  

These methods imperfect though they so obviously  were persisted until the 19th century when a more   comprehensive agency in Prussia assumed control  of all the waters in the state these loosely   organized and Scattered methods of managing and  utilizing the Waters of Brandenburg never worked  

Smoothly disputes over who was responsible for  what and more important who would pay led to   chronic neglect of critical repairs add to this  the wanton destruction of structures not only by   enemy and friendly troops during the wars but  also by local inhabitants who repurposed wood  

From bridges and stone from causeways to build  or repair houses and farm buildings and I could   only think of The Disappearance of catalytic  converters from under automobiles today seems   a very similar kind of thing these problems were  rampant and some became the stuff of Legends and  

Frequently triggered violence among neighbors  and neighboring jurisdictions villagers and   individuals proved perfectly capable of diverting  streams and even the channels of larger rivers   to suit their own needs to expand their Holdings  by shifting boundary markers or to augment their   incomes Millers fought constantly to obtain  sufficient water to turn their wheels while  

Their neighbors complained about the siphoning  of water from streams thus killing the fish or   alternately the flooding of Meadows and Fields  as Millers damed Waters Fisher folk too disrupted   the flow of water when they built weirs and fish  traps in streams and rivers and here is a a very  

Old-fashioned fishing weir you know the fish get  caught in there but they were much more elaborate   on some of the larger rivers and they caused the  water level to fluctuate which really pissed a lot  

Of people off if they were either above where they  ended up with too much water or below where they   didn’t have enough water natural disasters such  as floods or hail storms but also human-caused   ones such as Wars could throw even the best  Arrangements into total disarray the wars of  

The mid to late 17th century we always talk about  the 30 Years War we kind of forget there’s a whole   series of wars that come right after the 30 Years  War there’s the second Northern war in the 1650s  

And then there’s a Swedish Brandenburg war in the  1670s and then there’s well then there was the the   Düsseldorf cow War but that’s just a little thing  and then there’s the Great Northern war so there’s   a whole series of wars that competed continually  Rock the entire area and actually some of them  

Were almost as severe in their destruction of  certain particular areas as was the 30 Years   War these wars did much to upset or even destroy  water systems and structures that existed since   the later Middle Ages the physical damage military  operations did could be immense but so too were  

The effect of years of neglect that left great  large parts of the great Elbe Dyke in a precarious   condition with breakthroughs threatening much  valuable agricultural land. Sources on the damages   the wars caused convey Rich if often horrifying  information about the complex environmental   infrastructural and ecological troubles that  affected the waters of Brandenburg-Prussia  

And whose resolution presented thorny problems  there were for example dead animals mostly horses   clogging and polluting canals millstreams and  locks Fords dams and crossings had been demolished   drainage ditches had silted up and the clearing  of forests for fortresses and for fuel resulted  

In erosions and frightening mudslides moreover  by the end of the 30 Years War Brandenburg had   suffered a population decline of perhaps as  high as 50% not all due to Deaths sometimes   due to people just simply moving away and not  returning it resulted in a substantial shortage  

Of agricultural labor agricultural production had  virtually ceased during stages of the war the lack   of Labor also frustrated the work of rebuilding  critical hydraulic rebuilding critical hydraulic   and para-hydraulic infrastructures and all sorts  of other secular and sacred structures effects   at restoration and Innovation frequently built  on pre-war precedents and methods but just as  

Often new initiatives that changed many parts  of the territory’s landscape including its   waterscape were initiated if it is too simple  to divide the flow of History into periods of   War and Peace it is equally simplistic to see  destruction and Recovery as two very different  

Processes or as chronologically separate they  interacted and often occurred simultaneously   moreover even the most well meaning and carefully  planned measures proved ineffective or worse,   harmful. The history of environmental engineering  is filled with examples of good intentions   gone wrong drainage to create more productive  landscapes as I showed you with the Oder Marsh  

Formed the principal goal of amelioration projects  such Endeavors began in the late 17th century but   gathered steam in the 18th and particularly in  the 19th century projects that drained Wetlands   fashioned more arable Fields but also disrupted  or destroyed whole ways of life the draining of  

The Oder Marsh was in the 19th century considered  almost universally as the beneficial Taming of a   barbaric and unruly nature. War however was not  the only was not only destructive it could also   be a creative disruption tearing down old barriers  encouraging Innovations and upending traditional  

And calcified social structures it could open  up opportunities for people once closed out of   positions of authority migrants second or third  sons and even women and not all troops or their   commanders embarked on Mindless destruction  the famous General Albrecht von Walenstein made  

Serious efforts at Canal building and agricultural  Improvement in Mecklenburg the territory next to   Brandenburg, a territory he controlled his Duke  from 1629 until his assassination in 1634 during   his short-lived tenure there he experimented  with ways to to improve plants and seeds in  

The extensive Gardens he built at his castle in  Güstrow and here is Güstrow before 1635 when the   rebuilding is just starting and that’s what the  castle looks like and this is the garden he laid   out it looks pretty much the same way today the  plants are different and it’s a little bigger  

And it’s a little better cared for but this was  basically what he did and the castle actually   has a collection of his seed catalogs that he  collected his seeds you know and stapled them in   a leaf loose leaf binder it’s kind of interesting  I’m sure they will no longer germinate but it was  

Kind of an interesting thing to see Scholars  have devoted much attention to the many top-   down initiatives undertaken after the end of  the 30 Years War as forms of State formation   administrative centralization and financial  reform that have often been gathered under the  

Now much questioned umbrella term of absolutism  the government of Brandenburg-Prussia recognized   a pressing need to recover from the wartime  damage and to improve the economic situation   of the territory historians have not been slow to  investigate how the government sought to rebuild  

Its shattered lands and especially to stimulate  agricultural production bolster or found new   manufactures and improved Transportation networks  in the wake of the Great War. Initiatives launched   during the reign of the great elector from 1640  to 1688 and his three immediate successors the  

Four famous hyperactive Hohenzollern rulers to  improve, I always felt like they needed a little   Ritalin to help them out here, to improve existing  Transportation networks focused almost exclusively   on Rivers canals and causeways and attendant  customs and fees these attempts and improvements  

Affected communities profoundly but so too did  a whole series of other measures more local in   character more individualized in conception more  fragmented in execution and yet just as fittingly   understood as resource management integral to the  process of early modern State formation a dike  

Breach along the Oder River in 1675 had flooded  the fields of the District of Labus. Assessing   the blame for shoddy or absent maintenance proved  a very ticklish and frustrating and eventually   a futile task the investigations triggered  by these lamentable events highlighted the  

Problems with time honored methods that relied  on the cooperation of interested parties these   individuals and groups could easily obfuscate or  deny their responsibilities altogether and they   did years of war had shaken such traditional  practices to the very core while reshuffling  

The groups and individuals designated as the  interested parties just keeping track of who   is responsible for which section of a dam to be  repaired was a very complicated task especially   as people lied about who the next door neighbor  was when the local authorities probed the matter  

They blamed the inutility of the practice  where each peasant was allotted a specific   stretch of dyke to keep in good repair many had  scandalously neglected the work they appended to   this investigation a list of individuals who  were queried about whether they had or all to  

Apparently had not done the work the answers were  surprisingly blunt many simply answered I didn’t   want to do it or queried why should I work on the  Dyke when Joe over there doesn’t Joe is made up of  

Course how does it benefit me I don’t live close  to the dike what do I care I mean literally that   is what they’re saying these complex negotiations  over dike maintenance eventually altered the sense   of traditional rights and forged new patterns  of communal interactions with local and more  

Distant governing entities the wars of the mid  to late 17th century had unsettled those older   relationships and frayed long-standing communal  bonds demographic decline abraded them and sheer   physical destruction erased many markers  of communal life from the landscape Mills   for example physically reminded locals of their  obligation to pay taxes and grain no structure  

Was more susceptible to wartime destruction and  as the Mills disappeared so too did much of their   political economic and social meaning into the  gaps flowed new currents that altered living and   governing in ways manifested on the landscape  the visible hand of the state controlled some  

Innovations but not all other changes proved  equally if not more decisive the bankruptcy of   Nobles and communes Villages technological  advances that included more sophisticated   surveying techniques that shifted how land and  waterscapes were perceived and known the arrival   of people in new places and the launching of new  Enterprises cash strapped often insolvent Nobles  

Sought novel sources of revenue that frequently  depended on relatively expensive technological   adaptations such as the substitution of windmills  for water-driven ones and sawmills for grain for   grain grinding ones and they accelerated the  commercialization of Water Resources such as  

Fish farming. Fish farming is really very old but  they actually began to do it in a far larger, far   more elaborate way where you had several different  kinds of fish ponds with one flowing into another   and then they drain them and they’d catch the  fish it sounded horrible draining them catching  

The fish terrible, at the same time opportunities  unfolded for people new to particular localities   one always thinks in this context of the famous  Dutch and other migrants welcomed to Brandenburg   by the elector and his first wife herself a Dutch  princess and who brought with them techniques of  

Hydraulic Engineering that transformed whole areas  such as around the old town of BSO creating the   new model estate of Oranienburg which is right  outside Berlin and you can see the canal up there   and the The Gardens and it was a very elaborate  estate it was actually quite large but it was not  

Only these famous migrants who made the difference  so in 1685 the nobleman atius fitzel a major   landholder in the province of Prignitz and that’s  in the western side of the of Brandenburg damed a   channel that paralleled the old Elde not Elbe but  Elde River it’s a much smaller River in order to  

Provide more power to his newly constructed Mill  almost immediately those living alongside the   river protested that the Overflow had flooded  their fields and pastures to the extent that   they now had to travel over them in punts or  wade. fitel was hardly alone in manipulating  

This particular water course the Local District  administrator had sought to facilitate timber   floating on the Elde and had therefore blocked the  entire riverbed by arbitrarily setting into it a   series of large locks this diversion of the Elde  drained water from the channel and deprived the  

Quitzow’s mill of Motive Power while the tannin  that leeched out of the floated logs poisoned the   fish. While disputes over the natural or altered  courses of water, like the building and upkeep   of hydraulic and para-hydraulic structures, date  well back into the late Middle Ages the 30 Years  

War nonetheless represented a turning point  in Brandenburg-Prussia that affected research   management directly but which also changed the  Contours of the land and the look of the landscape   as well as reshaping the lives and livelihoods of  those who lived on them the war also marked the  

Beginning of a gradual shift in ideas of property  from an older sense of lands and Waters held in   tenure, often for a limited period of time to  that of private ownership this represented a   significant change one that atius fito implicitly  articulated in inserting his rights to modify the  

Channel in 1685 it’s my River I get to do with it  what I want a concatenation of Destruction neglect   demographic decline economic malaise and from  1648 through the 1720s the continued demands of   the Warfare that raked all Northern Germany and  Northern Europe made the territory that emerged  

By the 1720s significantly different in its  social political and economic structures from   that existing in 1618 or even 1648 arguing that  the wars of the 17th century proved watersheds in   Brandenburg and Prussia is nothing even remotely  new yet this story has been for a very long time  

Told in a fairly triumphalist tradition inherited  from the Nationalist historians of the 19th   century who rooted an inevitable Rise Of Prussia  in a purposeful Hohenzollern effort or purposeful   Hohenzollern efforts to create a powerful State  beginning directly after the Treaty of Versailles  

This initiative was supposedly carried forward and  strengthened by generations of subsequent rulers   their Allied nobilities and especially their  growing core what we would today call bureaucrats   with profound effects good and bad on the land  and the lives of the inhabitants there whether  

They were human animal or plant even though  historians of Germany have long incorporated newer   perspectives into their analyses that have moved  the attention somewhat away from the efforts of   the Hohenzollerns and the initiatives of a state  with a clear centralizing absolutist Mission this  

Older narrative simply won’t die the author of a  study published at the beginning of the century On   The Rise Of Prussia did not hesitate to open with  the line in the 17th and 18th centuries Prussia   rose out of obscurity to become one of the most  powerful countries in Europe and further argued  

That the great elector completely refashioned  both the political and economic structures of   the electorate by adopting the model of absolutism  set by Louis the 14th certainly the Hohenzollerns   and their administrators had a significant  impact on the shape of Brandenburg-Prussia  

As it emerged in the second half of the 17th  century a skeptic in the audience might and   probably should ask whether the local day-to-day  managing or mismanaging of the environment I have   traced here was as critical as the weight of  the visible hand of the state. Was the daily  

Was the quotidian so ordinary so commonplace and  indeed so Universal as to be unremarkable I think   not rather the many contradictory uncoordinated  self-serving and perhaps even almost imperceptible   actions of innumerable others whose names are  less familiar or even unknown to history changed  

Brandenburg-Prussia in important ways surely the  story of the rise of Prussia or the formation   of the Prussian state must also be told on the  basis of everyday actions here those originating   with the many people who lived on and with the  Waters of Brandenburg thus when we consider the  

History of early modern Europe and not only  Brandenburg-Prussia let us think rather more   about landscapes like this one it’s Potsdam early  and you can see Potsdam, if you know Potsdam,   Potsdam is still surrounded by water it’s really  very beautiful but this is even waterier if that’s  

A word let us think more about these Landscapes  and perhaps less about rulers like Friedrich or   about battles like the battle of Fehrbellin  let’s think about that thank you very much

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