The island of Rügen in the Baltic Sea changed hands many times in history.
Today it is a popular tourist destination, but the history of this island is full of brutal wars and invasions!
This was a very violent part of Europe!
Let's take a look at what was going on. 🧵
It is not known when the island of Rügen was first settled but they speculate it was inhabited since the Stone Age.
By 1st century it was populated by the East Germanic tribe of Rugii.
In the 7th century the island was invaded and conquered by the West Slavic Rani.
But the Slavic Rani encountered strong rivals in the Danish crusaders who started expanding in the region in 12th century.
In 1168 the Danes conquered the island after they successfully besieged the fortress of Arkona.
The Danes brought with them Christianity and began converting the pagan Ranis.
This modern painting depicts Bishop Absalon destroying the pagan shrine to the god Svantevit at Arkona.
The Rani became vassals of the Danish as part of the Principality of Rügen.
However this principality continued to be ruled by the local Rani dynasty of Wizlawiden and was part of the Holy Roman Empire.
It was also settled by many Germans.
As Danish vassals, Rugians participated in numerous Danish wars of expansion in 12th and 13th century.
But there was also a pressure on Rügen from neighboring Pomerania which tried to unsuccessfully conquer it.
Denmark began losing its influence on the region in 13th century.
In 1325 the Wizlawiden dynasty died out and the Principality of Rügen passed on to Pomeranian rule.
The Danes couldn't keep the island under their control as King of Denmark Christopher II was busy fighting a rebellion of important nobles at home.
But there were other regional powers who tried to take advantage of the opportunity and claim Rügen for themselves.
A series of conflicts known as the Wars of the Rügen Succession emerged which would last until 1354, as Mecklenburg and various Hanseatic cities got involved.
Rügen remained under Pomeranian control.
However at the time the Duchy of Pomerania was divided and control of Rügen switched between Pomerania-Wolgast and Pomerania-Barth.
Pomerania was finally united again in 1478.
During the Thirty Years' War Rügen became part of Swedish Pomerania following the Swedish intervention in 1630.
This was formally recognized by the Treaty of Westphalia in 1618.
The Swedish Pomerania existed until 1815.
However during the existence of Swedish Pomerania Rügen was contested and invaded on multiple occasions.
There was fierce fighting for the control of the island during the Scanian War of 1675-1679.
The island was important because of proximity to mainland town of Stralsund.
Stralsund had already been contested during the Thirty Years' War and after the Swedes gained possession of it, they decided to fortify the city and it became one of two major Swedish forts in Pomerania alongside Stettin.
Rügen was important for the supply lines to Stralsund!
The Danes invaded Rügen in 1677 and caught the Swedes totally off guard, defeating them at Bergen with the aid of their Brandenburgian allies.
But the soldiers completely devastated the island with looting and a large number of soldiers could no longer be sustained there.
The Swedes were able to recapture Rügen in early 1678, as the devastated island was poorly guarded.
They won the Battle of Warksow where they killed or captured practically entire Danish-Brandenburgian force.
But the Danes were determined to come back.
The Danes kept staging raids over the summer and in autumn conducted a joint invasion with the Brandenburgians.
Despite its poor condition, the island of Rügen was still considered crucial for the planned siege of Stralsund.
They prepared an impressive invasion force.
The large Danish fleet invades Rügen!
27 warships were made available for the invasion to protect the landing of the Brandenburgian troops which formed the bulk of infantry.
The goal was to push the Swedes from the island for good!
The Elector of Brandenburg Frederick William personally led the Brandenburg Navy!
He was growing impatient with the progress and opted for an aggressive strategy.
Eventually the joint Danish-Brandenburgian force overwhelmed the Swedes and occupied the island.
Later that month Brandeburg troops also successfully conquered the fortress of Stralsund.
However Rügen would not remain under Danish control for long.
As the Scanian War ended, Rügen and Stralsund were both returned to Sweden in the Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye in 1679.
This war completely devastated Rügen as the island had been brutally plundered by soldiers from all sides.
In 1715, Rügen was invaded again during the Great Northern War by a combined Danish-Saxon-Prussian army which also conquered Stralsund.
But once again Rügen and Stralsund ultimately remained in Swedish after the war ended.
The truth was that the local nobility simply preferred Swedish rule and foreign powers realized it would be hard for them to maintain their rule there.
However the Swedish rule finally ended with the Napoleonic Wars.
Rügen was held by the French from 1807 to 1813.
Following the French defeat, Rügen was first given to Denmark and finally to Prussia in 1815.
After incorporation into Prussia, the island of Rügen has been part of German history ever since.
This was the age of nationalism which tried to rewrite its previous history as well.
In 1854-55 Prussians constructed large columns to commemorate previous German invasions.
In reality the historic Brandenburgian and Prussian invasions in 1678 and 1715 that the columns commemorate were not popular and left the island impoverished.
The columns also meant to symbolically demonstrate Prussia as the new dominant power in the Baltic.
Prussian rule also popularized Rügen as a tourist resort and this is the reputation which the island has held ever since in Germany.
The town of Putbus was built in entirely neoclassical style and became popular as a bathing resort.
The Nazis also took great interest in Rügen as they started to build a large building complex named Prora which was supposed to be a colossal holiday resort.
But it was never finished.
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The early modern era saw the production of massive plan reliefs - scale models of cities, fortifications and surrounding landscape for military usage.
Venetians were the early pioneers of this in 16th century. But the French under Louis XIV took this on another level in 17th century, ordering a production of 140 1:600 scale models in 1688, in an aim to catalogue all the important military fortifications and border fortress-cities in France.
The finest military engineers of the realm such as Vauban took part in this project!
Close attention was paid to all the details.
In 1700, Louis XIV installed the huge collection of plan reliefs in the Louvre. These models could initially only be viewed by elite and were a sort of state secret, as they would provide important knowledge in an event of war.
A large number of such models was built during and after wars, to include newly captured cities and fortresses. Many new plan reliefs were made during the rule of Louis XV in 18th century, some of them to replace the old damage ones.
The construction of plan reliefs shows a new development in European military history. With the advent of siege artillery and bastion fort fortifications, it became hugely important for European states to upgrade their key fortresses and ensure that their strategic cities and towns were fortified enough to endure an enemy assault. Topographic features were studied and sieges were meticulously planned!
It also shows the centralization of European states, which felt the need to have their military capabilities carefully catalogued, helping them to better devise a grand strategy to protect their borders against all threats, studying the possible weak points.
After the fall of Ancien Regime, the production of plan reliefs was revived by Napoleon who ordered the construction of many new ones.
These plan reliefs could also end up in enemy hands, captured as spoils of war. This happened in 1814 when Prussians took 17 models with them to Berlin.
The production of plan reliefs continued into 19th century, but they would eventually be rendered obsolete by 1870 as military technology developed further and artillery became even more powerful, too powerful for the old bastion fort fortifications.
Fortunately, many of the old plan reliefs survived to this day and are stored in the Musée des Plans-Reliefs where they could be observed by curious visitors.
An example of a plan relief kept in Musée des Plans-Reliefs in Paris.
Besançon and surrounding fortifications, made in 1722.
The level of detail is astonishing!
The scale model of Antibes and coast fortifications is quite epic!
Vauban helped to fortify this strategically important port in the French Riviera.
During 16th century sieges, mines and counter-mines were dug.
It was not uncommon that brutal subterranean fighting would take place in the mines!
It's incredible that such mines are still preserved today at St Andrews Castle in Scotland where a siege took place in 1546. 🧵
The well-preserved 16th century siege mines at St Andrews Castle reveal the hard work that was done by both the besiegers and the defenders to dig these tunnels.
During sieges, a lot depended on such subterranean battles.
Such tactics had already been in place for a long time in various medieval and early modern sieges all over Europe.
The besiegers dug tunnels trying to undermine enemy towers or sections of the wall, paving the way for the infantry to storm the city or fortification.
It's wild how Denmark had colonies in India for more than 200 years from 1620 to 1869.
Fort Dansborg, built in 1620, still stands today in the Bay of Bengal.
They had forts, factories, trading posts. But they eventually sold their possessions to British Empire.
The Danish presence in India was of little significance to the major European powers as they presented neither a military nor a mercantile threat so they let them carve out their own niche.
A map of Danish trade routes in the region.
The operation was initially conducted by Danish East India Company.
But the early years of the Danish adventure in India in 1620s were horrible. Almost two-thirds of all the trading vessels dispatched from Denmark were lost.
English explorer John Smith, famous for his involvement in establishing the Jamestown colony in America in 1607.
His coat of arms featured the heads of three Ottoman soldiers whom he beheaded in duels while serving as a mercenary in Transylvania during the Long Turkish War.
John Smith is known today for his role in managing the colony of Jamestown in Virginia, the first permanent English settlement in North America, and his connection with a Powhatan woman called Pocahontas.
But John Smith was also a powerful warrior and mercenary prior to that.
Born in England, he set off to sea in 1596 at age 16 after his father died to become a mercenary, fighting for the French against the Spanish.
He was looking for what he called "brave adventures".
After a truce was made in 1598, he joined a French pirate crew in Mediterranean.
Many Irishmen served the Habsburgs over centuries and distinguished themselves.
Over 100 Irishmen were field marshals, generals, or admirals in the Austrian Army!
Some of the illustrious Irish warriors serving the Habsburg emperors. 🧵
In 1853 there was an assassination attempt on emperor Franz Joseph in Vienna by a Hungarian nationalist.
But the emperor's life was saved by Count Maximilian Karl Lamoral O'Donnell who cut the assassin down with a sabre.
O'Donnell was a descendant of Irish nobility!
Maximilian ancestors -the powerful O'Donnell clan- left Ireland during the Flight of the Earls in 1607, when Irish earls and their followers left Ireland in the aftermath of their defeat against the English Crown in the Nine Years' War in 1603.
Many inns appeared in medieval Europe, offering foods, drinks and a place to socialize, as well as lodging for travelers, helping transportation logistics.
In this thread I will present some of the old medieval inns that survived to this day, from various European countries!🧵
The George Inn. Norton St Philip in Somerset, England 🏴.
Built in 14th century and completed in 15th century, this is a proper medieval inn.
Being an innkeeper was a respected social position. In medieval England, innkeepers were generally wealthy and held influence in towns!
Stiftskeller St. Peter. St Peter's Abbey in Salzburg, Austria 🇦🇹.
Often mentioned as the oldest inn in Central Europe, for it was first mentioned in 803 in a letter to Charlemagne.
It operated as part of the monastery to give food to pilgrims. Now a prestigious restaurant.