- Kashubians
Infobox Ethnic group
group = Kashubians/Kaszubian "Kaszëbi"
flag_caption = Kashubian flag
population = 50,000 to 500,000
regions = flagcountry|Poland
languages = Kashubian, Polish
religions = Catholicism, Evangelical Lutheran
related =Poles ·Germans ·Sorbs ·Czechs Kashubians/Kashubs/Kaszubians ( _cs. Kaszëbi; _pl. Kaszubi), also called Kassubians or Cassubians, are a West Slavic
ethnic group of north-centralPoland .The Kashubian unofficial capital is
Kartuzy ("Kartuzë"). Among larger cities,Gdynia ("Gdiniô"; ( _de. Gdingen (until 1939), "Gotenhafen" (1939-1945) contains the largest proportion of people declaring Kashubian origin. However, the biggest city of Cassubia region isGdańsk ("Gduńsk"; _de. Danzig), the capital of thePomeranian Voivodeship . The traditional occupations of the Kashubians wereagriculture andfishing ; today these are joined by the service and hospitality industry, andagrotourism .The main organization that maintains the Kashubian identity is the
Kashubian-Pomeranian Association . The recently formed "Odroda" is also dedicated to the renewal of Kashubian culture.Population
The total number of Kashubians varies depending on one's definition. A common estimate is that over 300,000 people in Poland are of the Kashubian ethnicity. The most extreme estimates are as low as 50,000 or as high as 500,000
In the Polish census of 2002, only 5,100 people declared Kashubian
nationality , although 51,000 declared Kashubian as their native language. Most Kashubians declare Polishnationality and Kashubianethnicity , and are considered both Polish "and" Kashubian. However, on the 2002 census there was no option to declare one nationality and a different ethnicity, or more than one nationality.History
Kashubians are the direct descendants of an early Slavic tribe of
Pomeranians who took their name from the land in which settled,Pomerania (from Polish "Pomorze", "the land along the sea"). It is believed that these ancestors of the Kashubians came into the region between the Odra andVistula Rivers after theMigration Period . While many Slavic Pomeranians were assimilated during the German settlement of Pomerania ("seeOstsiedlung "), especially in the Pomeranian Southeast (Pomerelia ) some kept and developed their customs and became known as Kashubians. The oldest known mention of the name dates from the 13th century (a seal ofBarnim I , Duke of Pomerania-Stettin), who ruled areas aroundSzczecin (Kashubian: "Sztetëno").Another early mention of the Kashubians from the 13th century saw the Dukes of Pomerania including "Duke of Kashubia" in their titles. From the
Treaty of Westphalia in 1648, after theThirty Years' War , parts of West Pomerania fell under Swedish rule, and the Swedish kings titled themselves "Dukes of Kashubia" from 1648 to the 1720s.The "
Landtag " parliament of theKingdom of Prussia inKönigsberg changed the official church language from Polish to German in 1843, but this decision was soon repealed. In 1858 Kashubians emigrated toUpper Canada and created the settlement of Wilno, inRenfrew County, Ontario , which still exists today. Kaszub immigrants founded St. Josaphat parish inChicago 'sLincoln Park community in the late 19th century. In the 1870s a fishing village was established in Jones Island inMilwaukee, Wisconsin , by Kashubian and German immigrants. The two groups did not hold deeds to the land, however, and the government of Milwaukee evicted them as squatters in the 1940s, with the area soon after turned into industrialpark .Many Pomeranians in the former
Duchy of Pomerania , most of them Lutheran Protestants (including theSlovincians ), were Germanised between the 14th and 19th centuries in the wake of the Prussian political program ofGermanisation . Some communities inPomerelia (Eastern Pomerania) have survived and today regard themselves as Kashubians in modern Poland, although others were expelled by Poland'sCommunist government as "Germans" afterWorld War II . Most Kashubians in Eastern Pomerania (the region also known asPomerelia orWest Prussia ), unlike Slovincians and Pomeranian SlavicWends , remained Roman Catholic.During the
Treaty of Versailles , Kaszub activistAntoni Abraham in agitating for Cassubia's integration intoPoland issued his famous quote "Nie ma Kaszub bez Polonii a bez Kaszub Polski" which translates into English as- There is no Cassubia without Poland, and no Poland without Cassubia.During the Second World War leading Kashubians in favour of
Polish nationalism , were killed by German forces, particularly those of higher education, at least according to the claims of the Polish Senate. [ [http://www.senat.gov.pl/k5/dok/diar/70/7004.htm] Polish Senate (Senát) claims.] The main place of executions wasPiaśnica .Kashubian language
About 50,000 Kashubians speak Kashubian, a West Slavic language belonging to the Lechitic group of languages in northern Poland. Many Polish linguists formerly considered Kashubian to be a Polish dialect, though most now believe it is a separate Slavic language.
There are other traditional Slavic ethnic groups inhabiting
Pomerania , such as theKociewiacy ,Borowiacy ,Krajniacy and others. These dialects tend to fall between Kashubian and the Polish dialects ofGreater Poland andMazovia . This might indicate that they are not only descendants of ancientPomeranians , but also of settlers who arrived to Pomerania from Greater Poland andMasovia in theMiddle Ages . However, this is only one possible explanation.The earliest surviving example of written Kashubian is
Martin Luther 's 1643 Protestantcatechism (with new editions in 1752 and 1828). Scientific interest in the Kashubian language was sparked by Mrongovius (publications in 1823, 1828) and the Russian linguist Hilferding (1859, 1862), later followed by Biskupski (1883, 1891), Bronisch (1896, 1898), Mikkola (1897), Nitsch (1903). Important works are S. Ramult's, "Słownik jezyka pomorskiego, czyli kaszubskiego", 1893, and F. Lorentz, "Slovinzische Grammatik", 1903, "Slovinzische Texte", 1905, and "Slovinzisches Wörterbuch", 1908.The first activist of the Kashubian/East Pomeranian national movement was
Florian Ceynowa . Among his accomplishments, he documented theKashubian alphabet and grammar by 1879 and published a collection of ethnographic-historic stories of the life of the Kashubians ("Skórb kaszébsko-slovjnckjé mòvé", 1866-1868). Another early writer in Kashubian wasHieronim Derdowski . The Young Kashubian movement followed, led by authorAleksander Majkowski , who wrote for the paper "Zrzësz Kaszëbskô" as part of the "Zrzëszincë" group. The group would contribute significantly to the development of the Kashubian literary language.Today
In 2005, Kashubian was for the first time made an official subject on the Polish
matura exam (roughly equivalent to the English A-Level and French Baccalaureat). Despite an initial uptake of only 23 students,Fact|date=March 2007 this development was seen as an important step in the official recognition and establishment of the language.Today, in some towns and villages in northern Poland Kashubian is the second language spoken after Polish, and it is taught in regional schools.
Kashubian presently enjoys legal protection in Poland as an official minority language.
Notable Kashubians
*
Świętopełk II the Great (1195-1266) powerful ruler of Eastern Pomerania
*Mestwin II (1220-1294) ruler of united Eastern Pomerania
*Hans David Ludwig Yorck von Wartenburg (1759-1830)Prussia nField Marshal of theNapoleon ic era
*Florian Ceynowa (1817-1881) political activist, writer, linguist, and revolutionary
*Hieronim Derdowski (1852-1902) poet, humorist, journalist
*Teodora Gulgowska néeFethke (1860-1959) painter, ethnographer, co-founder of the first open-air museum in Poland
*Antoni Abraham (1869-1923) Kashubian representative to the Versailles Treaty, political activist and proponent of Polish Kashubia
*Izydor Gulgowski (1874-1925) poet, ethnographer, co-founder of the first open-air museum in Poland
*Aleksander Majkowski (1876-1938) author, publicist, playwright, cultural activist
*Marian Mokwa (1889-1987) maritime painter, traveller, social activist
*Augustyn Necel (1902-1976) novelist
*Jan Trepczyk (1907-1989) poet, song-writer, lexicographer and creator of the Polish-Kashubian dictionary
*Franciszek Grucza (1911-1993) writer, translator
*Gerard Labuda (1916- ) historian
*Lech Bądkowski (1920-1984) writer, journalist, translator, political, cultural, and social activist
*Günter Grass (1927- ) Nobel Prize-winning Germanauthor of Kashubian descent
*Alojzy Nagel (1930-1998) poet
*Jan Drzeżdżon (1937-1992) novelist
*Klaus Kinski actor and author
*Wawrzyniec Samp (1939- ) sculptor and graphic artist
*Józef Borzyszkowski (1946- ) historian, politician, founder of the Kashubian Institute
*Jerzy Samp (1951- ) writer, publicist, historian, and social activist
*Marian Jelinski (1949- ) translator, writer
*Jerzy Stachurski (1953- ) poet, composer
*Stanisław Janke (1956- ) poet, novelist, translator
*Abdon Stryszak (1908 - 1995) professor of veterinary medicine
*Donald Tusk (1957- ) historian, politician, leader ofPlatforma Obywatelska , Prime Minister of Poland
*Nathan Darga , urban planner
*Danuta Stenka (1961- ) actressee also
*
Kashubian language
*Kashubian alphabet Further reading
* cite journal
quotes =
last = Synak
first = Brunon
authorlink =
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date =
year = 1997
month = December
title = The Kashubes during the post-communist transformation in Poland
journal =Nationalities Papers
volume = 25
issue = 4
pages = 715–728
issn =
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*cite journal
coauthors = Polish Cultural Institute
title = The Kashubian Polish Community of Southeastern Minnesota (MN) (Images of America)
year = 2001
month = JulyExternal links
* http://www.zk-p.pl/
* de icon (Kashubian) pl icon http://kaszubia.com/
* de icon en icon http://www.republika.pl/modraglina/kaszlink.html
* http://www.cassubia-slavica.com/
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