Treaty of Kraków
1525 treaty between Poland and the Teutonic Knights
The Treaty of Kraków was signed on 8 April 1525 between the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights. It officially ended the Polish–Teutonic War.[1]
The treaty gave Grand Master Albert of Hohenzollern enough autonomy to secede from the Order to become Duke of the new Duchy of Prussia created by secularization of the Monastic state of the Teutonic Knights. This was sealed by the Prussian Homage of 10 April.
References
- ^ John Freely Celestial Revolutionary: Copernicus, the Man and His Universe 2014 - - 0857734903 p 6 The Peace of Thorn was reaffirmed on 8 April 1525 by the Treaty of Krakow, which gave the Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights hereditary possession of the Order's territory, then known as 'Ducal Prussia', as a fief of the Polish Crown.
External links
- Scan of the treaty (IEG Mainz)
- Annotaded edition of the treaty (IEG Mainz)
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Polish truces and peace treaties
- Bautzen (1018)
- Merseburg (1033)
- Kalisz (1343)
- Namysłów (1348)
- Raciążek (1404)
- Thorn (1411)
- Lubowla (1412)
- Melno (1422)
- Łęczyca (1433)
- Brześć Kujawski (1435)
- Thorn (1466)
- Ólafu (1474)
- Franco-Polish Alliance (1524)
- Kraków (1525)
- Pozvol (1557)
- Vilnius (1561)
- Stettin (1570)
Commonwealth
With Muscovy | |
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With the Ottoman Empire | |
With Sweden | |
With Cossacks |
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With others |
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- Warsaw (1920)
- Suwałki (1920)
- Riga (1921)
- Franco-Polish alliance (1921)
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