BRAUNSBERG, a town
of Germany, in the kingdom of Prussia,
38 m. by rail S.W. of Königsberg, on the Passarge, 4 m. from its mouth
in the Frisches Haff. Pop. (1900) 12,497. It
possesses numerous Roman Catholic institutions, of which the most important
is the Lyceum Hosianum (enjoying university rank), founded in 1564 by the
cardinal
bishop Stanislaus Hosius. Brewing, tanning, and the manufactures of
soap, yeast, carriages and bricks are the most important industries of
the town, which also carries on a certain amount of trade in corn, ship
timber and yarn. The river is navigable for small vessels. The castle of
Braunsberg was built by the Teutonic knights
in 1241, and the town was founded ten years later. Destroyed by the Prussians
in 1262, it was restored in 1279. The town, which was the seat of the bishops
of Ermeland from 1255 to 1298, was granted the
“law of Lübeck”
by its bishop in 1284, and admitted to the Hanseatic
League. After numerous vicissitudes it fell into the hands of the Poles
in 1520, and in 1626 it was captured by Gustavus Adolphus. The Swedes kept
possession till 1635. It fell to Prussia by the first partition of Poland
in 1772.
Startseite,
vol.4