Prussia
[ pruhsh-uh ]
/ ˈprʌʃ ə /
noun
a former state in N Europe: became a military power in the 18th century and in 1871 led the formation of the German empire; formally abolished as an administrative unit in 1947.
German
Preussen.
Compare
East Prussia,
West Prussia.
Example sentences from the Web for prussia
British Dictionary definitions for prussia
Prussia
/ (ˈprʌʃə) /
noun
a former German state in N and central Germany, extending from France and the Low Countries to the Baltic Sea and Poland: developed as the chief military power of the Continent, leading the North German Confederation from 1867–71, when the German Empire was established; dissolved in 1947 and divided between East and West Germany, Poland, and the former Soviet Union. Area: (in 1939) 294 081 sq km (113 545 sq miles)
German name: Preussen
Cultural definitions for prussia
Prussia
Former state in north-central Germany. At the height of its power, Prussia occupied more than half of present-day Germany, stretching from The Netherlands and Belgium in the west to Lithuania in the east.
notes for Prussia
notes for Prussia
In the nineteenth century, Prussia led the economic and political unification of the German states, establishing itself as the largest and most influential of these states, with
Berlin as the capital of the German Empire.
notes for Prussia
After Germany's defeat in
World War II, Prussia was abolished as a state, and its territory was divided among
East Germany,
West Germany, the
Soviet Union, and Poland.
notes for Prussia
Prussians are often depicted as authoritarian, militaristic, and extremely orderly, a characterization based on the unswerving obedience of their army.