Through the lens of five generations of Thaddens, this book
tells the history of Trieglaff, the village and family estate
located in what is now western Poland, from Napoleon's occupation
in 1807 to the Red Army's invasion in 1945 and until the departure
of the last Thaddens in 1948. At the center of this history of
Trieglaff society, economy, politics, and culture is the von
Thadden family, notably, Adolph Ferdinand von Thadden, the head of
the pietistic revival in Pomerania, and Reinold von
Thadden-Trieglaff, the founder of the German Protestant Kirchentag.
It intertwines family history with the political history of Germany
through its description of Otto von Bismarck's close associations
with Trieglaff in the 19th century and its deliberation of the
execution of Elisabeth von Thadden, arising out of her resistance
to the Nazis, in the 20th century. The source material is richly
supplemented by family records kept by "Trieglaffers" in America
and from correspondence between Pomerania and America. The book
examines the lives of individuals as well as socio-economic and
cultural structures, depicting the dynamic changes that the village
experienced throughout some 150 years of German and European
history; it might be called world history in microcosm. As
juxtaposition of formal history and remembered history, it is a
serious scholarly source as well as an engaging read.
Rudolf von Thadden is Professor Emeritus of History at Gottingen
University, co-founder and honorary president of the Foundation for
German-French Cooperation at Genshagen near Berlin, and is still
active in his field.
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