Abstract
The Margraviate of Brandenburg was the core province of the Prussian
monarchy until 1815. This map shows its division into administrative
units or districts. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries,
Brandenburg was a sparsely populated, mostly rural territory whose main
centers of settlement had grown along the major rivers Elbe, Spree, Oder
and Netze. The Cottbus district formed an enclave separated from the
margraviate’s main territory after the Brandenburg Elector Frederick II
acquired the territory in the fifteenth century. In addition to the
princely (and after 1701 royal) seat Berlin, the most important towns
included Potsdam, Spandau, Stendal, Prenzlau, Frankfurt an der Oder and
Cüstrin (today: Kostrzyn nad Odrą in Poland).