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  1. Duke Casimir V of Pomerania (or, counting differently, Casimir VI; after 1380 – 13 April 1435) was a member of the House of Griffins and a Duke of Pomerania. He ruled in Pomerania-Stettin together with his brother Otto II from 1413 to 1428. After 1428, he ruled Pomerania-Stettin alone.

  2. The battle was won by the Polish, who took Casimir prisoner. He was released soon afterwards. In the Battle of Kremmer Damm (1412), Casimir and his older brother Otto II fought against Brandenburg. After Duke Swantibors's death in 1413, Casimir and his older brother Otto II jointly ruled Pomerania-Stettin. The war with Brandenburg continued.

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  4. Post World War II Soviet occupation Szczecin (Stettin) in 1945. Soviet occupation of Pomerania had started just after the East Pomeranian Offensive, at the time of the northern campaigns of the Battle of Berlin by the Red Army and First Polish Army, in March and April 1945.

  5. From 1295 to 1464 the city was the capital of a splinter Pomeranian realm known as the Pomerania-Stettin. (Its Dukes were Otto I, Barnim III the Great, Casimir III, Swantibor I, Boguslaw VII, Otto II, Casimir V, Joachim I the Younger, Otto III.)

  6. Casimir VI (V) Brother and joint ruler. 1435 - 1451: Joachim the Younger: Son. 1449: Pommern-Stargard absorbs Pommern-Traburg. 1451 - 1464: Otto III: Son. 1454 - 1466: King Kazimierz of Poland pursues the Thirteen Year War against the Teutonic Knights. Ostensibly the reason for the war is the domination of Prussia, which Poland is determined to ...

  7. Foreign the duke of Pomerania-Stettin also occasionally counted as Casimir IV, see Casimir III, Duke of Pomerania.

  8. Oct 29, 2021 · In June 1938, Adolf Hitler paid a visit to the then-German city, a stronghold of the Nazi movement. THE FIRST TIME I RECALL hearing about Stettin, or Szczecin as it is called in Polish, was in the famous speech Winston Churchill gave at Westminster College in Fulton, Missouri, in March 1946, when he sounded an early alarm in the Cold War.

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