East Elbia

East Elbia was noted for its historic manorialism and serfdom, as well as for political conservatism, combined with the predominantly Protestant confession of the local population.

The former social structure of this region with relatively large latifundia owned by landed gentry is a product of Ostsiedlung in the medieval era when Germanic settlers moved into the area of settlement of the Wends and other Slavic groups changing the ethnic makeup of Germania Slavica through assimilation, expulsion and immigration.

In the German Democratic Republic, which controlled the remainder of East Elbia after 1949 a land reform was initiated to collectivize agriculture and also with the explicit goal of eliminating the junker class.

[1] Attempts at restitution for expropriated property after 1990 have only been partially successful[2] and have not led to a reestablishment of the erstwhile social structure, but the average size of agricultural estates formed from erstwhile landwirtschaftliche Produktionsgenossenschaften (LPG, 'agricultural production cooperatives') and volkseigene Güter (VEG, 'national goods') is still much higher in the East than in the West of Germany where agriculture is still based mostly on small farms.

[3][4] Still, the term "East Elbia" has vanished from common use outside historical contexts and is usually glossed in texts aimed at a general audience.

The German Empire with East Elbia colored in. (Map in Korean ).