The Great or Große Stubber is a stony sandbank that dries out at low water located in the eastern part of the German Baltic Sea lagoon known as the Greifswalder Bodden or Bay of Greifswald.
In the Middle Ages the Stubber was an island that became steadily smaller as a result of tree-felling and the excavation of stones.
In 1678 the Stubber Bank acted as an assembly area for the entire naval force gathered for the invasion of Rügen which ended with the successful capture of Swedish-ruled island of Rügen by the Allies, Brandenburg-Prussia and Denmark.
The large glacial erratics that remain to this day are a hazard for sports boats.
From 2006 increasing numbers of seals, from 7 to 25, were counted on the Großer Stubber all year round.