I'm asking you.
Prussia transcends the current German-Polish Borders.
Prussia is now modern day Germany
East Prussia is now Poland, Russia (Kaliningrad), and Lithuania.
Prussia is not a country anymore(since the end of World War 2), now several different countries are settled where it was. The biggest one is Germany and most of the Prussian citizens resettled there.
Iran used to be called Persia. It changed its name in the early 1920s. (Prussia, which sounds similar, is an entirely different country, formerly located in the eastern part of, what is now, United Germany
No. Hungary in below Austria. Prussia is now part of Germany, Poland, the baltic states, Russia, Et cetera. Prussia, was never part of Hungary either.
A large part of what is now called Germany, was, throughout the eighteenth and most of the nineteenth centuries, known as Prussia, or the Prussian Empire.
Prussia no longer it exists, but it was where some central and eastern European countries now are.
In 1989, the country once known as Burma had its name changed by its military government. The country is now known as Myanmar, which is short for Republic of the Union of Myanmar.
Frederic the great-king of Prussia played violin.His violin was played also by Joan Sebastian Bach.A marvellous Stradivari violin -now in the Stradivari collection of a Venetian lawyer.The name King of Prussia was given to the town because of admiration for this music lover king and his famous violin probably played in Philadelphia by some great violin soloist.It would be easy to know who when and where that...inspiring concertp took place. Frederic the great-king of Prussia played violin.His violin was played also by Joan Sebastian Bach.A marvellous Stradivari violin -now in the Stradivari collection of a Venetian lawyer.The name King of Prussia was given to the town because of admiration for this music lover king and his famous violin probably played in Philadelphia by some great violin soloist.It would be easy to know who when and where that...inspiring concertp took place.
Usually not. However, during the Seven Years' War a part of Prussia briefly became Russian from 1758 until 1763. After World War 2 a part of Prussia became Russian again. This "Russian Prussia" is called Kaliningrad Oblast. The other parts of (Old Baltic) Prussia are now part of Poland and Lithuania. Prussia has two meanings: The (German) Kingdom of Prussia on one hand and Old/Baltic Prussia on the other hand. The Kingdom of Prussia got its name from the original Baltic Prussia (in Old Prussian language it is called "Prūsa"). The original Baltic Prussia was the easternmost province of the Kingdom of Prussia. That Province of Prussia inside the Kingdom of Prussia was most of the time parted into East Prussia and West Prussia.
No, Prussia was an old power in Europe that consited of now a day countries such as Germany, Netherlands, and others.