Category
page 1Brandenburg articles missing geocoordinate data
Northern March
10th-century march of East Francia
Province of Brandenburg
province of Prussia, Germany (1815–1947)

Bishopric of Havelberg
former Roman Catholic diocese
Havel Canal
river in Germany

Bishopric of Lebus
Roman Catholic diocese in Poland/Germany (1125-1598)
Battle of Lenzen
929 battle
Frankfurt Government Region
administrative district of the Prussian province of Brandenburg with headquarters in Frankfurt (Oder) (1815-1945)
Brandenburg-Schwedt
thumb|350px|Schwedt Castle in 1669
Brandenburg-Schwedt was a secundogeniture of the Hohenzollern margraves of Brandenburg, established by Prince Philip William who took his residence at Schwedt Castle in 1689. By appanage, they administered the manors of Schwedt and Vierraden on the Oder river (Uckermark and Neumark) as well as Wildenbruch in Pomerania (present-day Swobnica, Poland). Though prosperous, the cadet branch never obtained Imperial immediacy.
Gau March of Brandenburg
Gau of Nazi Germany
Senckenberg German Entomological Institute
entomological institute in Germany
Bützow–Szczecin railway
railway line in Poland
Battle of Fehrbellin
1758 battle
Battle of Rathenow
1675 battle
Palatinate-Landsberg
{| align="right" class="toccolours"
|-
|colspan=2 align="center" |Palatinate-LandsbergPfalz-Landsberg
|-
|colspan=2 align="center" |1604 - 1681
|-
|
|-
|width=138px| CapitalCircleBench
|width=138px| Burg LandsbergUpper RhenishCouncil of Princes
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|Partitioned from County Palatine of Zweibrücken
|1604
|-
|Inherited Zweibrücken
|1661
|-
|Extinct; to Sweden
|1681
|-
|}
Palatinate-Landsberg was a state of the Holy Roman Empire based around Landsberg Castle near Obermoschel, in southwestern Germany.
Mittelmark
thumb|300px|Brandenburg under the House of Ascania, 1320
The Mittelmark (, ) is a historical region in eastern Germany that was the core territory of the Margrave of Brandenburg between the Oder and Elbe rivers.
Kurmark
thumb|320px|Kurmark within Brandenburg-Prussia, at the death of Elector Frederick William in 1688
The German term Kurmark (archaic Churmark, "Electoral March") referred to the Imperial State held by the margraves of Brandenburg, who had been awarded the electoral (Kur) dignity by the Golden Bull of 1356. In early modern times, Kurmark proper denoted the western part of the margraviate to the exclusion of later acquisitions.
Cottbus–Guben railway
German railway line
Oststernberg District
historical district of Prussia
Brandenburg City Canal
canal in Germany
Battle of Nauen
battle in June, 1675
Jüterbog–Nauen railway
German railway line
Battle of Pasewalk
1760 battle
Havel–Oder–Wasserstraße
thumb|Havel-Oder-Wasserstraße - Eberswalder Kanalbrücke 1The Havel–Oder–Wasserstraße (HOW) is a navigable waterway connecting Berlin (Havel and Spree) and the German-Polish border at the West Oder River at Friedrichsthal north of Schwedt. Approximately 135 km long, it is composed of the following sections:
Havel-, Scheital-, Oderhaltung and the Hohensaaten-Friedrichsthaler Wasserstraße (HFW), which are connected by the Lehnitz lock,
the ship's lift Niederfinow and
the West Schleuse Hohensaaten.
Diocese of Brandenburg