Frederick the Great is keenly interested in …

Years: 1762 - 1762
Frederick the Great is keenly interested in land use, especially draining swamps and opening new farmland for colonizers who will increase the kingdom's food supply.

He calls it "peopling Prussia" (Peuplierungspolitik).

About a thousand new villages will be founded in his reign that will ultimately attract three hundred thousand immigrants from outside Prussia.

The use of improved technology has enabled him to create new farmland through a massive drainage program in the country's Oderbruch marsh-land.

The construction of embankments and drainage work had begun in 1735 but was primarily carried out between 1747 and 1762.

This program has created roughly sixty thousand hectares (one hundred and fifty thousand acres) of new farmland, but has also eliminated vast swaths of natural habitat, destroyed the region's biodiversity, and displaced numerous native plant and animal communities.

Frederick sees as this project as the "taming" and "conquering" of nature, which, in its wild form, he regards as "useless" and "barbarous" (an attitude that reflects his enlightenment-era, rationalist sensibilities).

He presides over the construction of canals for bringing crops to market, and introduces new crops, especially the potato and the turnip, to the country.

For this, he is sometimes called Der Kartoffelkönig (the Potato King).

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