The following is an attempt to describe the history not only of
Rhineland-Palatinate, but of several lineal states located along the middle Rhine River,
whose name comes from Celtic renos meaning
"raging flow".
In legend, the Palatine Hill in Rome was said
to be the one on whose foot the twins Romulus
and Remus were deposited when they escaped the flood
of the Tiber River. It became the initial center of Rome and retained this
importance for most of the life of the later Empire. The Roman emperors
designated some of their local officials with the title "palatine"
after the name of the hill.
Later empires such as the Merovingian and Carolingian used the same title,
expanding it to "count palatine", which meant an official sent to
report on a remote region owned by the crown. Under the later German empire of
the Saxon and Salian dynasties (919-1125), a further
expansion occurred -- the counts palatine were now responsible for general
administration and dispensing justice.
The regions along the middle Rhine were
originally put under imperial control by the Salian
dynasty. But after 1235, Emperor Friedrich II, who, more concerned with Italy than German lands, appointed a
count-palatine of the Wittelsbach family which
controlled the powerful duchy of Bavaria
in return for the duke's support.
With the decline of the monarchy after Friedrich II, administrative rights
reverted to local dukes or bishops, in Saxony, Bavaria and other places, but the count palatine of lower
Lotharingia who headquartered at the palace at Aachen held onto these powers
and kept them for his descendants, who called themselves the Counts Palatine of
the Rhine. This territory, called the Rhenish or Lower Palatinate [German, Pfalz],
was gathered on both sides of the Rhine
River between the Main and the Neckar, with its capital at Heidelberg until the 18th century.
In 1329, to resolve an internal familial dispute, the North Mark of Bavaria
was detached, named the Oberpfalz [Upper Palatinate],
and transferred to the Count Palatine.
The trend in those days was to subdivide inheritance among all the sons of a
family and in this way the Palatinate was
divided into four regions in 1410. This was reversed by Friedrich the
Victorious (1449-1476). After this event, the Palatinate's
power grew and it became the leading state in the empire, a fact which was
recognized by making its ruler an hereditary elector
in 1356.
Previously an entirely Catholic region, the Palatinate
accepted Calvinism under Elector Friedrich III during the 1560's.
Elector Friedrich V's acceptance of Bohemia's
offer of its crown touched off in 1618 the Thirty Years War, a complicated
catastrophe from which the Palatinate never
really recovered. Although the final result was centuries in coming, it meant
that instead of politically leading Germany,
the Palatinate became a spoil, fought over by
other states and countries. Subsequent German history might have been
considerably different had the Palatinate rather than Prussia held
the position that the latter was to acquire for itself. Initially however, the
only immediately apparent loss was that of the Upper
Palatinate which was claimed by Bavaria.
During these times, a weakened Palatinate was no match for an ebullient France under
Sun king Louis XIV, whose forces ravaged the region. In fact, so much
international concern was there over growing French hegemony, that Britain led a
coalition of powers to oppose her. These struggles became known as the War of
the Palatinate (or the War of the Grand
Alliance or War of the League of Augsburg, 1688-1697). One major effect was
large scale emigration from 1689 to 1697, and later, giving rise, for example,
in the United States
to the phenomenon of the Pennsylvania Dutch.
There was a major freeze in the winter of 1708/09 in the Palatinate.
On 10 January 1709 the Rhine
River froze and was
closed for five weeks. Wine froze into ice. Grapevines died. Cattle died in
their sheds. Many Palatines traveled down the Rhine to Rotterdam in late February and March. In Rotterdam they were
housed in shacks covered with reeds. The ones who made it to London were housed in 1,600 tents surrounding
the city. Londoners were resentful. Other Palatines were sent to other places,
such as Ireland, the Scilly Isles, the West Indies, and New York.
Queen Anne was related to the ruler of the Palatinate.
On 24 March 1709 a British naturalization act was passed whereby any foreigner
who would take the oaths to the British government and profess himself a
Protestant would be immediately naturalized and have all the privileges of an
English-born subject for one shilling.
The French returned following the Revolution of 1789 and the crowning of
Napoleon Bonaparte. The result was to incorporate the Rhine west bank
territories into France and
the east bank territories into the essentially-puppet duchies of Baden and Hesse.
After Napoleon's defeat in 1815, the Congress of Vienna granted the majority
of the east-bank lands to Bavaria and a a territory called Rheinhessen including the economically-vital cities of Mainz and Worms
to Hesse-Darmstadt. Rheinhessen
was at that time one of the three provinces of the Grandduchy
of Hessen, the other two being Starkenburg
and Oberhessen. Mainz,
west of the Rhine river,
was the provincial capital.
In Bavaria,
which was not territorially contiguous with its new property, the territory was
first known as the Königlich Bayrischen
Lande am Rhein. After 1836,
it was known as the Bayrische Pfalz.
After 1838 it was known variously as the Rheinpfalz (Palatinate) or Rheinbayern or
simply Pfalz. This state had its capital at Speyer (SHPY-er)
located west of the Rhine river.
The west-bank lands went to Prussia, and
were joined to Prussia's
east bank possessions to form the Prussian Rheinprovinz [Rhine Province]
in 1824. Prussia annexed
nearby Nassau and Meisenheim
in 1866 and the Rhineland became the most
prosperous area of the new German nation following its formation in 1871.
Following the First World war in 1918, the Rhine
Province and the entire Rhineland region on the west bank was occupied by the
Entente Powers until June 30, 1930. In 1920 the region was further cut up by
adding the Westpfalz, a region of 418 square miles
and over 100,000 inhabitants, including Homburg, St. Ingbert,
Blieskastel, to the Saar region. It was re-militarized by
Hitler's Germany
on March 3, 1936. In 1937, the Birkenfeld portion of Oldenburg
was transferred to the Rhine
Province.
|
|
30 August 1946
Rhineland-Palatinate was created by the French military government as a part of
the French Occupation Zone. It comprised lands including the southern part of
the Prussian province Rheinprovinz (Rhineland), part
of the Prussian province Hessen-Nassau, part of Rheinhessen (Rheinhessen was a
part of the free state Hessen-Darmstadt) and the
Bavarian Rheinpfalz and consisted in all of 39
counties in 5 districts - Koblenz, Montabaur, Pfalz, Rheinhessen and Trier until a
reorganization in the years 1968-72. (The French occupation zone included the
southern part of Baden, Rhineland-Palatinate,
Saarland and Wuerttemberg-Hohenzollern
-- see map
).
25 February 1947
The Allied Powers declared the State of Preußen (Prussia) dissolved.
18 May 1947
Elections for the first diet, and a plesbiscite over
the constitution, were held.
01 April 1949
The French Occupation Zone was joined with the Bizone
(combined British and US Zone) to form the Trizone (Trinationalzone).
23 May 1949
The Federal Republic of Germany was founded and
Rhineland-Palatinate became a federal state. The Pfalz
was to remain separate Regierungsbezirk within the
state until 1968.
1968-1972
Counties and districts were reorganized. The number of districts was reduced to
3 -- Koblenz, Rheinhessen-Pfalz, Trier -- and the 39 counties to
25.
[Top
of document]
- English
- Blanning,
T.C.W.
- Reform and
revolution in Mainz,
1743-1803
- The French
Revolution in Germany;
Occupation and Resistance in the Rhineland,
1792-1802, Internet
Bookshop
- Clasen,
C.P., The Palatinate in European
History 1559-1660 (1963)
- Cohn, Henry J.,
Government of the Rhine Palatinate in
the Fifteenth Century (1965)
- Langer, H., The
Thirty Years War (Poole, 1980)
- Pevitt,
Christine, Philipp, Duc
D'Orleans
- Pillorget,
R., "Louis XIV and the electorate of Trier,
1652-76" in Louis XIV and Europe (London, 1976, R.M. Hatton,
editor)
- Thompson, Richard H., Lothar Franz von Schèonborn
and the diplomacy of the Electorate of Mainz,
from the Treaty of Ryswick
to the outbreak of the War of the Spanish Succession
- Wedgwood, C.V., The
Thirty Years War (London,
1938)
- Controversy and
Conciliation (1986, D. Visser, editor)
- Rhineland-Pfalz-Saarland (Roadmap,1996, Ravenstein
Verlag Gmbh)
- The Thirty Years'
War (New York, Routledge, 1987, Geoffrey
Parker, editor)
- Deutsch: siehe
Deutsche
Seite
[Top of
document]
Letzte Änderung/Last update: 6-Sep-2000 (DK)
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Braun, Rick Heli, Julian Isphording
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