Province of Hohenzollern: Difference between revisions

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Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Wikipedia article at de: Hohenzollernsche Lande; see its history for attribution.
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{{Unreferenced|date=December 2009}}
{{short description|Province of Prussia}}
 
{{Infobox former subdivision
| native_name = ''ProvinzHohenzollernsche HohenzollernLande''
| conventional_long_name = Province of Hohenzollern
| common_name = Hohenzollern
| subdivision = [[Provinces of Prussia|Province]]
| nation = [[Prussia]]|
| image_flag = Flagge Preußen - Provinz Hohenzollern.svg
|image_flag image_coat = FlaggeCoat Preußenof -Arms Provinzof Hohenzollern Province.svg
|image_coat image_map = CoatGerman Empire of- ArmsPrussia of- Hohenzollern Province(1871).svg
| image_map_caption = The Province of = The Hohenzollern Lands (red), within the [[Kingdom of Prussia]] (light yellow), within the [[German Empire]]|
|image_map = German Empire - Prussia - Hohenzollern (1871).svg
| capital = [[Sigmaringen]]
|image_map_caption = The Province of Hohenzollern (red), within the [[Kingdom of Prussia]] (light yellow), within the [[German Empire]]
| coordinates = {{Coord|48|05|N|9|13|E|display=inline,title}}
| stat_area1 = 1,142
|capital = [[Sigmaringen]]
| stat_pop1 = 73,844
|coordinates = {{Coord|48|05|N|9|13|E|display=inline,title}}
| stat_year1 = 1939|
|stat_area1= 1142
| p1 = Hohenzollern-Hechingen
|stat_pop1 = 73,844
| flag_p1 = Flag of Hohenzollern-Hechingen and Sigmaringen.png
|stat_year1 = 1939
| p2 = Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen
|p1 flag_p2 = Flag of Hohenzollern-Hechingen and Sigmaringen.png
| s1 = Württemberg-Hohenzollern
|flag_p1 = Flag of Hohenzollern-Hechingen and Sigmaringen.png
| flag_s1 = Flagge Königreich Württemberg.svg|
|p2 = Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen
| today = [[Baden-Württemberg]]
|flag_p2 = Flag of Hohenzollern-Hechingen and Sigmaringen.png
| year_start = 1850
|s1 = Württemberg-Hohenzollern
| year_end = 1946
|flag_s1 = Flagge Königreich Württemberg.svg
}}
|today = [[Baden-Württemberg]]
|year_start = 1850
|year_end = 1946
|demonym=}}
The '''Province of Hohenzollern''' ({{lang-de|Provinz Hohenzollern}}) or the '''Hohenzollern Lands''' ({{lang-de|link=no|Hohenzollernsche Lande}}) was a [[Provinces of Prussia|province of Prussia]] from 1850 to 1946.
 
The '''Province of Hohenzollern''' (German: ''Hohenzollernsche Lande'', 'Hohenzollern Lands') was a district of [[Prussia]] from 1850 to 1946. It was located in [[Swabia]], the region of southern Germany that was the ancestral home of the [[House of Hohenzollern]], to which the kings of Prussia belonged.
Hohenzollern was established in 1850 by merging [[Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen]] and [[Hohenzollern-Hechingen]], formerly independent [[principalities]] ruled by the [[Catholic]] branch of the [[House of Hohenzollern]], that ceded their sovereignty to the [[Kingdom of Prussia]] ruled by the [[Protestant]] Hohenzollern branch and used the same dynastic [[coat of arms]]. Hohenzollern enjoyed all the rights of a full-fledged province of Prussia, including representation in the [[Prussian parliament]], but its military matters and some civil matters were governed by the [[Oberpräsident]] of [[Rhine Province]]. Hohenzollern was Prussia's smallest province until [[Berlin]] city was separated from [[Province of Brandenburg|Brandenburg]] in 1881, and the least-populous with the last census recording 74,151 inhabitants in 1939. The province's size meant it was administered as a single ''[[Regierungsbezirk]]'' (district) from [[Sigmaringen]], the provincial capital, which was further subdivided into seven ''Oberamtsbezirke'', although only four of these remained by 1925, when they were merged and re-divided as two new ''[[Landkreis|Kreise]]''. Hohenzollern was an [[exclave]] of Prussia, surrounded by [[Baden]] and [[Württemberg]], and was the southernmost province.
 
The Hohenzollern Lands were formed in 1850 from two principalities that had belonged to members of the Catholic branch of the Hohenzollern family. They were united to create a unique type of administrative district ([[Regierungsbezirk|''Regierungsbezirk'')]] that was not a true province<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |last=Lilla |first=Joachim |title=Die administrativen Beziehungen der Hohenzollernschen (Hohenzollerischen) Lande zur Rheinprovinz |trans-title=The Administrative Relations of the Hohenzollern Lands to the Rhine Province (1852 to 1945) |url=http://www.rheinische-geschichte.lvr.de/themen/Epochen%C3%BCbergreifend/Seiten/DieadministrativenBeziehungenderHohenzollernschenLande.aspx |website=Portal Rheinische Geschichte |language=de}}</ref> – a ''Regierungsbezirk'' was normally a part of a province – but that had almost all the rights of a Prussian province.<ref name=":1">{{Cite book |last=Romeyk |first=Horst |title=Verwaltungs- und Behördengeschichte der Rheinprovinz 1914–1945 |publisher=Droste Verlag |year=1985 |location=Düsseldorf |pages=123 ff. |language=de |trans-title=History of Administration and Public Authorities of the Rhine Province 1914-1945}}</ref> The Hohenzollern Lands lost their separate identity in 1946 when they were made part of the state of [[Württemberg-Hohenzollern]] following [[World War II]].
Hohenzollern became a province of the [[Free State of Prussia]] in 1918 after [[World War I]], and this system continued to exist unchanged until 1933, when all provincial functions were ''[[de facto]]'' suspended by [[Nazi Germany]] and provinces were placed under [[direct rule]]. Hohenzollern was dissolved in 1946 following [[World War II]], when the [[Allied-occupied Germany#French Zone of Occupation|French military administration]] merged it with Württemberg to form the state of [[Württemberg-Hohenzollern]], and became part of the [[Federal Republic of Germany]]. Hohenzollern was part of the [[Federal states of Germany|federal state]] of [[Baden-Württemberg]] from 1952, but after regional reforms in 1973 the Hohenzollern borders were eliminated, with the region now belonging to the districts of [[Sigmaringen (district)|Sigmaringen]] and [[Zollernalbkreis]], which also contain land that was not Hohenzollern territory.
 
==Gallery History ==
The Catholic ruling houses of [[Hohenzollern-Hechingen]] and [[Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen]] had hereditary treaties with Prussia that went back to 1695 and 1707 respectively. During the [[German revolutions of 1848–1849|German Revolutions of 1848–1849]], when the principalities' future came into question, King [[Frederick William IV of Prussia]] was initially reluctant to take them over. His historian and advisor Rudolf von Stillfried-Rattonitz told him that if he did not, the two Swabian princes "would inevitably have to throw themselves into the arms of the 400-year-old [[House of Württemberg|House of Württemberg,]] … [Prussia's] hereditary enemy", a disgrace that the king could not bear.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Gönner |first=Eberhard |title=Die Revolution 1848/49 in den hohenzollerischen Fürstentümern und deren Anschluß an Preußen |year=1952 |location=Hechingen |pages=181 |language=de |trans-title=The 1848/49 Revolution in the Hohenzollern Principalities and their annexation to Prussia}}</ref> In May 1849 he approved a treaty of annexation that was signed on 7 December 1849; the two princes abdicated the same day. The Prussian state took possession of Sigmaringen on 6 April 1850 and of Hechingen on 8 April. The two former principalities were then merged into one governmental district with administrative headquarters in the town of [[Sigmaringen]].
<gallery>
 
Karte-Hohenzollern.png|Map of Hohenzollern in purple, c. 1930
The Hohenzollern Lands, with a total population of only about 65,500 in 1850, were smaller in size and less populous than any of the full Prussian provinces. The district was subordinate overall to ministries in Berlin,<ref name=":0" /> although since it had the status of a province, it was represented in the [[Prussian State Council]] (''Staatsrat''), and its district president was equal to the governors (''Oberpräsidenten'') of Prussian provinces. Many of its administrative functions, however, were the responsibility of the nearby [[Rhine Province]].<ref name=":1" />
Hohenzollernsche Lande Tafel.jpg|Hohenzollern emblem with the eagle of the [[Free State of Prussia]] and the province's alternative name, ''Hohenzollernsche Lande''.
 
</gallery>
During the [[Austro-Prussian War|Austro-Prussia War]] of 1866, the Hohenzollern Lands were occupied from 27 June to 6 August by troops from Württemberg, which fought with the [[German Confederation]] on the losing Austrian side of the war.<ref> von Lindeiner-Wildau, Christoph (1967). Burg Hohenzollern als preußisch-deutsche Garnison und befestigter Platz [''Hohenzollern Castle as a Prussian-German Garrison and Fortified Place'']. In: Zeitschrift für Hohenzollerische Geschichte 3(90), p.&nbsp;81–82. Online at ([http://dl.ub.uni-freiburg.de/diglit/zhg1967/0083 Digitalisat der UB Freiburg]).</ref>
 
In 1875 Prussia established provincial associations (,''Provinzialverbänden''), bodies of local self-government that were above the municipalities and the rural and urban districts, and that replaced the older, lower-level administrative districts. With their formation, the Hohenzollern Lands gained self-government through a ''Landeskommunalverband'', a corporate body under public law for the self-administration of the district and for which a district parliament (''Kommunallandtag'') was elected. Both remained in existence until 1973. The Hohenzollern Lands' court of appeal until 1879 was in [[Arnsberg]], about 450 km to the north. After that the Higher Regional Court in [[Frankfurt am Main]] was responsible. Its military, higher education system and medical system were under the jurisdiction of the Rhine Province.<ref name=":0" />
[[File:Karte-Hohenzollern.png|thumb|left|356x356px|Map of the Hohenzollern Lands (in purple, cgray). 1930]]
The administration of the Sigmaringen district, which performed the tasks of a state government, was initially divided into the seven Hohenzollern upper bureaus (''Oberämter'') of [[Gammertingen]], [[Haigerloch]], [[Hechingen]], [[Ostrach]], [[Sigmaringen]], [[Trochtelfingen]] and [[Wald, Baden-Württemberg|Wald]]. In 1925 the upper administrative districts (''Oberamtsbezirke'') Gammertingen, Haigerloch, Hechingen and Sigmaringen were combined to form the two new ''Oberämter'', Hechingen and Sigmaringen.
 
In 1918, following World War I, the Hohenzollern Lands became a province of the [[Free State of Prussia]], and their overall status remained unchanged during the life of the [[Weimar Republic]]. In 1933, after the [[Nazi Party|Nazi]] seizure of power, all provincial functions were de facto suspended and provinces were placed under direct rule. The Hohenzollern Lands belonged to the Nazi [[Gau (territory)]] of Württemberg-Hohenzollern under [[Gauleiter]] and ''[[Reichsstatthalter]]'' (Reich governor) of Württemberg [[Wilhelm Murr]]. The Hohenzollern Lands nevertheless formally remained a Prussian administrative district.
 
After World War II the area became part of the [[French occupation zone in Germany|French occupation zone]]. In 1946 the military government united it with the southern part of the former state of Württemberg to form the state of [[Württemberg-Hohenzollern]] with [[Tübingen]] as its capital. It became part of [[West Germany]] when it was establishment in 1949. The districts of Hechingen and Sigmaringen were retained, even when Württemberg-Hohenzollern was absorbed into [[Baden-Württemberg]] in 1952.
 
The Hohenzollern Lands' boundaries were lost during the district reform of Baden-Württemberg in 1973. Today the area is divided among nine rural districts (''Landkreise)'' within three administrative districts, all of which include non-Hohenzollern areas. The majority lies in the Sigmaringen and [[Zollernalbkreis]] ''Landkreise'', whose borders partly coincide, especially in the north, with those of the former Hohenzollern Lands. [[File:Hohenzollernsche Lande Tafel.jpg|thumb|Emblem of the Hohenzollern Lands with the eagle of the Free State of Prussia.]]
 
== Population ==
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
! Year
! Population<ref>{{Cite web |last=Rademacher |first=Michael |date=2006 |title=Online-Material zur Dissertation, University of Osnabrück |url=https://treemagic.org/rademacher/www.verwaltungsgeschichte.de/p_hohenzollern.html |language=de}}</ref>
|-
| 1852 || 65.634
|-
| 1880 || 67.624
|-
| 1890 || 66.085
|-
| 1900 || 66.780
|-
| 1905 || 68.282
|-
| 1910 || 71.011
|-
| 1925 || 71.840
|-
| 1933 || 72.991
|-
| 1939 || 73.706
|}
== References ==
{{Reflist}}
 
== External links ==
* '''[https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Hohenzollernsche_Lande?uselang=de Commons: Hohenzollernsche Lande]''' – A collection of pictures
* [http://www.gemeindeverzeichnis.de/gem1900//gem1900.htm?hohenzollern/hohenzollern1900.htm Hohenzollern Lands ''Oberämter'' 1910 (in German)]
* [http://www.territorial.de/hohenz/hohenzla.htm ''Regierungsbezirk'' Hohenzollern Lands timeline (in German)]
* [http://www.gonschior.de/weimar/Preussen/Hohenzollern/index.htm Hohenzollern Lands Overview (in German)]
 
{{Territories and provinces of Prussia}}
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[[Category:1850 establishments in Germany]]
[[Category:1946 disestablishments in Germany]]
 
 
{{BadenWurttemberg-geo-stub}}