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Alsace

Alsace (/ælˈsæs/,[4] US also /ælˈss, ˈælsæs/;[5][6] French: [alzas] ; Low Alemannic German/Alsatian: Elsàss [ˈɛlsɑs]; German: Elsass[a] [ˈɛlzas] ; Latin: Alsatia) is a cultural region and a territorial collectivity in eastern France, on the west bank of the upper Rhine next to Germany and Switzerland. In January 2023, it had a population of 1,921,014.[3] Alsatian culture is characterized by a blend of German and French influences.[7]

Alsace
Elsàss (Alemannic German)
Anthem: "Elsässisches Fahnenlied" (German)
(English: "Song of the Alsatian Flag")
Instrumental version, 2023
[1]
CountryFrance
Territorial collectivityEuropean Collectivity of Alsace
PrefectureStrasbourg
Departments
Area
 • Total8,280 km2 (3,200 sq mi)
Population
 (Jan. 2023)[3]
 • Total1,921,014
 • Density230/km2 (600/sq mi)
DemonymAlsatian
ISO 3166 codeFR-A

Until 1871, Alsace included the area now known as the Territoire de Belfort, which formed its southernmost part. From 1982 to 2016, Alsace was the smallest administrative région in metropolitan France, consisting of the Bas-Rhin and Haut-Rhin departments. Territorial reform passed by the French Parliament in 2014 resulted in the merger of the Alsace administrative region with Champagne-Ardenne and Lorraine to form Grand Est. On 1 January 2021, the departments of Bas-Rhin and Haut-Rhin merged into the new European Collectivity of Alsace but remained part of the region Grand Est.

Alsatian is an Alemannic dialect closely related to Swabian, although since World War II most Alsatians primarily speak French. Internal and international migration since 1945 has also changed the ethnolinguistic composition of Alsace. For more than 300 years, from the Thirty Years' War to World War II, the political status of Alsace was heavily contested between France and various German states in wars and diplomatic conferences. The economic and cultural capital of Alsace, as well as its largest city, is Strasbourg, which sits on the contemporary German international border. The city is the seat of several international organizations and bodies.

Etymology Edit

The name Alsace can be traced to the Old High German Ali-saz or Elisaz, meaning "foreign domain".[8] An alternative explanation is from a Germanic Ell-sass, meaning "seated on the Ill",[9] a river in Alsace.

History Edit

In prehistoric times, Alsace was inhabited by nomadic hunters. The area became a diffuse border region between the French and the German cultures and languages. After the end of the Thirty Years War, southern Alsace was annexed by France in 1648, with most of the remainder conquered later in the century. In contrast to other parts of France, Protestants were permitted to practice their faith in Alsace even after the Edict of Fontainebleau of 1685 that abolished their privileges in the rest of France.

After the 1870–71 Franco-Prussian War, Alsace was annexed by Germany and became a part of the 1871 unified German Empire as a formal "Emperor's Land". After World War I the victorious Allies detached it from Germany and the province became part of the Third French Republic. Having been occupied and annexed by Germany during World War II, it was returned to France by the Allies at the end of World War II.

Pre-Roman Alsace Edit

The presence of hominids in Alsace can be traced back 600,000 years.[10] By 4000 BCE farming, in the form of Linear Pottery culture, arrived in the region from the Danube and the Hungarian plain. The culture was characterized by "timber longhouse settlements and incised pottery ... favoring floodplain edge situations for their permanent villages ... [and] small clearings in the forest" for their crops and animals."[11]

By 100 BCE Germanic peoples, including eventually the Suebi and other tribes under Ariovistus, had begun to intrude into areas along the upper Rhine and Danube long settled by Celtic Gauls. Alsace itself had come to be occupied by the Triboci, a Germanic tribe allied with Ariovistus.[12]

Roman Alsace Edit

In response to the threat posted by Ariovistus, the Aedui, a Celtic tribe allied to Rome, appealed to the Roman Senate and Julius Caesar for aid. In 58 BCE, after negotiations with Ariovistus failed, Julius Caesar routed the Suebi at the foot of the Vosges near what became Cernay in southern Alsace.[13][14] There followed a "long period of security ... for the Gauls along the middle and upper Rhine."[13]

From the time of Augustus to the early fifth century AD, the area of Alsace was incorporated into the Roman province of Germania Superior.[15] As a border province, the Romans built fortifications and military camps, many of which, including Argentoratum (Strasbourg), evolved into modern towns and cities.[16]

Alemannic and Frankish Alsace Edit

In 357 CE, Germanic tribes attempted to conquer Alsace but they were rebuffed by the Romans.[10] With the decline of the Roman Empire, Alsace became the territory of the Germanic Alemanni. The Alemanni were agricultural people, and their Germanic language formed the basis of modern-day dialects spoken along the Upper Rhine (Alsatian, Alemannian, Swabian, Swiss). Clovis and the Franks defeated the Alemanni during the 5th century AD, culminating with the Battle of Tolbiac, and Alsace became part of the Kingdom of Austrasia. Under Clovis' Merovingian successors the inhabitants were Christianized. Alsace remained under Frankish control until the Frankish realm, following the Oaths of Strasbourg of 842, was formally dissolved in 843 at the Treaty of Verdun; the grandsons of Charlemagne divided the realm into three parts. Alsace formed part of the Middle Francia, which was ruled by the eldest grandson Lothar I.

Lothar died early in 855 and his realm was divided into three parts. The part known as Lotharingia, or Lorraine, was given to Lothar's son. The rest was shared between Lothar's brothers Charles the Bald (ruler of the West Frankish realm) and Louis the German (ruler of the East Frankish realm). The Kingdom of Lotharingia was short-lived, however, becoming the stem duchy of Lorraine in Eastern Francia after the Treaty of Ribemont in 880. Alsace was united with the other Alemanni east of the Rhine into the stem duchy of Swabia.

Alsace within the Holy Roman Empire Edit

At about this time, the surrounding areas experienced recurring fragmentation and reincorporations among a number of feudal secular and ecclesiastical lordships, a common process in the Holy Roman Empire. Alsace experienced great prosperity during the 12th and 13th centuries under Hohenstaufen emperors.

 
Seal of Albert IV, Count of Habsburg (d.1239), inscribed in Latin (with abbreviations): SIGILLUM ALBERTI (COMIS) DE HABESB(URG) ET LANGRAVII ALSACTIAE ("seal of Albert of Habsburg, Count of Habsburg and Landgrave of Alsace")

Frederick I set up Alsace as a province (a procuratio, not a provincia) to be ruled by ministeriales, a non-noble class of civil servants. The idea was that such men would be more tractable and less likely to alienate the fief from the crown out of their own greed. The province had a single provincial court (Landgericht) and a central administration with its seat at Hagenau. Frederick II designated the Bishop of Strasbourg to administer Alsace, but the authority of the bishop was challenged by Count Rudolf of Habsburg, who received his rights from Frederick II's son Conrad IV. Strasbourg began to grow to become the most populous and commercially important town in the region.

In 1262, after a long struggle with the ruling bishops, its citizens gained the status of free imperial city. A stop on the Paris-Vienna-Orient trade route, as well as a port on the Rhine route linking southern Germany and Switzerland to the Netherlands, England and Scandinavia, it became the political and economic center of the region. Cities such as Colmar and Hagenau also began to grow in economic importance and gained a kind of autonomy within the "Décapole" (or "Zehnstädtebund"), a federation of ten free towns.

Though little is known about the early history of the Jews of Alsace, there is a lot of information from the 12th century onwards. They were successful as moneylenders and had the favor of the Emperor.[17] As in much of Europe, the prosperity of Alsace was brought to an end in the 14th century by a series of harsh winters, bad harvests, and the Black Death. These hardships were blamed on Jews, leading to the pogroms of 1336 and 1339. In 1349, Jews of Alsace were accused of poisoning the wells with plague, leading to the massacre of thousands of Jews during the Strasbourg pogrom.[18] Jews were subsequently forbidden to settle in the town. An additional natural disaster was the Rhine rift earthquake of 1356, one of Europe's worst which made ruins of Basel. Prosperity returned to Alsace under Habsburg administration during the Renaissance.

 
Petite France, Strasbourg

Holy Roman Empire central power had begun to decline following years of imperial adventures in Italian lands, often ceding hegemony in Western Europe to France, which had long since centralized power. France began an aggressive policy of expanding eastward, first to the rivers Rhône and Meuse, and when those borders were reached, aiming for the Rhine. In 1299 the French proposed a marriage alliance between Blanche (sister of Philip IV of France) and Rudolf (son of Albert I of Germany), with Alsace to be the dowry; however, the deal never came off. In 1307, the town of Belfort was first chartered by the Counts of Montbéliard. During the next century, France was to be militarily shattered by the Hundred Years' War, which prevented for a time any further tendencies in this direction. After the conclusion of the war, France was again free to pursue its desire to reach the Rhine and in 1444 a French army appeared in Lorraine and Alsace. It took up winter quarters, demanded the submission of Metz and Strasbourg and launched an attack on Basel.

In 1469, following the Treaty of St. Omer [fr], Upper Alsace was sold by Archduke Sigismund of Austria to Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy. Although Charles was the nominal landlord, taxes were paid to Frederick III, Holy Roman Emperor. The latter was able to use this tax and a dynastic marriage to his advantage to gain back full control of Upper Alsace (apart from the free towns, but including Belfort) in 1477 when it became part of the demesne of the Habsburg family, who were also rulers of the empire. The town of Mulhouse joined the Swiss Confederation in 1515, where it was to remain until 1798.

By the time of the Protestant Reformation in the 16th century, Strasbourg was a prosperous community, and its inhabitants accepted Protestantism in 1523. Martin Bucer was a prominent Protestant reformer in the region. His efforts were countered by the Roman Catholic Habsburgs who tried to eradicate heresy in Upper Alsace. As a result, Alsace was transformed into a mosaic of Catholic and Protestant territories. On the other hand, Mömpelgard (Montbéliard) to the southwest of Alsace, belonging to the Counts of Württemberg since 1397, remained a Protestant enclave in France until 1793.

German Land within the Kingdom of France Edit

This situation prevailed until 1639, when most of Alsace was conquered by France to keep it out of the hands of the Spanish Habsburgs, who by secret treaty in 1617 had gained a clear road to their valuable and rebellious possessions in the Spanish Netherlands, the Spanish Road. Beset by enemies and seeking to gain a free hand in Hungary, the Habsburgs sold their Sundgau territory (mostly in Upper Alsace) to France in 1646, which had occupied it, for the sum of 1.2 million Thalers. When hostilities were concluded in 1648 with the Treaty of Westphalia, most of Alsace was recognized as part of France, although some towns remained independent. The treaty stipulations regarding Alsace were complex. Although the French king gained sovereignty, existing rights and customs of the inhabitants were largely preserved. France continued to maintain its customs border along the Vosges mountains where it had been, leaving Alsace more economically oriented to neighbouring German-speaking lands. The German language remained in use in local administration, in schools, and at the (Lutheran) University of Strasbourg, which continued to draw students from other German-speaking lands. The 1685 Edict of Fontainebleau, by which the French king ordered the suppression of French Protestantism, was not applied in Alsace. France did endeavour to promote Catholicism. Strasbourg Cathedral, for example, which had been Lutheran from 1524 to 1681, was returned to the Catholic Church. However, compared to the rest of France, Alsace enjoyed a climate of religious tolerance.

 
Louis XIV receiving the keys of Strasbourg in 1681

France consolidated its hold with the 1679 Treaties of Nijmegen, which brought most remaining towns under its control. France seized Strasbourg in 1681 in an unprovoked action. These territorial changes were recognised in the 1697 Treaty of Ryswick that ended the War of the Grand Alliance. But Alsace still contained islands of territory nominally under the sovereignty of German princes and an independent city-state at Mulhouse. These enclaves were established by law, prescription and international consensus.[19]

From French Revolution to the Franco-Prussian War Edit

 
Alsatian sign, 1792:
Freiheit Gleichheit Brüderlichk. od. Tod (Liberty Equality Fraternity or Death)
Tod den Tyranen (Death to Tyrants)
Heil den Völkern (Long live the Peoples)

The year 1789 brought the French Revolution and with it the first division of Alsace into the départements of Haut- and Bas-Rhin. Alsatians played an active role in the French Revolution. On 21 July 1789, after receiving news of the Storming of the Bastille in Paris, a crowd of people stormed the Strasbourg city hall, forcing the city administrators to flee and putting symbolically an end to the feudal system in Alsace. In 1792, Rouget de Lisle composed in Strasbourg the Revolutionary marching song "La Marseillaise" (as Marching song for the Army of the Rhine), which later became the anthem of France. "La Marseillaise" was played for the first time in April of that year in front of the mayor of Strasbourg Philippe-Frédéric de Dietrich. Some of the most famous generals of the French Revolution also came from Alsace, notably Kellermann, the victor of Valmy, Kléber, who led the armies of the French Republic in Vendée and Westermann, who also fought in the Vendée.

Mulhouse (a city in southern Alsace), which had been part of Switzerland since 1466, joined France in 1798.[10]

At the same time, some Alsatians were in opposition to the Jacobins and sympathetic to the restoration of the monarchy pursued by the invading forces of Austria and Prussia who sought to crush the nascent revolutionary republic. Many of the residents of the Sundgau made "pilgrimages" to places like Mariastein Abbey, near Basel, in Switzerland, for baptisms and weddings. When the French Revolutionary Army of the Rhine was victorious, tens of thousands fled east before it. When they were later permitted to return (in some cases not until 1799), it was often to find that their lands and homes had been confiscated. These conditions led to emigration by hundreds of families to newly vacant lands in the Russian Empire in 1803–4 and again in 1808. A poignant retelling of this event based on what Goethe had personally witnessed can be found in his long poem Hermann and Dorothea.

In response to the "hundred day" restoration of Napoleon I of France in 1815, Alsace along with other frontier provinces of France was occupied by foreign forces from 1815 to 1818,[20] including over 280,000 soldiers and 90,000 horses in Bas-Rhin alone. This had grave effects on trade and the economy of the region since former overland trade routes were switched to newly opened Mediterranean and Atlantic seaports.

The population grew rapidly, from 800,000 in 1814 to 914,000 in 1830 and 1,067,000 in 1846. The combination of economic and demographic factors led to hunger, housing shortages and a lack of work for young people. Thus, it is not surprising that people left Alsace, not only for Paris – where the Alsatian community grew in numbers, with famous members such as Georges-Eugène Haussmann – but also for more distant places like Russia and the Austrian Empire, to take advantage of the new opportunities offered there: Austria had conquered lands in Eastern Europe from the Ottoman Empire and offered generous terms to colonists as a way of consolidating its hold on the new territories. Many Alsatians also began to sail to the United States, settling in many areas from 1820 to 1850.[21] In 1843 and 1844, sailing ships bringing immigrant families from Alsace arrived at the port of New York. Some settled in Texas and Illinois, many to farm or to seek success in commercial ventures: for example, the sailing ships Sully (in May 1843) and Iowa (in June 1844) brought families who set up homes in northern Illinois and northern Indiana. Some Alsatian immigrants were noted for their roles in 19th-century American economic development.[22] Others ventured to Canada to settle in southwestern Ontario, notably Waterloo County.

Alsatian Jews Edit

In contrast to the rest of France, the Jews in Alsace had not been expelled during the Middle Ages. By 1790, the Jewish population of Alsace was approximately 22,500, about 3% of the provincial population. They were highly segregated and subject to long-standing antisemitic regulations. They maintained their own customs, Yiddish language, and historic traditions within the tightly knit ghettos; they adhered to Jewish law. Jews were barred from most cities and instead lived in villages. They concentrated in trade, services, and banking. They financed about a third of the mortgages in Alsace. Official tolerance grew during the French Revolution, with full emancipation in 1791. However, local antisemitism also increased and Napoleon turned hostile in 1806, imposing a one-year moratorium on all debts owed to Jews.[citation needed] In the 1830–1870 era, most Jews moved to the cities, where they integrated and acculturated, as antisemitism sharply declined. By 1831, the state began paying salaries to official rabbis, and in 1846 a special legal oath for Jews was discontinued. Antisemitic local riots occasionally occurred, especially during the Revolution of 1848. The merger of Alsace into Germany in 1871–1918 lessened antisemitic violence.[23] The constitution of the Reichsland of 1911 reserved one seat in the first chamber of the Landtag for a representative of the Jewish Consistory of Alsace-Lorraine (besides two seats respectively for the two main Christian denominations).

Struggle between France and united Germany Edit

We Germans who know Germany and France know better what is good for the Alsatians than the unfortunates themselves. In the perversion of their French life they have no exact idea of what concerns Germany.

— Heinrich von Treitschke, German nationalist historian and politician, 1871[24][25]
 
Traditional costumes of Alsace

The Franco-Prussian War, which started in July 1870, saw France defeated in May 1871 by the Kingdom of Prussia and other German states. The end of the war led to the unification of Germany. Otto von Bismarck annexed Alsace and northern Lorraine to the new German Empire in 1871. France ceded more than 90% of Alsace and one-fourth of Lorraine, as stipulated in the treaty of Frankfurt; Belfort, the largest Alsatian town south of Mulhouse, remained French. Unlike other member states of the German federation, which had governments of their own, the new Imperial territory of Alsace-Lorraine was under the sole authority of the Kaiser, administered directly by the imperial government in Berlin. Between 100,000 and 130,000 Alsatians (of a total population of about a million and a half) chose to remain French citizens and leave Reichsland Elsaß-Lothringen, many of them resettling in French Algeria as Pieds-Noirs. Only in 1911 was Alsace-Lorraine granted some measure of autonomy, which was manifested also in a flag and an anthem (Elsässisches Fahnenlied). In 1913, however, the Saverne Affair (French: Incident de Saverne) showed the limits of this new tolerance of the Alsatian identity.

 
An Alsatian woman in traditional costume, photographed by Adolphe Braun in the 1870s

During the First World War, to avoid ground fights between brothers, many Alsatians served as sailors in the Kaiserliche Marine and took part in the Naval mutinies that led to the abdication of the Kaiser in November 1918, which left Alsace-Lorraine without a nominal head of state. The sailors returned home and tried to found an independent republic. While Jacques Peirotes, at this time deputy at the Landrat Elsass-Lothringen and just elected mayor of Strasbourg, proclaimed the forfeiture of the German Empire and the advent of the French Republic, a self-proclaimed government of Alsace-Lorraine declared its independence as the "Republic of Alsace-Lorraine". French troops entered Alsace less than two weeks later to quash the worker strikes and remove the newly established Soviets and revolutionaries from power. With the arrival of the French soldiers, many Alsatians and local Prussian/German administrators and bureaucrats cheered the re-establishment of order.[26]

Although U.S. President Woodrow Wilson had insisted that the région was self-ruling by legal status, as its constitution had stated it was bound to the sole authority of the Kaiser and not to the German state, France would allow no plebiscite, as granted by the League of Nations to some eastern German territories at this time, because the French regarded the Alsatians as Frenchmen liberated from German rule. Germany ceded the region to France under the Treaty of Versailles.

Policies forbidding the use of German and requiring French were promptly introduced.[27] In order not to antagonize the Alsatians, the region was not subjected to some legal changes that had occurred in the rest of France between 1871 and 1919, such as the 1905 French law on the separation of Church and State.

 
German stamps of Hindenburg marked with "Elsaß" (1940)

Alsace-Lorraine was occupied by Germany in 1940 during the Second World War. Although it was never formally annexed, Alsace-Lorraine was incorporated into the Greater German Reich, which had been restructured into Reichsgaue. Alsace was merged with Baden, and Lorraine with the Saarland, to become part of a planned Westmark. During the war, 130,000 young men from Alsace and Lorraine were conscripted into the German armies against their will (malgré-nous). There were some volunteers for the Waffen SS.,[28] although they were outnumbered by conscripts of the 1926–1927 classes. Thirty of said Waffen SS were involved in the Oradour-sur-Glane massacre (29 conscripts, one volunteer). A third of the malgré-nous perished on the Eastern front. In July 1944, 1500 malgré-nous were released from Soviet captivity and sent to Algiers, where they joined the Free French Forces.

After World War II Edit

Today, the territory is in certain areas subject to some laws that are significantly different from the rest of France, which is known as the local law.

In more recent years, the Alsatian language is again being promoted by local, national and European authorities as an element of the region's identity. Alsatian is taught in schools (but is not mandatory) as one of the regional languages of France. German is also taught as a foreign language in local kindergartens and schools. There is a growing network of schools proposing full immersion in Alsatian dialect and in Standard German, called ABCM-Zweisprachigkeit (ABCM -> French acronym for "Association for Bilingualism in the Classroom from Kindergarten onwards", Zweisprachigkeit -> German for "Bilingualism"). However, the Constitution of France still requires that French be the only official language of the Republic.

Timeline Edit

Year(s) Event Ruled by Official or common language
5400–4500 BC Bandkeramiker/Linear Pottery cultures Unknown
2300–750 BC Bell Beaker cultures Proto-Celtic spoken
750–450 BC Hallstatt culture early Iron Age (early Celts) None; Old Celtic spoken
450–58 BC Celts/Gauls firmly secured in entire Gaul, Alsace; trade with Greece is evident (Vix) Celts/Gauls None; Gaulish variety of Celtic widely spoken
58 / 44 BC–
AD 260
Alsace and Gaul conquered by Caesar, provinciated to Germania Superior Roman Empire Latin; Gallic widely spoken
260–274 Postumus founds breakaway Gallic Empire Gallic Empire Latin, Gallic
274–286 Rome reconquers the Gallic Empire, Alsace Roman Empire Latin, Gallic, Germanic (only in Argentoratum)
286–378 Diocletian divides the Roman Empire into Western and Eastern sectors Roman Empire
around 300 Beginning of Germanic migrations to the Roman Empire Roman Empire
378–395 The Visigoths rebel, precursor to waves of German, and Hun invasions Roman Empire Alamannic Incursions
395–436 Death of Theodosius I, causing a permanent division between Western and Eastern Rome Western Roman Empire
436–486 Germanic invasions of the Western Roman Empire Roman Tributary of Gaul Alamannic
486–511 Lower Alsace conquered by the Franks Frankish Realm Old Frankish, Latin; Alamannic
531–614 Upper Alsace conquered by the Franks Frankish Realm
614–795 Totality of Alsace to the Frankish Kingdom Frankish Realm
795–814 Charlemagne begins reign, Charlemagne crowned Emperor of the Romans on 25 December 800 Frankish Empire Old Frankish; Frankish and Alamannic
814 Death of Charlemagne Carolingian Empire Old Frankish; Frankish and Alamannic varieties of Old High German
847–870 Treaty of Verdun gives Alsace and Lotharingia to Lothar I Middle Francia (Carolingian Empire) Frankish; Frankish and Alamannic varieties of Old High German
870–889 Treaty of Mersen gives Alsace to East Francia East Francia (German Kingdom of the Carolingian Empire) Frankish, Frankish and Alamannic varieties of Old High German
889–962 Carolingian Empire breaks up into five Kingdoms, Magyars and Vikings periodically raid Alsace Kingdom of Germany Frankish and Alamannic varieties of Old High German
962–1618 Otto I crowned Holy Roman Emperor Holy Roman Empire Old High German, Middle High German, Modern High German; Alamannic and Franconian German dialects
1618–1674 Louis XIII annexes portions of Alsace during the Thirty Years' War Holy Roman Empire German; Alamannic and Franconian dialects (Alsatian)
1674–1871 Louis XIV annexes the rest of Alsace during the Franco-Dutch War, establishing full French sovereignty over the region Kingdom of France Officially French
(Alsatian and German tolerated and spoken by an estimated 85%-90% of the population)
1871–1918 Franco-Prussian War causes French cession of Alsace to German Empire German Empire German; German/Alsatian (86.8% - 1,492,347 people), French (11.5% - 198,318 people), Italian (1.1% - 18,750 people), German and a second language (0.4% - 7,485 people), Polish (0.1% - 1,410 people). Statistics from 1871. Over time, French declined to 10.9%
1919–1940 Treaty of Versailles causes German cession of Alsace to France France French; Alsatian, French, German
1940–1944 Nazi Germany conquers Alsace, establishing Gau Baden-Elsaß Nazi Germany German; Alsatian, French, German
1945–present French control France French; French and Alsatian German (declining minority language)

Geography Edit

Topography Edit

 
Topographic map of Alsace

Alsace has an area of 8,283 km2, making it the smallest région of metropolitan France. It is almost four times longer than it is wide, corresponding to a plain between the Rhine in the east and the Vosges mountains in the west.

It includes the départements of Haut-Rhin and Bas-Rhin (known previously as Sundgau and Nordgau). It borders Germany on the north and the east, Switzerland and Franche-Comté on the south and Lorraine on the west.

Several valleys are also found in the région. Its highest point is the Grand Ballon in Haut-Rhin, which reaches a height of 1424 m. It contains many forests, primarily in the Vosges and in Bas-Rhin (Haguenau Forest).

The ried lies along the Rhine.

Geology Edit

 
The Grand Ballon, southern face, seen from the valley of the Thur

Alsace is the part of the plain of the Rhine located at the west of the Rhine, on its left bank. It is a rift or graben, from the Oligocene epoch, associated with its horsts: the Vosges and the Black Forest.

The Jura Mountains, formed by slip (induced by the alpine uplift) of the Mesozoic cover on the Triassic formations, goes through the area of Belfort.

Climate Edit

Alsace has a semi-continental climate at low altitude and a continental climate at high altitude. There is fairly low precipitation because the Vosges protect it from the west. The city of Colmar has a sunny microclimate; it is the second driest city in France, with an annual precipitation of 600 mm, making it ideal for vin d'Alsace (Alsatian wine).

Governance Edit

 
Official logo of the European Collectivity of Alsace

Since 2021, Alsace has been a territorial collectivity called the European Collectivity of Alsace (collectivité européenne d'Alsace).

Administrative divisions Edit

The European Collectivity of Alsace is divided into 2 departmental constituencies (circonscriptions départementales), 9 departmental arrondissements, 40 cantons, and 880 communes.

 
Administrative map of Bas-Rhin

Bas-Rhin

 
Administrative map of Haut-Rhin

Haut-Rhin

Society Edit

Demographics Edit

Alsace's population increased to 1,921,014 in 2023.[3] It has regularly increased over time, except in wartime and shortly after the German annexation of 1871 (when many Alsatians who had opted to keep their French citizenship emigrated to France), by both natural growth and immigration. High population growth during the post-WW2 economic boom of the Trente Glorieuses ended after the 1973 oil crisis. Demographic growth picked up again in the 1990s and 2000s, but by the 2010s Alsace entered a new period of slow demographic growth.

Historical population of Alsace
(within the borders set in 1871)
YearPop.±% p.a.
1806 751,008—    
1821 843,973+0.78%
1831 933,828+1.02%
1836 976,478+0.85%
1841 989,477+0.26%
1846 1,031,360+0.82%
1851 1,043,859+0.24%
1856 1,028,446−0.31%
1861 1,057,647+0.55%
1866 1,082,193+0.46%
1871 1,059,240−0.37%
1875 1,051,554−0.18%
1880 1,073,954+0.42%
1885 1,074,626+0.01%
1890 1,093,114+0.34%
1895 1,116,086+0.42%
1900 1,154,641+0.68%
1905 1,198,774+0.75%
YearPop.±% p.a.
1910 1,218,544+0.33%
1921 1,120,629−0.81%
1926 1,161,639+0.72%
1931 1,204,968+0.74%
1936 1,219,381+0.24%
1946 1,144,986−0.63%
1954 1,217,581+0.75%
1962 1,318,070+1.02%
1968 1,412,385+1.16%
1975 1,517,330+1.04%
1982 1,566,048+0.45%
1990 1,624,372+0.46%
1999 1,734,145+0.73%
2009 1,843,053+0.62%
2014 1,872,949+0.32%
2020 1,915,915+0.38%
2023 1,921,014+0.09%
Sources: French and German censuses (1806-1871),[29] (1876-2020),[30] and INSEE estimate (2023).[3]

Immigration Edit

At the 2018 census, 69.9% of the inhabitants of Alsace were natives of Alsace, 16.0% were born in the rest of Metropolitan France, 0.5% were born in Overseas France, and 13.7% were born in foreign countries.[31] Nearly 44% of the immigrants come from Europe, in particular from Germany (natives of Germany residing in Alsace where housing is cheaper), Italy, Portugal and Serbia.[32][33] Since 2008, the number of Turkish immigrants living in Alsace has declined, whereas the number of Maghreban immigrants has risen less than the number of European immigrants.[34][32][33] The fastest growing groups of immigrants are those from Asia and from sub-Saharan Africa.[34][32][33]

Place of birth of residents of Alsace
(at the 1968, 1975, 1982, 1990, 1999, 2008, 2013, and 2018 censuses)
Census Born in Alsace Born in the rest of
Metropolitan France
Born in
Overseas France
Born in foreign
countries with French
citizenship at birth
[a]
Immigrants[b]
2018 69.9% 16.0% 0.5% 2.2% 11.6%
from Europe from the Maghreb[c] from Turkey from the rest of the world
5.1% 2.6% 1.5% 2.4%
2013 71.1% 15.4% 0.4% 2.3% 10.8%
from Europe from the Maghreb[c] from Turkey from the rest of the world
4.8% 2.5% 1.6% 2.0%
2008 71.8% 15.3% 0.4% 2.3% 10.3%
from Europe from the Maghreb[c] from Turkey from the rest of the world
4.5% 2.4% 1.6% 1.8%
1999 73.6% 15.4% 0.4% 2.1% 8.5%
from Europe from the Maghreb[c] from Turkey from the rest of the world
4.2% 1.9% 1.3% 1.1%
1990 75.9% 13.4% 0.3% 2.4% 7.9%
1982 76.8% 12.5% 0.3% 2.6% 7.8%
1975 78.3% 11.6% 0.2% 2.6% 7.3%
1968 81.7% 9.8% 0.1% 2.8% 5.6%
^a Persons born abroad of French parents, such as Pieds-Noirs and children of French expatriates.
^b An immigrant is by French definition a person born in a foreign country and who did not have French citizenship at birth. Note that an immigrant may have acquired French citizenship since moving to France, but is still listed as an immigrant in French statistics. On the other hand, persons born in France with foreign citizenship (the children of immigrants) are not listed as immigrants.
^c Morocco, Tunisia, Algeria
Source: INSEE[31][32][33][35][34][36]

Religion Edit

Religion in Alsace[37]
religion percent
Catholic
70%
Protestant
17%
No religion
8%
Other faith
5%
 
Temple Saint-Étienne (architect Jean-Baptiste Schacre), the main Calvinist church of Mulhouse

Alsace is generally seen as the most religious of all the French regions. Most of the Alsatian population is Roman Catholic, but, largely because of the region's German heritage, a significant Protestant community also exists: today, the EPCAAL (a Lutheran church) is France's second largest Protestant church, also forming an administrative union (UEPAL) with the much smaller Calvinist EPRAL. Unlike the rest of France, the Local law in Alsace-Moselle still provides for the Napoleonic Concordat of 1801 and the organic articles, which provides public subsidies to the Roman Catholic, Lutheran, and Calvinist churches, as well as to Jewish synagogues; religion classes in one of these faiths are compulsory in public schools. The divergence in policy from the French majority is because the region was part of Imperial Germany when the 1905 law separating the French church and state was instituted (for a more comprehensive history, see Alsace-Lorraine). Controversy erupts periodically on the appropriateness of that legal disposition, as well as on the exclusion of other religions from the arrangement.

Following the Protestant Reformation, promoted by the local reformer Martin Bucer, the principle of cuius regio, eius religio led to a certain amount of religious diversity in the highlands of northern Alsace. Landowners, who as "local lords" had the right to decide the religion that was allowed on their land, were eager to entice populations from the more attractive lowlands to settle and develop their property. Many accepted without discrimination Catholics, Lutherans, Calvinists, Jews and Anabaptists. Multiconfessional villages appeared, particularly in the region of Alsace bossue. Alsace became one of the French regions boasting a thriving Jewish community and the only region with a noticeable Anabaptist population. Philipp Jakob Spener who founded Pietism was born in Alsace. The schism of the Amish under the lead of Jacob Amman from the Mennonites occurred in 1693 in Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines. The strongly Catholic Louis XIV tried in vain to drive them from Alsace. When Napoleon imposed military conscription without religious exception, most emigrated to the American continent.

In 1707, the simultaneum forced many Reformed and Lutheran church buildings to also allow Catholic services. About 50 such "simultaneous churches" still exist in modern Alsace, but with the Catholic church's general lack of priests, they tend to hold Catholic services only occasionally.

Culture Edit

Alsace historically was part of the Holy Roman Empire and the German realm of culture. Since the 17th century, the region has passed between German and French control numerous times, resulting in a cultural blend. German traits remain in the more traditional, rural parts of the culture, such as the cuisine and architecture, whereas modern institutions are totally dominated by French culture.

Symbolism Edit

 
Coat of arms of Alsace

Strasbourg Edit

 
Coat of arms of Strasbourg

Strasbourg's arms are the colours of the shield of the Bishop of Strasbourg (a band of red on a white field, also considered an inversion of the arms of the diocese) at the end of a revolt of the burghers during the Middle Ages who took their independence from the teachings of the Bishop. It retains its power over the surrounding area.

Flags Edit

 
Rot-un-Wiss, the historical flag
 
The region's flag from 1949 to 2008

There is controversy around the recognition of the Alsatian flag. The authentic historical flag is the Rot-un-Wiss; Red and White are commonly found on the coat of arms of Alsatian cities (Strasbourg, Mulhouse, Sélestat...)[38] and of many Swiss cities, especially in Basel's region. The German region Hesse uses a flag similar to the Rot-un-Wiss. As it underlines the Germanic roots of the region, it was replaced in 1949 by a new "Union jack-like" flag representing the union of the two départements. It has, however, no real historical relevance. It has been since replaced again by a slightly different one, also representing the two départements. With the purpose of "Francizing" the region, the Rot-un-Wiss has not been recognized by Paris. Some overzealous statesmen have called it a Nazi invention – while its origins date back to the 11th century and the Red and White banner[39] of Gérard de Lorraine (aka. d'Alsace). The Rot-un-Wiss flag is still known as the real historical emblem of the region by most of the population and the départements' parliaments and has been widely used during protests against the creation of a new "super-region" gathering Champagne-Ardennes, Lorraine and Alsace, namely on Colmar's statue of liberty.[40]

Language Edit

 
Spatial distribution of dialects in Alsace prior to the expansion of standard French in the 20th century
An Alsatian dialect speaker, recorded in France

Although German dialects were spoken in Alsace for most of its history, the dominant language in Alsace today is French.

The traditional language of the région is Alsatian, an Alemannic dialect of Upper German spoken on both sides of the Rhine and closely related to Swiss German. Some Frankish dialects of West Central German are also spoken in "Alsace Bossue" and in the extreme north of Alsace. As is customary for regional languages in France, neither Alsatian nor the Frankish dialects have any form of official status, although both are now recognized as languages of France and can be chosen as subjects in lycées.

Although Alsace has been part of France multiple times in the past, the region had no direct connection with the French state for several centuries. From the end of the Roman Empire (5th century) to the French annexation (17th century), Alsace was politically part of the German world.

During the Lutheran Reform, the towns of Alsace were the first to adopt the German language as their official language instead of Latin. It was in Strasbourg that German was first used for the liturgy. It was also in Strasbourg that the first German Bible was published in 1466.

From the annexation of Alsace by France in the 17th century and the language policy of the French Revolution up to 1870, knowledge of French in Alsace increased considerably. With the education reforms of the 19th century, the middle classes began to speak and write French well. The French language never really managed, however, to win over the masses, the vast majority of whom continued to speak their German dialects and write in German (which we would now call "standard German").[citation needed]

Between 1870 and 1918, Alsace was annexed by the German Empire in the form of an imperial province or Reichsland, and the mandatory official language, especially in schools, became High German. French lost ground to such an extent that it has been estimated that only 2% of the population spoke French fluently, and only 8% had some knowledge of it (Maugue, 1970).

After 1918, French was the only language used in schools, particularly primary schools. After much argument and discussion and after many temporary measures, a memorandum was issued by Vice-Chancellor Pfister in 1927 and governed education in primary schools until 1939.

During a reannexation by Germany (1940–1945), High German was reinstated as the language of education. The population was forced to speak German and 'French' family names were Germanized. Following the Second World War, the 1927 regulation was not reinstated, and the teaching of German in primary schools was suspended by a provisional rectorial decree, which was supposed to enable French to regain lost ground. The teaching of German became a major issue, however, as early as 1946. After World War II, the French government pursued, in line with its traditional language policy, a campaign to suppress the use of German as part of a wider Francization campaign. The local German dialect was rendered a backward regional "Germanic" dialect not being attached to German.[41]

In 1951, Article 10 of the Deixonne Law (Loi Deixonne) on the teaching of local languages and dialects made provision for Breton, Basque, Catalan and old Provençal but not for Corsican, Dutch (West Flemish) or Alsatian in Alsace and Moselle. However, in a Decree of 18 December 1952, supplemented by an Order of 19 December of the same year, optional teaching of the German language was introduced in elementary schools in communes in which the language of habitual use was the Alsatian dialect.

In 1972, the Inspector General of German, Georges Holderith, obtained authorization to reintroduce German into 33 intermediate classes on an experimental basis. This teaching of German, referred to as the Holderith Reform, was later extended to all pupils in the last two years of elementary school. This reform is still largely the basis of German teaching (but not Alsatian) in elementary schools today.

It was not until 9 June 1982, with the Circulaire sur la langue et la culture régionales en Alsace (Memorandum on regional language and culture in Alsace) issued by the Vice-Chancellor of the Académie Pierre Deyon, that the teaching of German in primary schools in Alsace really began to be given more official status. The Ministerial Memorandum of 21 June 1982, known as the Circulaire Savary, introduced financial support, over three years, for the teaching of regional languages in schools and universities. This memorandum was, however, implemented in a fairly lax manner.

Both Alsatian and Standard German were for a time banned from public life (including street and city names, official administration, and educational system). Though the ban has long been lifted and street signs today are often bilingual, Alsace-Lorraine is today predominantly French in language and culture. Few young people speak Alsatian today, although there do still exist one or two enclaves in the Sundgau region where some older inhabitants cannot speak French, and where Alsatian is still used as the mother tongue. A related Alemannic German survives on the opposite bank of the Rhine, in Baden, and especially in Switzerland. However, while French is the major language of the region, the Alsatian dialect of French is heavily influenced by German and other languages such as Yiddish in phonology and vocabulary.

This situation has spurred a movement to preserve the Alsatian language, which is perceived as endangered, a situation paralleled in other régions of France, such as Brittany or Occitania. Alsatian is now taught in French high schools. Increasingly, French is the only language used at home and at work, and a growing number of people have a good knowledge of standard German as a foreign language learned in school.

The constitution of the Fifth Republic states that French alone is the official language of the Republic. However, Alsatian, along with other regional languages, are recognized by the French government in the official list of languages of France.

Although the French government signed the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages in 1992, it never ratified the treaty and therefore no legal basis exists for any of the regional languages in France.[42] However, visitors to Alsace can see indications of renewed political and cultural interest in the language – in Alsatian signs appearing in car-windows and on hoardings, and in new official bilingual street signs in Strasbourg and Mulhouse.

A 1999 INSEE survey, included in the 1999 Census, the majority of the population in Alsace speak French as their first language, 39.0% (or 500,000 people) of the population speak Alsatian, 16.2% (or 208,000 people) speak German, 75,200 people speak English (or 5.9%) and 27,600 people speak Italian.[43]

The survey counted 548,000 adult speakers of Alsatian in France, making it the second most-spoken regional language in the country (after Occitan). Like all regional languages in France, however, the transmission of Alsatian is on the decline. While 39% of the adult population of Alsace speak Alsatian, only one in four children speak it, and only one in ten children uses it regularly.

Architecture Edit

 
Colmar's old town

The traditional habitat of the Alsatian lowland, like in other regions of Germany and Northern Europe, consists of houses constructed with walls in timber framing and cob and roofing in flat tiles. This type of construction is abundant in adjacent parts of Germany and can be seen in other areas of France, but their particular abundance in Alsace is owed to several reasons:

  1. The proximity to the Vosges where the wood can be found.
  2. During periods of war and bubonic plague, villages were often burned down, so to prevent the collapse of the upper floors, ground floors were built of stone and upper floors built in half-timberings to prevent the spread of fire.
  3. During most of its history, a great part of Alsace was flooded by the Rhine every year. Half-timbered houses were easy to knock down and to move around during those times (a day was necessary to move it and a day to rebuild it in another place).

However, half-timbering was found to increase the risk of fire, which is why from the 19th century, it began to be rendered. In recent times, villagers started to paint the rendering white in accordance with Beaux-Arts movements. To discourage this, the region's authorities gave financial grants to the inhabitants to paint the rendering in various colours, in order to return to the original style and many inhabitants accepted (more for financial reasons than by firm belief).[citation needed]

Cuisine Edit

 
Flammekueche

Alsatian cuisine, somewhat based on German culinary traditions, is marked by the use of pork in various forms. It is perhaps mostly known for the region's wines and beers. Traditional dishes include baeckeoffe, flammekueche, choucroute, and fleischnacka. Southern Alsace, also called the Sundgau, is characterized by carpe frite (that also exists in Yiddish tradition).

Food Edit

 
Kugelhupf

The festivities of the year's end involve the production of a great variety of biscuits and small cakes called bredela as well as pain d'épices (gingerbread cakes) which are baked around Christmas time. The Kugelhupf is also popular in Alsace, and the Christstollen during the Christmas season.[44]

The gastronomic symbol of the région is undoubtedly the Choucroute, a local variety of Sauerkraut. The word Sauerkraut in Alsatian has the form sûrkrût, same as in other southwestern German dialects, and means "sour cabbage" as its Standard German equivalent. This word was included into the French language as choucroute. To make it, the cabbage is finely shredded, layered with salt and juniper and left to ferment in wooden barrels. Sauerkraut can be served with poultry, pork, sausage or even fish. Traditionally it is served with Strasbourg sausage or frankfurters, bacon, smoked pork or smoked Morteau or Montbéliard sausages, or a selection of other pork products. Served alongside are often roasted or steamed potatoes or dumplings.

Alsace is also well known for its foie gras made in the region since the 17th century. Additionally, Alsace is known for its fruit juices and mineral waters.

Wines Edit

 
Riesling grapes

Alsace is an important wine-producing région. Vins d'Alsace (Alsace wines) are mostly white. Alsace produces some of the world's most noted dry rieslings and is the only region in France to produce mostly varietal wines identified by the names of the grapes used (wine from Burgundy is also mainly varietal, but not normally identified as such), typically from grapes also used in Germany. The most notable example is Gewurztraminer.

Beers Edit

Alsace is also the main beer-producing region of France, thanks primarily to breweries in and near Strasbourg. These include those of Fischer, Karlsbräu, Kronenbourg, and Heineken International. Hops are grown in Kochersberg and in northern Alsace. Schnapps is also traditionally made in Alsace, but it is in decline because home distillers are becoming less common and the consumption of traditional, strong, alcoholic beverages is decreasing.

In tales Edit

 
Alsatian stork

The stork is a main feature of Alsace and was the subject of many legends told to children. The bird practically disappeared around 1970, but re-population efforts are continuing. They are mostly found on roofs of houses, churches and other public buildings in Alsace.

The Easter Bunny was first mentioned in Georg Franck von Franckenau's De ovis paschalibus (About Easter eggs) in 1682 referring to an Alsace tradition of an Easter Hare bringing Easter eggs.

The term "Alsatia" Edit

"Alsatia", the Latin form of Alsace's name, entered the English language as "a lawless place" or "a place under no jurisdiction" prior to the 17th century as a reflection of the British perception of the region at that time. It was used into the 20th century as a term for a ramshackle marketplace, "protected by ancient custom and the independence of their patrons". The word is still in use in the 21st century among the English and Australian judiciaries to describe a place where the law cannot reach: "In setting up the Serious Organised Crime Agency, the state has set out to create an Alsatia – a region of executive action free of judicial oversight," Lord Justice Sedley in UMBS v SOCA 2007.[45]

Derived from the above, "Alsatia" was historically a cant term for the area near Whitefriars, London, which was for a long time a sanctuary. It is first known in print in the title of The Squire of Alsatia, a 1688 play written by Thomas Shadwell.

Economy Edit

According to the Institut National de la Statistique et des Études Économiques (INSEE), Alsace had a gross domestic product of 44.3 billion euros in 2002. With a GDP per capita of €24,804, it is the second région of France, after only Île-de-France, and 68% of Alsatian jobs are in the services, and 25% are in industry, which makes Alsace one of France's most industrialised régions.

Alsace is a région of varied economic activity, including:

Alsace has many international ties and 35% of firms are foreign companies (notably German, Swiss, American, Japanese, and Scandinavian).

Tourism Edit

Having been early and always densely populated, Alsace is famous for its high number of picturesque villages, churches and castles and for the various beauties of its three main towns, in spite of severe destructions suffered throughout five centuries of wars between France and Germany.

Alsace is furthermore famous for its vineyards (especially along the 170 km of the Route des Vins d'Alsace from Marlenheim to Thann) and the Vosges mountains with their thick and green forests and picturesque lakes.

 
Château du Haut-Kœnigsbourg
 
Colmar petitevenise
 
The main entrance of the Ouvrage Schoenenbourg from the Maginot Line

Transportation Edit

Roads Edit

 
Ponts Couverts, Strasbourg

Most major car journeys are made on the A35 autoroute, which links Saint-Louis on the Swiss border to Lauterbourg on the German border.

The A4 toll road (towards Paris) begins 20 km (12 mi) northwest of Strasbourg and the A36 toll road towards Lyon, begins 10 km (6.2 mi) west from Mulhouse.

Spaghetti junctions (built in the 1970s and 1980s) are prominent in the comprehensive system of motorways in Alsace, especially in the outlying areas of Strasbourg and Mulhouse. These cause a major buildup of traffic and are the main sources of pollution in the towns, notably in Strasbourg where the motorway traffic of the A35 was 170,000 per day in 2002.

At present, plans are being considered for building a new dual carriageway west of Strasbourg, which would reduce the buildup of traffic in that area by picking up north and southbound vehicles and getting rid of the buildup outside Strasbourg. The line plans to link up the interchange of Hœrdt to the north of Strasbourg, with Innenheim in the southwest. The opening is envisaged at the end of 2011, with an average usage of 41,000 vehicles a day. Estimates of the French Works Commissioner however, raised some doubts over the interest of such a project, since it would pick up only about 10% of the traffic of the A35 at Strasbourg. Paradoxically, this reversed the situation of the 1950s. At that time, the French trunk road left of the Rhine not been built, so that traffic would cross into Germany to use the Karlsruhe-Basel Autobahn.

To add to the buildup of traffic, the neighbouring German state of Baden-Württemberg has imposed a tax on heavy-goods vehicles using their Autobahnen. Thus, a proportion of the HGVs travelling from north Germany to Switzerland or southern Alsace bypasses the A5 on the Alsace-Baden-Württemberg border and uses the untolled French A35 instead.

Trains Edit

 
Place de l'Homme de Fer Tram Station

TER Alsace is the rail network serving Alsace. Its network is articulated around the city of Strasbourg. It is one of the most developed rail networks in France, financially sustained partly by the French railroad SNCF, and partly by the région Alsace.

Because the Vosges are surmountable only by the Col de Saverne and the Belfort Gap, it has been suggested that Alsace needs to open up and get closer to France in terms of its rail links. Developments already under way or planned include:

  • the TGV Est (Paris – Strasbourg) had its first phase brought into service in June 2007, bringing down the Strasbourg-Paris trip from 4 to 2 hours 20 minutes, and further reducing it to 1h 50m after the completion of the second phase in 2016.
  • the TGV Rhin-Rhône between Dijon and Mulhouse (opened in 2011)
  • a tram-train system in Mulhouse (2011)
  • an interconnection with the German InterCityExpress, as far as Kehl (expected 2016)

However, the abandoned Maurice-Lemaire tunnel towards Saint-Dié-des-Vosges was rebuilt as a toll road.

Waterways Edit

Port traffic of Alsace exceeds 15 million tonnes, of which about three-quarters is centred on Strasbourg, which is the second busiest French fluvial harbour. The enlargement plan of the Rhône–Rhine Canal, intended to link up the Mediterranean Sea and Central Europe (Rhine, Danube, North Sea and Baltic Sea) was abandoned in 1998 for reasons of expense and land erosion, notably in the Doubs valley.

Air traffic Edit

There are two international airports in Alsace:

Strasbourg is also two hours away by road from one of the largest European airports, Frankfurt Main, and 2 hours 30 minutes from Charles de Gaulle Airport through the direct TGV service, stopping in Terminal 2.

Cycling network Edit

Crossed by three EuroVelo routes

Alsace is the most bicycle-friendly region of France,[citation needed] with 2,000 kilometres (1,200 mi) of cycle routes. The network is of a very good standard and well signposted. All the towpaths of the canals in Alsace (canal des houillères de la Sarre, canal de la Marne au Rhin, canal de la Bruche, canal du Rhône au Rhin) are tarred.

Notable people Edit

 
Statue of Martin Schongauer by Frédéric Bartholdi in front of the Unterlinden Museum, Colmar

The following is a selection of people born in Alsace who have been particularly influential or successful in their respective fields.

Arts Edit

Business Edit

Literature Edit

Military Edit

Nobility Edit

Religion Edit

Sciences Edit

Sports Edit

Major communities Edit

German original names in brackets if French names differ:

Sister regions Edit

There is an accord de coopération internationale between Alsace and the following regions:[51]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

References Edit

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  44. ^ "Les Christstollen de la vallée de Munster". 2009.
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  46. ^ "Jardins de la ferme bleue – SehenswĂźrdigkeiten in Uttenhoffen, Elsa". beLocal.de. 23 November 2011. Archived from the original on 19 July 2012. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  47. ^ Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1900). "Bartholdi, Frederic Auguste" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
  48. ^ La famille paternelle des Marx Brothers (in French)
  49. ^ Zeydel, Edwin H. (1966). "Wann wurde Sebastian Brant geboren?". Zeitschrift für deutsches Altertum und deutsche Literatur. 95 (4): 319–320. ISSN 0044-2518. JSTOR 20655345.
  50. ^ "Birth certificate of Dreyfus, Alfred". culture.gouv.fr. Government of the French Republic. Retrieved 24 July 2019.
  51. ^ (in French). Archived from the original on 3 January 2011.

Further reading Edit

  • Assall, Paul. Juden im Elsass. Zürich: Rio Verlag. ISBN 3-907668-00-6.
  • Das Elsass: Ein literarischer Reisebegleiter. Frankfurt a. M.: Insel Verlag, 2001. ISBN 3-458-34446-2.
  • Erbe, Michael (Hrsg.) Das Elsass: Historische Landschaft im Wandel der Zeiten. Stuttgart: Kohlhammer Verlag, 2002. ISBN 3-17-015771-X.
  • Faber, Gustav. Elsass. München: Artemis-Cicerone Kunst- und Reiseführer, 1989.
  • Fischer, Christopher J. Alsace to the Alsatians? Visions and Divisions of Alsatian Regionalism, 1870–1939 (Berghahn Books, 2010).
  • Gerson, Daniel. Die Kehrseite der Emanzipation in Frankreich: Judenfeindschaft im Elsass 1778 bis 1848. Essen: Klartext, 2006. ISBN 3-89861-408-5.
  • Herden, Ralf Bernd. Straßburg Belagerung 1870. Norderstedt: BoD, 2007, ISBN 978-3-8334-5147-8.
  • Hummer, Hans J. Politics and Power in Early Medieval Europe: Alsace and the Frankish Realm, 600–1000. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009.
  • Kaeppelin, Charles E. R, and Mary L. Hendee. Alsace Throughout the Ages. Franklin, Pa: C. Miller, 1908.
  • Lazer, Stephen A. State Formation in Early Modern Alsace, 1648–1789. Rochester: University of Rochester Press, 2019. 12 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  • Mehling, Marianne (Hrsg.) Knaurs Kulturführer in Farbe Elsaß. München: Droemer Knaur, 1984.
  • Putnam, Ruth. Alsace and Lorraine: From Cæsar to Kaiser, 58 B.C.–1871 A.D. New York: 1915.
  • Schreiber, Hermann. Das Elsaß und seine Geschichte, eine Kulturlandschaft im Spannungsfeld zweier Völker. Augsburg: Weltbild, 1996.
  • Schwengler, Bernard. Le Syndrome Alsacien: d'Letschte? Strasbourg: Éditions Oberlin, 1989. ISBN 2-85369-096-2.
  • Ungerer, Tomi. Elsass. Das offene Herz Europas. Straßburg: Édition La Nuée Bleue, 2004. ISBN 2-7165-0618-3.
  • Vogler, Bernard and Hermann Lersch. Das Elsass. Morstadt: Éditions Ouest-France, 2000. ISBN 3-88571-260-1.

External links Edit

  • Official website of the Alsace regional council 30 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  • Alsace : at the heart of Europe 5 February 2016 at the Wayback Machine – Official French website (in English)
  • Visit Alsace Official Alsace tourism website
  • Alsatourisme 23 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine Tourism in Alsace (in French)
  • Alsace at Curlie
  • Alsace.net: Directory of Alsatian Websites (in French)
  • (in French)
  • Churches and chapels of Alsace (pictures only) (in French)
  • Medieval castles of Alsace (pictures only) (in French)
  • "Organs of Alsace" (in French)
  • The Alsatian Library of Mutual Credit (in French)
  • The Alsatian Artists (in French)

48°30′N 7°30′E / 48.500°N 7.500°E / 48.500; 7.500

alsace, other, uses, disambiguation, elsaß, redirects, here, battleship, elsaß, region, german, empire, lorraine, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, . For other uses see Alsace disambiguation Elsass redirects here For the battleship see SMS Elsass For the region of the German Empire see Alsace Lorraine This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Alsace news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Alsace ae l ˈ s ae s 4 US also ae l ˈ s eɪ s ˈ ae l s ae s 5 6 French alzas Low Alemannic German Alsatian Elsass ˈɛlsɑs German Elsass a ˈɛlzas Latin Alsatia is a cultural region and a territorial collectivity in eastern France on the west bank of the upper Rhine next to Germany and Switzerland In January 2023 it had a population of 1 921 014 3 Alsatian culture is characterized by a blend of German and French influences 7 Alsace Elsass Alemannic German Views of Cernay Colmar Strasbourg Chateau de Hohenbourg Riquewihr Neuf BrisachFlagCoat of armsAnthem Elsassisches Fahnenlied German English Song of the Alsatian Flag source source Instrumental version 2023 1 CountryFranceTerritorial collectivityEuropean Collectivity of AlsacePrefectureStrasbourgDepartments2 Bas RhinHaut RhinArea 2 Total8 280 km2 3 200 sq mi Population Jan 2023 3 Total1 921 014 Density230 km2 600 sq mi DemonymAlsatianISO 3166 codeFR AUntil 1871 Alsace included the area now known as the Territoire de Belfort which formed its southernmost part From 1982 to 2016 Alsace was the smallest administrative region in metropolitan France consisting of the Bas Rhin and Haut Rhin departments Territorial reform passed by the French Parliament in 2014 resulted in the merger of the Alsace administrative region with Champagne Ardenne and Lorraine to form Grand Est On 1 January 2021 the departments of Bas Rhin and Haut Rhin merged into the new European Collectivity of Alsace but remained part of the region Grand Est Alsatian is an Alemannic dialect closely related to Swabian although since World War II most Alsatians primarily speak French Internal and international migration since 1945 has also changed the ethnolinguistic composition of Alsace For more than 300 years from the Thirty Years War to World War II the political status of Alsace was heavily contested between France and various German states in wars and diplomatic conferences The economic and cultural capital of Alsace as well as its largest city is Strasbourg which sits on the contemporary German international border The city is the seat of several international organizations and bodies Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Pre Roman Alsace 2 2 Roman Alsace 2 3 Alemannic and Frankish Alsace 2 4 Alsace within the Holy Roman Empire 2 5 German Land within the Kingdom of France 2 6 From French Revolution to the Franco Prussian War 2 6 1 Alsatian Jews 2 7 Struggle between France and united Germany 2 8 After World War II 2 9 Timeline 3 Geography 3 1 Topography 3 2 Geology 3 3 Climate 4 Governance 4 1 Administrative divisions 5 Society 5 1 Demographics 5 1 1 Immigration 5 2 Religion 6 Culture 6 1 Symbolism 6 1 1 Strasbourg 6 1 2 Flags 6 2 Language 6 3 Architecture 6 4 Cuisine 6 4 1 Food 6 4 2 Wines 6 4 3 Beers 6 5 In tales 6 6 The term Alsatia 7 Economy 7 1 Tourism 7 2 Transportation 7 2 1 Roads 7 2 2 Trains 7 2 3 Waterways 7 2 4 Air traffic 7 2 5 Cycling network 8 Notable people 8 1 Arts 8 2 Business 8 3 Literature 8 4 Military 8 5 Nobility 8 6 Religion 8 7 Sciences 8 8 Sports 9 Major communities 10 Sister regions 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksEtymology EditThe name Alsace can be traced to the Old High German Ali saz or Elisaz meaning foreign domain 8 An alternative explanation is from a Germanic Ell sass meaning seated on the Ill 9 a river in Alsace History EditMain article History of Alsace In prehistoric times Alsace was inhabited by nomadic hunters The area became a diffuse border region between the French and the German cultures and languages After the end of the Thirty Years War southern Alsace was annexed by France in 1648 with most of the remainder conquered later in the century In contrast to other parts of France Protestants were permitted to practice their faith in Alsace even after the Edict of Fontainebleau of 1685 that abolished their privileges in the rest of France After the 1870 71 Franco Prussian War Alsace was annexed by Germany and became a part of the 1871 unified German Empire as a formal Emperor s Land After World War I the victorious Allies detached it from Germany and the province became part of the Third French Republic Having been occupied and annexed by Germany during World War II it was returned to France by the Allies at the end of World War II Pre Roman Alsace Edit The presence of hominids in Alsace can be traced back 600 000 years 10 By 4000 BCE farming in the form of Linear Pottery culture arrived in the region from the Danube and the Hungarian plain The culture was characterized by timber longhouse settlements and incised pottery favoring floodplain edge situations for their permanent villages and small clearings in the forest for their crops and animals 11 By 100 BCE Germanic peoples including eventually the Suebi and other tribes under Ariovistus had begun to intrude into areas along the upper Rhine and Danube long settled by Celtic Gauls Alsace itself had come to be occupied by the Triboci a Germanic tribe allied with Ariovistus 12 Roman Alsace Edit In response to the threat posted by Ariovistus the Aedui a Celtic tribe allied to Rome appealed to the Roman Senate and Julius Caesar for aid In 58 BCE after negotiations with Ariovistus failed Julius Caesar routed the Suebi at the foot of the Vosges near what became Cernay in southern Alsace 13 14 There followed a long period of security for the Gauls along the middle and upper Rhine 13 From the time of Augustus to the early fifth century AD the area of Alsace was incorporated into the Roman province of Germania Superior 15 As a border province the Romans built fortifications and military camps many of which including Argentoratum Strasbourg evolved into modern towns and cities 16 Alemannic and Frankish Alsace Edit Main article Duchy of Alsace In 357 CE Germanic tribes attempted to conquer Alsace but they were rebuffed by the Romans 10 With the decline of the Roman Empire Alsace became the territory of the Germanic Alemanni The Alemanni were agricultural people and their Germanic language formed the basis of modern day dialects spoken along the Upper Rhine Alsatian Alemannian Swabian Swiss Clovis and the Franks defeated the Alemanni during the 5th century AD culminating with the Battle of Tolbiac and Alsace became part of the Kingdom of Austrasia Under Clovis Merovingian successors the inhabitants were Christianized Alsace remained under Frankish control until the Frankish realm following the Oaths of Strasbourg of 842 was formally dissolved in 843 at the Treaty of Verdun the grandsons of Charlemagne divided the realm into three parts Alsace formed part of the Middle Francia which was ruled by the eldest grandson Lothar I Lothar died early in 855 and his realm was divided into three parts The part known as Lotharingia or Lorraine was given to Lothar s son The rest was shared between Lothar s brothers Charles the Bald ruler of the West Frankish realm and Louis the German ruler of the East Frankish realm The Kingdom of Lotharingia was short lived however becoming the stem duchy of Lorraine in Eastern Francia after the Treaty of Ribemont in 880 Alsace was united with the other Alemanni east of the Rhine into the stem duchy of Swabia Alsace within the Holy Roman Empire Edit At about this time the surrounding areas experienced recurring fragmentation and reincorporations among a number of feudal secular and ecclesiastical lordships a common process in the Holy Roman Empire Alsace experienced great prosperity during the 12th and 13th centuries under Hohenstaufen emperors nbsp Seal of Albert IV Count of Habsburg d 1239 inscribed in Latin with abbreviations SIGILLUM ALBERTI COMIS DE HABESB URG ET LANGRAVII ALSACTIAE seal of Albert of Habsburg Count of Habsburg and Landgrave of Alsace Frederick I set up Alsace as a province a procuratio not a provincia to be ruled by ministeriales a non noble class of civil servants The idea was that such men would be more tractable and less likely to alienate the fief from the crown out of their own greed The province had a single provincial court Landgericht and a central administration with its seat at Hagenau Frederick II designated the Bishop of Strasbourg to administer Alsace but the authority of the bishop was challenged by Count Rudolf of Habsburg who received his rights from Frederick II s son Conrad IV Strasbourg began to grow to become the most populous and commercially important town in the region In 1262 after a long struggle with the ruling bishops its citizens gained the status of free imperial city A stop on the Paris Vienna Orient trade route as well as a port on the Rhine route linking southern Germany and Switzerland to the Netherlands England and Scandinavia it became the political and economic center of the region Cities such as Colmar and Hagenau also began to grow in economic importance and gained a kind of autonomy within the Decapole or Zehnstadtebund a federation of ten free towns Though little is known about the early history of the Jews of Alsace there is a lot of information from the 12th century onwards They were successful as moneylenders and had the favor of the Emperor 17 As in much of Europe the prosperity of Alsace was brought to an end in the 14th century by a series of harsh winters bad harvests and the Black Death These hardships were blamed on Jews leading to the pogroms of 1336 and 1339 In 1349 Jews of Alsace were accused of poisoning the wells with plague leading to the massacre of thousands of Jews during the Strasbourg pogrom 18 Jews were subsequently forbidden to settle in the town An additional natural disaster was the Rhine rift earthquake of 1356 one of Europe s worst which made ruins of Basel Prosperity returned to Alsace under Habsburg administration during the Renaissance nbsp Petite France StrasbourgHoly Roman Empire central power had begun to decline following years of imperial adventures in Italian lands often ceding hegemony in Western Europe to France which had long since centralized power France began an aggressive policy of expanding eastward first to the rivers Rhone and Meuse and when those borders were reached aiming for the Rhine In 1299 the French proposed a marriage alliance between Blanche sister of Philip IV of France and Rudolf son of Albert I of Germany with Alsace to be the dowry however the deal never came off In 1307 the town of Belfort was first chartered by the Counts of Montbeliard During the next century France was to be militarily shattered by the Hundred Years War which prevented for a time any further tendencies in this direction After the conclusion of the war France was again free to pursue its desire to reach the Rhine and in 1444 a French army appeared in Lorraine and Alsace It took up winter quarters demanded the submission of Metz and Strasbourg and launched an attack on Basel In 1469 following the Treaty of St Omer fr Upper Alsace was sold by Archduke Sigismund of Austria to Charles the Bold Duke of Burgundy Although Charles was the nominal landlord taxes were paid to Frederick III Holy Roman Emperor The latter was able to use this tax and a dynastic marriage to his advantage to gain back full control of Upper Alsace apart from the free towns but including Belfort in 1477 when it became part of the demesne of the Habsburg family who were also rulers of the empire The town of Mulhouse joined the Swiss Confederation in 1515 where it was to remain until 1798 By the time of the Protestant Reformation in the 16th century Strasbourg was a prosperous community and its inhabitants accepted Protestantism in 1523 Martin Bucer was a prominent Protestant reformer in the region His efforts were countered by the Roman Catholic Habsburgs who tried to eradicate heresy in Upper Alsace As a result Alsace was transformed into a mosaic of Catholic and Protestant territories On the other hand Mompelgard Montbeliard to the southwest of Alsace belonging to the Counts of Wurttemberg since 1397 remained a Protestant enclave in France until 1793 German Land within the Kingdom of France Edit This situation prevailed until 1639 when most of Alsace was conquered by France to keep it out of the hands of the Spanish Habsburgs who by secret treaty in 1617 had gained a clear road to their valuable and rebellious possessions in the Spanish Netherlands the Spanish Road Beset by enemies and seeking to gain a free hand in Hungary the Habsburgs sold their Sundgau territory mostly in Upper Alsace to France in 1646 which had occupied it for the sum of 1 2 million Thalers When hostilities were concluded in 1648 with the Treaty of Westphalia most of Alsace was recognized as part of France although some towns remained independent The treaty stipulations regarding Alsace were complex Although the French king gained sovereignty existing rights and customs of the inhabitants were largely preserved France continued to maintain its customs border along the Vosges mountains where it had been leaving Alsace more economically oriented to neighbouring German speaking lands The German language remained in use in local administration in schools and at the Lutheran University of Strasbourg which continued to draw students from other German speaking lands The 1685 Edict of Fontainebleau by which the French king ordered the suppression of French Protestantism was not applied in Alsace France did endeavour to promote Catholicism Strasbourg Cathedral for example which had been Lutheran from 1524 to 1681 was returned to the Catholic Church However compared to the rest of France Alsace enjoyed a climate of religious tolerance nbsp Louis XIV receiving the keys of Strasbourg in 1681France consolidated its hold with the 1679 Treaties of Nijmegen which brought most remaining towns under its control France seized Strasbourg in 1681 in an unprovoked action These territorial changes were recognised in the 1697 Treaty of Ryswick that ended the War of the Grand Alliance But Alsace still contained islands of territory nominally under the sovereignty of German princes and an independent city state at Mulhouse These enclaves were established by law prescription and international consensus 19 From French Revolution to the Franco Prussian War Edit nbsp Alsatian sign 1792 Freiheit Gleichheit Bruderlichk od Tod Liberty Equality Fraternity or Death Tod den Tyranen Death to Tyrants Heil den Volkern Long live the Peoples The year 1789 brought the French Revolution and with it the first division of Alsace into the departements of Haut and Bas Rhin Alsatians played an active role in the French Revolution On 21 July 1789 after receiving news of the Storming of the Bastille in Paris a crowd of people stormed the Strasbourg city hall forcing the city administrators to flee and putting symbolically an end to the feudal system in Alsace In 1792 Rouget de Lisle composed in Strasbourg the Revolutionary marching song La Marseillaise as Marching song for the Army of the Rhine which later became the anthem of France La Marseillaise was played for the first time in April of that year in front of the mayor of Strasbourg Philippe Frederic de Dietrich Some of the most famous generals of the French Revolution also came from Alsace notably Kellermann the victor of Valmy Kleber who led the armies of the French Republic in Vendee and Westermann who also fought in the Vendee Mulhouse a city in southern Alsace which had been part of Switzerland since 1466 joined France in 1798 10 At the same time some Alsatians were in opposition to the Jacobins and sympathetic to the restoration of the monarchy pursued by the invading forces of Austria and Prussia who sought to crush the nascent revolutionary republic Many of the residents of the Sundgau made pilgrimages to places like Mariastein Abbey near Basel in Switzerland for baptisms and weddings When the French Revolutionary Army of the Rhine was victorious tens of thousands fled east before it When they were later permitted to return in some cases not until 1799 it was often to find that their lands and homes had been confiscated These conditions led to emigration by hundreds of families to newly vacant lands in the Russian Empire in 1803 4 and again in 1808 A poignant retelling of this event based on what Goethe had personally witnessed can be found in his long poem Hermann and Dorothea In response to the hundred day restoration of Napoleon I of France in 1815 Alsace along with other frontier provinces of France was occupied by foreign forces from 1815 to 1818 20 including over 280 000 soldiers and 90 000 horses in Bas Rhin alone This had grave effects on trade and the economy of the region since former overland trade routes were switched to newly opened Mediterranean and Atlantic seaports The population grew rapidly from 800 000 in 1814 to 914 000 in 1830 and 1 067 000 in 1846 The combination of economic and demographic factors led to hunger housing shortages and a lack of work for young people Thus it is not surprising that people left Alsace not only for Paris where the Alsatian community grew in numbers with famous members such as Georges Eugene Haussmann but also for more distant places like Russia and the Austrian Empire to take advantage of the new opportunities offered there Austria had conquered lands in Eastern Europe from the Ottoman Empire and offered generous terms to colonists as a way of consolidating its hold on the new territories Many Alsatians also began to sail to the United States settling in many areas from 1820 to 1850 21 In 1843 and 1844 sailing ships bringing immigrant families from Alsace arrived at the port of New York Some settled in Texas and Illinois many to farm or to seek success in commercial ventures for example the sailing ships Sully in May 1843 and Iowa in June 1844 brought families who set up homes in northern Illinois and northern Indiana Some Alsatian immigrants were noted for their roles in 19th century American economic development 22 Others ventured to Canada to settle in southwestern Ontario notably Waterloo County Alsatian Jews Edit Main article History of the Jews in Alsace In contrast to the rest of France the Jews in Alsace had not been expelled during the Middle Ages By 1790 the Jewish population of Alsace was approximately 22 500 about 3 of the provincial population They were highly segregated and subject to long standing antisemitic regulations They maintained their own customs Yiddish language and historic traditions within the tightly knit ghettos they adhered to Jewish law Jews were barred from most cities and instead lived in villages They concentrated in trade services and banking They financed about a third of the mortgages in Alsace Official tolerance grew during the French Revolution with full emancipation in 1791 However local antisemitism also increased and Napoleon turned hostile in 1806 imposing a one year moratorium on all debts owed to Jews citation needed In the 1830 1870 era most Jews moved to the cities where they integrated and acculturated as antisemitism sharply declined By 1831 the state began paying salaries to official rabbis and in 1846 a special legal oath for Jews was discontinued Antisemitic local riots occasionally occurred especially during the Revolution of 1848 The merger of Alsace into Germany in 1871 1918 lessened antisemitic violence 23 The constitution of the Reichsland of 1911 reserved one seat in the first chamber of the Landtag for a representative of the Jewish Consistory of Alsace Lorraine besides two seats respectively for the two main Christian denominations Struggle between France and united Germany Edit Main article Alsace Lorraine We Germans who know Germany and France know better what is good for the Alsatians than the unfortunates themselves In the perversion of their French life they have no exact idea of what concerns Germany Heinrich von Treitschke German nationalist historian and politician 1871 24 25 nbsp Traditional costumes of AlsaceThe Franco Prussian War which started in July 1870 saw France defeated in May 1871 by the Kingdom of Prussia and other German states The end of the war led to the unification of Germany Otto von Bismarck annexed Alsace and northern Lorraine to the new German Empire in 1871 France ceded more than 90 of Alsace and one fourth of Lorraine as stipulated in the treaty of Frankfurt Belfort the largest Alsatian town south of Mulhouse remained French Unlike other member states of the German federation which had governments of their own the new Imperial territory of Alsace Lorraine was under the sole authority of the Kaiser administered directly by the imperial government in Berlin Between 100 000 and 130 000 Alsatians of a total population of about a million and a half chose to remain French citizens and leave Reichsland Elsass Lothringen many of them resettling in French Algeria as Pieds Noirs Only in 1911 was Alsace Lorraine granted some measure of autonomy which was manifested also in a flag and an anthem Elsassisches Fahnenlied In 1913 however the Saverne Affair French Incident de Saverne showed the limits of this new tolerance of the Alsatian identity nbsp An Alsatian woman in traditional costume photographed by Adolphe Braun in the 1870sDuring the First World War to avoid ground fights between brothers many Alsatians served as sailors in the Kaiserliche Marine and took part in the Naval mutinies that led to the abdication of the Kaiser in November 1918 which left Alsace Lorraine without a nominal head of state The sailors returned home and tried to found an independent republic While Jacques Peirotes at this time deputy at the Landrat Elsass Lothringen and just elected mayor of Strasbourg proclaimed the forfeiture of the German Empire and the advent of the French Republic a self proclaimed government of Alsace Lorraine declared its independence as the Republic of Alsace Lorraine French troops entered Alsace less than two weeks later to quash the worker strikes and remove the newly established Soviets and revolutionaries from power With the arrival of the French soldiers many Alsatians and local Prussian German administrators and bureaucrats cheered the re establishment of order 26 Although U S President Woodrow Wilson had insisted that the region was self ruling by legal status as its constitution had stated it was bound to the sole authority of the Kaiser and not to the German state France would allow no plebiscite as granted by the League of Nations to some eastern German territories at this time because the French regarded the Alsatians as Frenchmen liberated from German rule Germany ceded the region to France under the Treaty of Versailles Policies forbidding the use of German and requiring French were promptly introduced 27 In order not to antagonize the Alsatians the region was not subjected to some legal changes that had occurred in the rest of France between 1871 and 1919 such as the 1905 French law on the separation of Church and State nbsp German stamps of Hindenburg marked with Elsass 1940 Alsace Lorraine was occupied by Germany in 1940 during the Second World War Although it was never formally annexed Alsace Lorraine was incorporated into the Greater German Reich which had been restructured into Reichsgaue Alsace was merged with Baden and Lorraine with the Saarland to become part of a planned Westmark During the war 130 000 young men from Alsace and Lorraine were conscripted into the German armies against their will malgre nous There were some volunteers for the Waffen SS 28 although they were outnumbered by conscripts of the 1926 1927 classes Thirty of said Waffen SS were involved in the Oradour sur Glane massacre 29 conscripts one volunteer A third of the malgre nous perished on the Eastern front In July 1944 1500 malgre nous were released from Soviet captivity and sent to Algiers where they joined the Free French Forces After World War II Edit Today the territory is in certain areas subject to some laws that are significantly different from the rest of France which is known as the local law In more recent years the Alsatian language is again being promoted by local national and European authorities as an element of the region s identity Alsatian is taught in schools but is not mandatory as one of the regional languages of France German is also taught as a foreign language in local kindergartens and schools There is a growing network of schools proposing full immersion in Alsatian dialect and in Standard German called ABCM Zweisprachigkeit ABCM gt French acronym for Association for Bilingualism in the Classroom from Kindergarten onwards Zweisprachigkeit gt German for Bilingualism However the Constitution of France still requires that French be the only official language of the Republic Timeline Edit Year s Event Ruled by Official or common language5400 4500 BC Bandkeramiker Linear Pottery cultures Unknown2300 750 BC Bell Beaker cultures Proto Celtic spoken750 450 BC Hallstatt culture early Iron Age early Celts None Old Celtic spoken450 58 BC Celts Gauls firmly secured in entire Gaul Alsace trade with Greece is evident Vix Celts Gauls None Gaulish variety of Celtic widely spoken58 44 BC AD 260 Alsace and Gaul conquered by Caesar provinciated to Germania Superior Roman Empire Latin Gallic widely spoken260 274 Postumus founds breakaway Gallic Empire Gallic Empire Latin Gallic274 286 Rome reconquers the Gallic Empire Alsace Roman Empire Latin Gallic Germanic only in Argentoratum 286 378 Diocletian divides the Roman Empire into Western and Eastern sectors Roman Empirearound 300 Beginning of Germanic migrations to the Roman Empire Roman Empire378 395 The Visigoths rebel precursor to waves of German and Hun invasions Roman Empire Alamannic Incursions395 436 Death of Theodosius I causing a permanent division between Western and Eastern Rome Western Roman Empire436 486 Germanic invasions of the Western Roman Empire Roman Tributary of Gaul Alamannic486 511 Lower Alsace conquered by the Franks Frankish Realm Old Frankish Latin Alamannic531 614 Upper Alsace conquered by the Franks Frankish Realm614 795 Totality of Alsace to the Frankish Kingdom Frankish Realm795 814 Charlemagne begins reign Charlemagne crowned Emperor of the Romans on 25 December 800 Frankish Empire Old Frankish Frankish and Alamannic814 Death of Charlemagne Carolingian Empire Old Frankish Frankish and Alamannic varieties of Old High German847 870 Treaty of Verdun gives Alsace and Lotharingia to Lothar I Middle Francia Carolingian Empire Frankish Frankish and Alamannic varieties of Old High German870 889 Treaty of Mersen gives Alsace to East Francia East Francia German Kingdom of the Carolingian Empire Frankish Frankish and Alamannic varieties of Old High German889 962 Carolingian Empire breaks up into five Kingdoms Magyars and Vikings periodically raid Alsace Kingdom of Germany Frankish and Alamannic varieties of Old High German962 1618 Otto I crowned Holy Roman Emperor Holy Roman Empire Old High German Middle High German Modern High German Alamannic and Franconian German dialects1618 1674 Louis XIII annexes portions of Alsace during the Thirty Years War Holy Roman Empire German Alamannic and Franconian dialects Alsatian 1674 1871 Louis XIV annexes the rest of Alsace during the Franco Dutch War establishing full French sovereignty over the region Kingdom of France Officially French Alsatian and German tolerated and spoken by an estimated 85 90 of the population 1871 1918 Franco Prussian War causes French cession of Alsace to German Empire German Empire German German Alsatian 86 8 1 492 347 people French 11 5 198 318 people Italian 1 1 18 750 people German and a second language 0 4 7 485 people Polish 0 1 1 410 people Statistics from 1871 Over time French declined to 10 9 1919 1940 Treaty of Versailles causes German cession of Alsace to France France French Alsatian French German1940 1944 Nazi Germany conquers Alsace establishing Gau Baden Elsass Nazi Germany German Alsatian French German1945 present French control France French French and Alsatian German declining minority language Geography EditTopography Edit nbsp Topographic map of AlsaceAlsace has an area of 8 283 km2 making it the smallest region of metropolitan France It is almost four times longer than it is wide corresponding to a plain between the Rhine in the east and the Vosges mountains in the west It includes the departements of Haut Rhin and Bas Rhin known previously as Sundgau and Nordgau It borders Germany on the north and the east Switzerland and Franche Comte on the south and Lorraine on the west Several valleys are also found in the region Its highest point is the Grand Ballon in Haut Rhin which reaches a height of 1424 m It contains many forests primarily in the Vosges and in Bas Rhin Haguenau Forest The ried lies along the Rhine Geology Edit See also Vosges and Jura coal mining basins nbsp The Grand Ballon southern face seen from the valley of the ThurAlsace is the part of the plain of the Rhine located at the west of the Rhine on its left bank It is a rift or graben from the Oligocene epoch associated with its horsts the Vosges and the Black Forest The Jura Mountains formed by slip induced by the alpine uplift of the Mesozoic cover on the Triassic formations goes through the area of Belfort Climate Edit Alsace has a semi continental climate at low altitude and a continental climate at high altitude There is fairly low precipitation because the Vosges protect it from the west The city of Colmar has a sunny microclimate it is the second driest city in France with an annual precipitation of 600 mm making it ideal for vin d Alsace Alsatian wine Governance Edit nbsp Official logo of the European Collectivity of AlsaceSince 2021 Alsace has been a territorial collectivity called the European Collectivity of Alsace collectivite europeenne d Alsace Administrative divisions Edit The European Collectivity of Alsace is divided into 2 departmental constituencies circonscriptions departementales 9 departmental arrondissements 40 cantons and 880 communes nbsp Administrative map of Bas RhinBas Rhin Arrondissement of Haguenau Wissembourg Arrondissement of Molsheim Arrondissement of Saverne Arrondissement of Selestat Erstein Arrondissement of Strasbourg nbsp Administrative map of Haut RhinHaut Rhin Arrondissement of Altkirch Arrondissement of Colmar Ribeauville Arrondissement of Guebwiller Arrondissement of Mulhouse Arrondissement of Thann GuebwillerSociety EditDemographics Edit Alsace s population increased to 1 921 014 in 2023 3 It has regularly increased over time except in wartime and shortly after the German annexation of 1871 when many Alsatians who had opted to keep their French citizenship emigrated to France by both natural growth and immigration High population growth during the post WW2 economic boom of the Trente Glorieuses ended after the 1973 oil crisis Demographic growth picked up again in the 1990s and 2000s but by the 2010s Alsace entered a new period of slow demographic growth Historical population of Alsace within the borders set in 1871 YearPop p a 1806751 008 1821843 973 0 78 1831933 828 1 02 1836976 478 0 85 1841989 477 0 26 18461 031 360 0 82 18511 043 859 0 24 18561 028 446 0 31 18611 057 647 0 55 18661 082 193 0 46 18711 059 240 0 37 18751 051 554 0 18 18801 073 954 0 42 18851 074 626 0 01 18901 093 114 0 34 18951 116 086 0 42 19001 154 641 0 68 19051 198 774 0 75 YearPop p a 19101 218 544 0 33 19211 120 629 0 81 19261 161 639 0 72 19311 204 968 0 74 19361 219 381 0 24 19461 144 986 0 63 19541 217 581 0 75 19621 318 070 1 02 19681 412 385 1 16 19751 517 330 1 04 19821 566 048 0 45 19901 624 372 0 46 19991 734 145 0 73 20091 843 053 0 62 20141 872 949 0 32 20201 915 915 0 38 20231 921 014 0 09 Graphs are temporarily unavailable due to technical issues Sources French and German censuses 1806 1871 29 1876 2020 30 and INSEE estimate 2023 3 Immigration Edit At the 2018 census 69 9 of the inhabitants of Alsace were natives of Alsace 16 0 were born in the rest of Metropolitan France 0 5 were born in Overseas France and 13 7 were born in foreign countries 31 Nearly 44 of the immigrants come from Europe in particular from Germany natives of Germany residing in Alsace where housing is cheaper Italy Portugal and Serbia 32 33 Since 2008 the number of Turkish immigrants living in Alsace has declined whereas the number of Maghreban immigrants has risen less than the number of European immigrants 34 32 33 The fastest growing groups of immigrants are those from Asia and from sub Saharan Africa 34 32 33 Place of birth of residents of Alsace at the 1968 1975 1982 1990 1999 2008 2013 and 2018 censuses Census Born in Alsace Born in the rest of Metropolitan France Born in Overseas France Born in foreign countries with French citizenship at birth a Immigrants b 2018 69 9 16 0 0 5 2 2 11 6 from Europe from the Maghreb c from Turkey from the rest of the world5 1 2 6 1 5 2 4 2013 71 1 15 4 0 4 2 3 10 8 from Europe from the Maghreb c from Turkey from the rest of the world4 8 2 5 1 6 2 0 2008 71 8 15 3 0 4 2 3 10 3 from Europe from the Maghreb c from Turkey from the rest of the world4 5 2 4 1 6 1 8 1999 73 6 15 4 0 4 2 1 8 5 from Europe from the Maghreb c from Turkey from the rest of the world4 2 1 9 1 3 1 1 1990 75 9 13 4 0 3 2 4 7 9 1982 76 8 12 5 0 3 2 6 7 8 1975 78 3 11 6 0 2 2 6 7 3 1968 81 7 9 8 0 1 2 8 5 6 a Persons born abroad of French parents such as Pieds Noirs and children of French expatriates b An immigrant is by French definition a person born in a foreign country and who did not have French citizenship at birth Note that an immigrant may have acquired French citizenship since moving to France but is still listed as an immigrant in French statistics On the other hand persons born in France with foreign citizenship the children of immigrants are not listed as immigrants c Morocco Tunisia AlgeriaSource INSEE 31 32 33 35 34 36 Religion Edit Religion in Alsace 37 religion percentCatholic 70 Protestant 17 No religion 8 Other faith 5 nbsp Temple Saint Etienne architect Jean Baptiste Schacre the main Calvinist church of MulhouseAlsace is generally seen as the most religious of all the French regions Most of the Alsatian population is Roman Catholic but largely because of the region s German heritage a significant Protestant community also exists today the EPCAAL a Lutheran church is France s second largest Protestant church also forming an administrative union UEPAL with the much smaller Calvinist EPRAL Unlike the rest of France the Local law in Alsace Moselle still provides for the Napoleonic Concordat of 1801 and the organic articles which provides public subsidies to the Roman Catholic Lutheran and Calvinist churches as well as to Jewish synagogues religion classes in one of these faiths are compulsory in public schools The divergence in policy from the French majority is because the region was part of Imperial Germany when the 1905 law separating the French church and state was instituted for a more comprehensive history see Alsace Lorraine Controversy erupts periodically on the appropriateness of that legal disposition as well as on the exclusion of other religions from the arrangement Following the Protestant Reformation promoted by the local reformer Martin Bucer the principle of cuius regio eius religio led to a certain amount of religious diversity in the highlands of northern Alsace Landowners who as local lords had the right to decide the religion that was allowed on their land were eager to entice populations from the more attractive lowlands to settle and develop their property Many accepted without discrimination Catholics Lutherans Calvinists Jews and Anabaptists Multiconfessional villages appeared particularly in the region of Alsace bossue Alsace became one of the French regions boasting a thriving Jewish community and the only region with a noticeable Anabaptist population Philipp Jakob Spener who founded Pietism was born in Alsace The schism of the Amish under the lead of Jacob Amman from the Mennonites occurred in 1693 in Sainte Marie aux Mines The strongly Catholic Louis XIV tried in vain to drive them from Alsace When Napoleon imposed military conscription without religious exception most emigrated to the American continent In 1707 the simultaneum forced many Reformed and Lutheran church buildings to also allow Catholic services About 50 such simultaneous churches still exist in modern Alsace but with the Catholic church s general lack of priests they tend to hold Catholic services only occasionally Culture EditAlsace historically was part of the Holy Roman Empire and the German realm of culture Since the 17th century the region has passed between German and French control numerous times resulting in a cultural blend German traits remain in the more traditional rural parts of the culture such as the cuisine and architecture whereas modern institutions are totally dominated by French culture Symbolism Edit nbsp Coat of arms of AlsaceStrasbourg Edit nbsp Coat of arms of StrasbourgStrasbourg s arms are the colours of the shield of the Bishop of Strasbourg a band of red on a white field also considered an inversion of the arms of the diocese at the end of a revolt of the burghers during the Middle Ages who took their independence from the teachings of the Bishop It retains its power over the surrounding area Flags Edit Main article Flag of Alsace nbsp Rot un Wiss the historical flag nbsp The region s flag from 1949 to 2008There is controversy around the recognition of the Alsatian flag The authentic historical flag is the Rot un Wiss Red and White are commonly found on the coat of arms of Alsatian cities Strasbourg Mulhouse Selestat 38 and of many Swiss cities especially in Basel s region The German region Hesse uses a flag similar to the Rot un Wiss As it underlines the Germanic roots of the region it was replaced in 1949 by a new Union jack like flag representing the union of the two departements It has however no real historical relevance It has been since replaced again by a slightly different one also representing the two departements With the purpose of Francizing the region the Rot un Wiss has not been recognized by Paris Some overzealous statesmen have called it a Nazi invention while its origins date back to the 11th century and the Red and White banner 39 of Gerard de Lorraine aka d Alsace The Rot un Wiss flag is still known as the real historical emblem of the region by most of the population and the departements parliaments and has been widely used during protests against the creation of a new super region gathering Champagne Ardennes Lorraine and Alsace namely on Colmar s statue of liberty 40 Language Edit nbsp Spatial distribution of dialects in Alsace prior to the expansion of standard French in the 20th century source source source source source source source track An Alsatian dialect speaker recorded in FranceAlthough German dialects were spoken in Alsace for most of its history the dominant language in Alsace today is French The traditional language of the region is Alsatian an Alemannic dialect of Upper German spoken on both sides of the Rhine and closely related to Swiss German Some Frankish dialects of West Central German are also spoken in Alsace Bossue and in the extreme north of Alsace As is customary for regional languages in France neither Alsatian nor the Frankish dialects have any form of official status although both are now recognized as languages of France and can be chosen as subjects in lycees Although Alsace has been part of France multiple times in the past the region had no direct connection with the French state for several centuries From the end of the Roman Empire 5th century to the French annexation 17th century Alsace was politically part of the German world During the Lutheran Reform the towns of Alsace were the first to adopt the German language as their official language instead of Latin It was in Strasbourg that German was first used for the liturgy It was also in Strasbourg that the first German Bible was published in 1466 From the annexation of Alsace by France in the 17th century and the language policy of the French Revolution up to 1870 knowledge of French in Alsace increased considerably With the education reforms of the 19th century the middle classes began to speak and write French well The French language never really managed however to win over the masses the vast majority of whom continued to speak their German dialects and write in German which we would now call standard German citation needed Between 1870 and 1918 Alsace was annexed by the German Empire in the form of an imperial province or Reichsland and the mandatory official language especially in schools became High German French lost ground to such an extent that it has been estimated that only 2 of the population spoke French fluently and only 8 had some knowledge of it Maugue 1970 After 1918 French was the only language used in schools particularly primary schools After much argument and discussion and after many temporary measures a memorandum was issued by Vice Chancellor Pfister in 1927 and governed education in primary schools until 1939 During a reannexation by Germany 1940 1945 High German was reinstated as the language of education The population was forced to speak German and French family names were Germanized Following the Second World War the 1927 regulation was not reinstated and the teaching of German in primary schools was suspended by a provisional rectorial decree which was supposed to enable French to regain lost ground The teaching of German became a major issue however as early as 1946 After World War II the French government pursued in line with its traditional language policy a campaign to suppress the use of German as part of a wider Francization campaign The local German dialect was rendered a backward regional Germanic dialect not being attached to German 41 In 1951 Article 10 of the Deixonne Law Loi Deixonne on the teaching of local languages and dialects made provision for Breton Basque Catalan and old Provencal but not for Corsican Dutch West Flemish or Alsatian in Alsace and Moselle However in a Decree of 18 December 1952 supplemented by an Order of 19 December of the same year optional teaching of the German language was introduced in elementary schools in communes in which the language of habitual use was the Alsatian dialect In 1972 the Inspector General of German Georges Holderith obtained authorization to reintroduce German into 33 intermediate classes on an experimental basis This teaching of German referred to as the Holderith Reform was later extended to all pupils in the last two years of elementary school This reform is still largely the basis of German teaching but not Alsatian in elementary schools today It was not until 9 June 1982 with the Circulaire sur la langue et la culture regionales en Alsace Memorandum on regional language and culture in Alsace issued by the Vice Chancellor of the Academie Pierre Deyon that the teaching of German in primary schools in Alsace really began to be given more official status The Ministerial Memorandum of 21 June 1982 known as the Circulaire Savary introduced financial support over three years for the teaching of regional languages in schools and universities This memorandum was however implemented in a fairly lax manner Both Alsatian and Standard German were for a time banned from public life including street and city names official administration and educational system Though the ban has long been lifted and street signs today are often bilingual Alsace Lorraine is today predominantly French in language and culture Few young people speak Alsatian today although there do still exist one or two enclaves in the Sundgau region where some older inhabitants cannot speak French and where Alsatian is still used as the mother tongue A related Alemannic German survives on the opposite bank of the Rhine in Baden and especially in Switzerland However while French is the major language of the region the Alsatian dialect of French is heavily influenced by German and other languages such as Yiddish in phonology and vocabulary This situation has spurred a movement to preserve the Alsatian language which is perceived as endangered a situation paralleled in other regions of France such as Brittany or Occitania Alsatian is now taught in French high schools Increasingly French is the only language used at home and at work and a growing number of people have a good knowledge of standard German as a foreign language learned in school The constitution of the Fifth Republic states that French alone is the official language of the Republic However Alsatian along with other regional languages are recognized by the French government in the official list of languages of France Although the French government signed the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages in 1992 it never ratified the treaty and therefore no legal basis exists for any of the regional languages in France 42 However visitors to Alsace can see indications of renewed political and cultural interest in the language in Alsatian signs appearing in car windows and on hoardings and in new official bilingual street signs in Strasbourg and Mulhouse A 1999 INSEE survey included in the 1999 Census the majority of the population in Alsace speak French as their first language 39 0 or 500 000 people of the population speak Alsatian 16 2 or 208 000 people speak German 75 200 people speak English or 5 9 and 27 600 people speak Italian 43 The survey counted 548 000 adult speakers of Alsatian in France making it the second most spoken regional language in the country after Occitan Like all regional languages in France however the transmission of Alsatian is on the decline While 39 of the adult population of Alsace speak Alsatian only one in four children speak it and only one in ten children uses it regularly Architecture Edit nbsp Colmar s old townThe traditional habitat of the Alsatian lowland like in other regions of Germany and Northern Europe consists of houses constructed with walls in timber framing and cob and roofing in flat tiles This type of construction is abundant in adjacent parts of Germany and can be seen in other areas of France but their particular abundance in Alsace is owed to several reasons The proximity to the Vosges where the wood can be found During periods of war and bubonic plague villages were often burned down so to prevent the collapse of the upper floors ground floors were built of stone and upper floors built in half timberings to prevent the spread of fire During most of its history a great part of Alsace was flooded by the Rhine every year Half timbered houses were easy to knock down and to move around during those times a day was necessary to move it and a day to rebuild it in another place However half timbering was found to increase the risk of fire which is why from the 19th century it began to be rendered In recent times villagers started to paint the rendering white in accordance with Beaux Arts movements To discourage this the region s authorities gave financial grants to the inhabitants to paint the rendering in various colours in order to return to the original style and many inhabitants accepted more for financial reasons than by firm belief citation needed Cuisine Edit nbsp FlammekuecheAlsatian cuisine somewhat based on German culinary traditions is marked by the use of pork in various forms It is perhaps mostly known for the region s wines and beers Traditional dishes include baeckeoffe flammekueche choucroute and fleischnacka Southern Alsace also called the Sundgau is characterized by carpe frite that also exists in Yiddish tradition Food Edit nbsp KugelhupfThe festivities of the year s end involve the production of a great variety of biscuits and small cakes called bredela as well as pain d epices gingerbread cakes which are baked around Christmas time The Kugelhupf is also popular in Alsace and the Christstollen during the Christmas season 44 The gastronomic symbol of the region is undoubtedly the Choucroute a local variety of Sauerkraut The word Sauerkraut in Alsatian has the form surkrut same as in other southwestern German dialects and means sour cabbage as its Standard German equivalent This word was included into the French language as choucroute To make it the cabbage is finely shredded layered with salt and juniper and left to ferment in wooden barrels Sauerkraut can be served with poultry pork sausage or even fish Traditionally it is served with Strasbourg sausage or frankfurters bacon smoked pork or smoked Morteau or Montbeliard sausages or a selection of other pork products Served alongside are often roasted or steamed potatoes or dumplings Alsace is also well known for its foie gras made in the region since the 17th century Additionally Alsace is known for its fruit juices and mineral waters Wines Edit nbsp Riesling grapesAlsace is an important wine producing region Vins d Alsace Alsace wines are mostly white Alsace produces some of the world s most noted dry rieslings and is the only region in France to produce mostly varietal wines identified by the names of the grapes used wine from Burgundy is also mainly varietal but not normally identified as such typically from grapes also used in Germany The most notable example is Gewurztraminer Beers Edit Alsace is also the main beer producing region of France thanks primarily to breweries in and near Strasbourg These include those of Fischer Karlsbrau Kronenbourg and Heineken International Hops are grown in Kochersberg and in northern Alsace Schnapps is also traditionally made in Alsace but it is in decline because home distillers are becoming less common and the consumption of traditional strong alcoholic beverages is decreasing In tales Edit nbsp Alsatian storkThe stork is a main feature of Alsace and was the subject of many legends told to children The bird practically disappeared around 1970 but re population efforts are continuing They are mostly found on roofs of houses churches and other public buildings in Alsace The Easter Bunny was first mentioned in Georg Franck von Franckenau s De ovis paschalibus About Easter eggs in 1682 referring to an Alsace tradition of an Easter Hare bringing Easter eggs The term Alsatia Edit Main article Alsatia Alsatia the Latin form of Alsace s name entered the English language as a lawless place or a place under no jurisdiction prior to the 17th century as a reflection of the British perception of the region at that time It was used into the 20th century as a term for a ramshackle marketplace protected by ancient custom and the independence of their patrons The word is still in use in the 21st century among the English and Australian judiciaries to describe a place where the law cannot reach In setting up the Serious Organised Crime Agency the state has set out to create an Alsatia a region of executive action free of judicial oversight Lord Justice Sedley in UMBS v SOCA 2007 45 Derived from the above Alsatia was historically a cant term for the area near Whitefriars London which was for a long time a sanctuary It is first known in print in the title of The Squire of Alsatia a 1688 play written by Thomas Shadwell Economy EditAccording to the Institut National de la Statistique et des Etudes Economiques INSEE Alsace had a gross domestic product of 44 3 billion euros in 2002 With a GDP per capita of 24 804 it is the second region of France after only Ile de France and 68 of Alsatian jobs are in the services and 25 are in industry which makes Alsace one of France s most industrialised regions Alsace is a region of varied economic activity including viticulture mostly along the Route des Vins d Alsace between Marlenheim and Thann hop harvesting and brewing half of French beer is produced in Alsace especially in the vicinity of Strasbourg notably in Schiltigheim Hochfelden Saverne and Obernai forestry development automobile industry Mulhouse and Molsheim home town of Bugatti Automobiles life sciences as part of the trinational BioValley tourism potassium chloride until the late 20th century and potash miningAlsace has many international ties and 35 of firms are foreign companies notably German Swiss American Japanese and Scandinavian Tourism Edit Having been early and always densely populated Alsace is famous for its high number of picturesque villages churches and castles and for the various beauties of its three main towns in spite of severe destructions suffered throughout five centuries of wars between France and Germany Alsace is furthermore famous for its vineyards especially along the 170 km of the Route des Vins d Alsace from Marlenheim to Thann and the Vosges mountains with their thick and green forests and picturesque lakes nbsp Chateau du Haut Kœnigsbourg nbsp Colmar petitevenise nbsp The main entrance of the Ouvrage Schoenenbourg from the Maginot LineOld towns of Strasbourg Colmar Selestat Guebwiller Saverne Obernai Thann Smaller cities and villages Molsheim Rosheim Riquewihr Ribeauville Kaysersberg Wissembourg Neuwiller les Saverne Marmoutier Rouffach Soultz Haut Rhin Bergheim Hunspach Seebach Turckheim Eguisheim Neuf Brisach Ferrette Niedermorschwihr and the gardens of the blue house in Uttenhoffen 46 Churches as main sights in otherwise less remarkable places Thann Andlau Murbach Ebersmunster Niederhaslach Sigolsheim Lautenbach Epfig Altorf Ottmarsheim Domfessel Niederhaslach Marmoutier and the fortified church at Hunawihr Chateau du Haut Kœnigsbourg Other castles Ortenbourg and Ramstein above Selestat Hohlandsbourg Fleckenstein Haut Barr above Saverne Saint Ulrich above Ribeauville Lichtenberg Wangenbourg the three Castles of Eguisheim Pflixbourg Wasigenstein Andlau Grand Geroldseck Wasenbourg Cite de l Automobile museum in Mulhouse Cite du train museum in Mulhouse The EDF museum in Mulhouse Ungersheim s ecomusee open air museum and Bioscope leisure park about the environment closed since September 2012 Musee historique in Haguenau largest museum in Bas Rhin outside Strasbourg Bibliotheque humaniste in Selestat one of the oldest public libraries in the world Christmas markets in Kaysersberg Strasbourg Mulhouse and Colmar Departmental Centre of the History of Families CDHF in Guebwiller The Maginot Line Ouvrage Schoenenbourg Mount Ste Odile Route des Vins d Alsace Alsace Wine Route Memorial d Alsace Lorraine in Schirmeck Natzweiler Struthof the only German concentration camp on French territory during WWII Famous mountains Massif du Donon Grand Ballon Petit Ballon Ballon d Alsace Hohneck Hartmannswillerkopf National park Parc naturel des Vosges du Nord Regional park Parc naturel regional des Ballons des Vosges south of the Vosges Transportation Edit Roads Edit nbsp Ponts Couverts StrasbourgMost major car journeys are made on the A35 autoroute which links Saint Louis on the Swiss border to Lauterbourg on the German border The A4 toll road towards Paris begins 20 km 12 mi northwest of Strasbourg and the A36 toll road towards Lyon begins 10 km 6 2 mi west from Mulhouse Spaghetti junctions built in the 1970s and 1980s are prominent in the comprehensive system of motorways in Alsace especially in the outlying areas of Strasbourg and Mulhouse These cause a major buildup of traffic and are the main sources of pollution in the towns notably in Strasbourg where the motorway traffic of the A35 was 170 000 per day in 2002 At present plans are being considered for building a new dual carriageway west of Strasbourg which would reduce the buildup of traffic in that area by picking up north and southbound vehicles and getting rid of the buildup outside Strasbourg The line plans to link up the interchange of Hœrdt to the north of Strasbourg with Innenheim in the southwest The opening is envisaged at the end of 2011 with an average usage of 41 000 vehicles a day Estimates of the French Works Commissioner however raised some doubts over the interest of such a project since it would pick up only about 10 of the traffic of the A35 at Strasbourg Paradoxically this reversed the situation of the 1950s At that time the French trunk road left of the Rhine not been built so that traffic would cross into Germany to use the Karlsruhe Basel Autobahn To add to the buildup of traffic the neighbouring German state of Baden Wurttemberg has imposed a tax on heavy goods vehicles using their Autobahnen Thus a proportion of the HGVs travelling from north Germany to Switzerland or southern Alsace bypasses the A5 on the Alsace Baden Wurttemberg border and uses the untolled French A35 instead Trains Edit nbsp Place de l Homme de Fer Tram StationTER Alsace is the rail network serving Alsace Its network is articulated around the city of Strasbourg It is one of the most developed rail networks in France financially sustained partly by the French railroad SNCF and partly by the region Alsace Because the Vosges are surmountable only by the Col de Saverne and the Belfort Gap it has been suggested that Alsace needs to open up and get closer to France in terms of its rail links Developments already under way or planned include the TGV Est Paris Strasbourg had its first phase brought into service in June 2007 bringing down the Strasbourg Paris trip from 4 to 2 hours 20 minutes and further reducing it to 1h 50m after the completion of the second phase in 2016 the TGV Rhin Rhone between Dijon and Mulhouse opened in 2011 a tram train system in Mulhouse 2011 an interconnection with the German InterCityExpress as far as Kehl expected 2016 However the abandoned Maurice Lemaire tunnel towards Saint Die des Vosges was rebuilt as a toll road Waterways Edit Port traffic of Alsace exceeds 15 million tonnes of which about three quarters is centred on Strasbourg which is the second busiest French fluvial harbour The enlargement plan of the Rhone Rhine Canal intended to link up the Mediterranean Sea and Central Europe Rhine Danube North Sea and Baltic Sea was abandoned in 1998 for reasons of expense and land erosion notably in the Doubs valley Air traffic Edit There are two international airports in Alsace the international airport of Strasbourg in Entzheim the international EuroAirport Basel Mulhouse Freiburg which is the seventh largest French airport in terms of trafficStrasbourg is also two hours away by road from one of the largest European airports Frankfurt Main and 2 hours 30 minutes from Charles de Gaulle Airport through the direct TGV service stopping in Terminal 2 Cycling network Edit Crossed by three EuroVelo routes the EuroVelo 5 Via Francigena from London to Rome Brindisi the EuroVelo 6 Veloroute des fleuves from Nantes to Budapest H and the EuroVelo 15 Veloroute Rhin Rhine cycle route from Andermatt CH to Rotterdam NL Alsace is the most bicycle friendly region of France citation needed with 2 000 kilometres 1 200 mi of cycle routes The network is of a very good standard and well signposted All the towpaths of the canals in Alsace canal des houilleres de la Sarre canal de la Marne au Rhin canal de la Bruche canal du Rhone au Rhin are tarred Notable people Edit nbsp Statue of Martin Schongauer by Frederic Bartholdi in front of the Unterlinden Museum ColmarThe following is a selection of people born in Alsace who have been particularly influential or successful in their respective fields See also Category People from Alsace and Alsatians people Arts Edit Jean Arp Frederic Auguste Bartholdi born in Colmar in 1834 47 Theodore Deck Gustave Dore Sebastien Erard Jean Jacques Henner Philip James de Loutherbourg Master of the Drapery Studies Marcel Marceau Sam Marx born as Simon Marx in Mertzwiller in 1859 48 Charles Munch Claude Rich Martin Schongauer Marie Tussaud Tomi Ungerer Emile Waldteufel Jean Jacques Waltz aka Hansi Cora Wilburn William WylerBusiness Edit Automobiles Ettore Bugatti Thierry Mugler Schlumberger brothers Andre Koechlin Leopold Louis DreyfusLiterature Edit Sebastian Brant who was born in Strasbourg in 1457 or 1458 49 August Stober Gottfried von StrassburgMilitary Edit Alfred Dreyfus who was born in Mulhouse in 1850 50 Francois Christophe de Kellermann Jean Baptiste Kleber Jacques Paul Klein Jean RappNobility Edit Henriette Louise de Waldner de Freundstein Ludwig I of BavariaReligion Edit Martin Bucer Wolfgang Capito Charles de Foucauld Herrad of Landsberg Pope Leo IX Thomas Murner J F Oberlin Odile of Alsace Albert Schweitzer Philipp Spener Jakob WimpfelingSciences Edit Hans Bethe Charles Friedel Charles Frederic Gerhardt Johann Hermann Alfred Kastler Erich Leo Lehmann Jean Marie Lehn Wilhelm Philippe Schimper Charles Xavier Thomas Pierre Weiss Charles Adolphe WurtzSports Edit Mehdi Baala Yann Ehrlacher Valerien Ismael Sebastien Loeb Yvan Muller Thierry Omeyer Thomas Voeckler Arsene WengerMajor communities EditGerman original names in brackets if French names differ Bischheim Colmar Kolmar Guebwiller Gebweiler Haguenau Hagenau Illkirch Graffenstaden Illkirch Grafenstaden Illzach LingolsheimMulhouse Mulhausen Saint Louis St Ludwig Saverne Zabern Schiltigheim Selestat Schlettstadt Strasbourg Strassburg WittenheimSister regions EditThere is an accord de cooperation internationale between Alsace and the following regions 51 Vest Romania Gyeongsangbuk do South Korea Upper Austria Austria Lower Silesia Poland Quebec Canada Jiangsu China Moscow RussiaSee also Edit2014 Alsace single territorial collectivity referendum Musee alsacien Strasbourg Route Romane d Alsace German place names in Alsace Alsace independence movement Castroville TexasNotes Edit German spelling before 1996 Elsass References Edit https www youtube com watch v dJr8yennvBY La geographie de l Alsace region alsace Archived from the original on 12 December 2015 Retrieved 13 January 2016 a b c d Estimation de population par departement sexe et grande classe d age Annees 1975 a 2023 INSEE Retrieved 10 February 2023 Alsace Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 17 March 2020 Alsace The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 5th ed HarperCollins Retrieved 11 May 2019 Alsace CollinsDictionary com HarperCollins Retrieved 11 May 2019 Leichtfried Laura 23 February 2017 Alsace culturally not quite French not quite German British Council Archived from the original on 23 February 2017 Retrieved 25 August 2021 Bostock John Knight Kenneth Charles King D R McLintock 1976 Kenneth Charles King D R McLintock ed A Handbook on Old High German Literature 2nd ed Oxford Clarendon Press p 20 ISBN 0 19 815392 9 Roland Kaltenbach Le guide de l Alsace La Manufacture 1992 ISBN 2 7377 0308 5 page 36 a b c Skutsch Carl ed 2005 Encyclopedia of the World s Minorities Vol 1 New York Routledge p 79 ISBN 1 57958 468 3 Bellwood Peter 2005 First Farmers Malden MA Blackwell Publishing p 77 Cary M Scullard H H 1979 A History of Rome Down to the Reign of Constantine London MacMillan Education Ltd p 260 a b Cary M Scullard H H 1979 A History of Rome Down to the Age of Constantine third ed London Macmillan Education Ltd pp 259 261 Caesar Julius 2000 Henderson Jeffrey ed The Galllic War Book 1 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University pp 46 87 lines 31 54 Sheperd William 1929 Historical Atlas seventh ed New York Henry Holt and Company pp 38 39 Cary M Scullard H H 1979 A History of Rome Down to the Reign of Constantine London MacMillan Education Ltd pp 336 and 458 Wigoder Geoffrey 1972 Jewish Art and Civilization p 62 Sherman Irwin W 2006 The power of plagues Wiley Blackwell p 74 ISBN 1 55581 356 9 Doyle William 1989 The Oxford History of the French Revolution Oxford University Press p 7 ISBN 978 0 19 880493 2 Veve Thomas Dwight 1992 The Duke of Wellington and the British army of occupation in France 1815 1818 pp 20 21 Greenwood Press Westport Connecticut United States Cox net Archived from the original on 4 May 2006 Ilgenweb net Archived 23 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Caron Vicki 2005 Alsace In Levy Richard S ed Antisemitism A Historical Encyclopedia of Prejudice and Persecution Vol 1 Abc Clio pp 13 16 ISBN 9781851094394 Full text of Alsace Lorraine since 1870 New York The Macmillan 1919 Remaking the Map of Europe by Jean Finot The New York Times 30 May 1915 Archive video However propaganda for elections was allowed to go with a German translation from 1919 to 2008 Stephane Courtois Mark Kramer Livre noir du Communisme crimes terreur repression Harvard University Press 1999 p 323 ISBN 0 674 07608 7 EHESS Des villages de Cassini aux communes d aujourd hui Retrieved 10 February 2023 INSEE Statistiques locales Population municipale historique depuis 1876 Retrieved 10 February 2023 a b INSEE Donnees harmonisees des recensements de la population 1968 2018 in French Retrieved 11 February 2022 a b c d INSEE IMG1B Population immigree par sexe age et pays de naissance en 2018 Departement du Bas Rhin 67 in French Retrieved 10 February 2013 a b c d INSEE IMG1B Population immigree par sexe age et pays de naissance en 2018 Departement du Haut Rhin 68 in French Retrieved 10 February 2013 a b c INSEE IMG1B Population immigree par sexe age et pays de naissance en 2008 in French Retrieved 10 February 2013 INSEE IMG1B Population immigree par sexe age et pays de naissance en 2013 Region d Alsace 42 in French Retrieved 10 February 2013 INSEE D FD IMG2 Base France par departements Lieux de naissance a l etranger selon la nationalite in French Archived from the original on 12 October 2013 Retrieved 26 June 2013 1 Geographie religieuse France Unser LandBreve histoire d un drapeau alsacien Unser Land Archived from the original on 27 January 2015 Retrieved 29 December 2014 Genealogie bisval net Colmar une statue de la Liberte en Rot und Wiss France 3 Alsace 16 November 2014 von Polenz Peter 1999 Deutsche Sprachgeschichte vom Spatmittelalter bis zur Gegenwart Vol Band III 19 und 20 Jahrhundert Berlin New York p 165 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Charte europeenne des langues regionales Hollande nourrit la guerre contre le francais Le Figaro 5 June 2015 www epsilon insee fr jspui bitstream 1 2294 1 cpar12 1 pdf L alsacien deuxieme langue regionale de France INSEE December 2002 p 3 Les Christstollen de la vallee de Munster 2009 Lashmar Paul 27 May 2007 Law Lords slam crime agency for freezing UMBS payments The Independent London Archived from the original on 1 October 2007 Retrieved 30 May 2010 Jardins de la ferme bleue SehenswĂzrdigkeiten in Uttenhoffen Elsa beLocal de 23 November 2011 Archived from the original on 19 July 2012 Retrieved 30 March 2012 Wilson J G Fiske J eds 1900 Bartholdi Frederic Auguste Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography New York D Appleton La famille paternelle des Marx Brothers in French Zeydel Edwin H 1966 Wann wurde Sebastian Brant geboren Zeitschrift fur deutsches Altertum und deutsche Literatur 95 4 319 320 ISSN 0044 2518 JSTOR 20655345 Birth certificate of Dreyfus Alfred culture gouv fr Government of the French Republic Retrieved 24 July 2019 Les Accords de cooperation entre l Alsace et in French Archived from the original on 3 January 2011 Further reading EditAssall Paul Juden im Elsass Zurich Rio Verlag ISBN 3 907668 00 6 Das Elsass Ein literarischer Reisebegleiter Frankfurt a M Insel Verlag 2001 ISBN 3 458 34446 2 Erbe Michael Hrsg Das Elsass Historische Landschaft im Wandel der Zeiten Stuttgart Kohlhammer Verlag 2002 ISBN 3 17 015771 X Faber Gustav Elsass Munchen Artemis Cicerone Kunst und Reisefuhrer 1989 Fischer Christopher J Alsace to the Alsatians Visions and Divisions of Alsatian Regionalism 1870 1939 Berghahn Books 2010 Gerson Daniel Die Kehrseite der Emanzipation in Frankreich Judenfeindschaft im Elsass 1778 bis 1848 Essen Klartext 2006 ISBN 3 89861 408 5 Herden Ralf Bernd Strassburg Belagerung 1870 Norderstedt BoD 2007 ISBN 978 3 8334 5147 8 Hummer Hans J Politics and Power in Early Medieval Europe Alsace and the Frankish Realm 600 1000 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2009 Kaeppelin Charles E R and Mary L Hendee Alsace Throughout the Ages Franklin Pa C Miller 1908 Lazer Stephen A State Formation in Early Modern Alsace 1648 1789 Rochester University of Rochester Press 2019 Archived 12 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine Mehling Marianne Hrsg Knaurs Kulturfuhrer in Farbe Elsass Munchen Droemer Knaur 1984 Putnam Ruth Alsace and Lorraine From Caesar to Kaiser 58 B C 1871 A D New York 1915 Schreiber Hermann Das Elsass und seine Geschichte eine Kulturlandschaft im Spannungsfeld zweier Volker Augsburg Weltbild 1996 Schwengler Bernard Le Syndrome Alsacien d Letschte Strasbourg Editions Oberlin 1989 ISBN 2 85369 096 2 Ungerer Tomi Elsass Das offene Herz Europas Strassburg Edition La Nuee Bleue 2004 ISBN 2 7165 0618 3 Vogler Bernard and Hermann Lersch Das Elsass Morstadt Editions Ouest France 2000 ISBN 3 88571 260 1 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alsace nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Alsace Official website of the Alsace regional council Archived 30 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine Alsace at the heart of Europe Archived 5 February 2016 at the Wayback Machine Official French website in English Visit Alsace Official Alsace tourism website Rhine Online life in southern Alsace and neighbouring Basel and Baden Wuerrtemburg Alsatourisme Archived 23 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine Tourism in Alsace in French Alsace at Curlie Alsace net Directory of Alsatian Websites in French Museums of Alsace in French Churches and chapels of Alsace pictures only in French Medieval castles of Alsace pictures only in French Organs of Alsace in French The Alsatian Library of Mutual Credit in French The Alsatian Artists in French 48 30 N 7 30 E 48 500 N 7 500 E 48 500 7 500 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alsace amp oldid 1175688071, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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