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Electorate of Hesse

The Electorate of Hesse (German: Kurfürstentum Hessen), also known as Hesse-Kassel or Kurhessen, was a landgraviate whose prince was given the right to elect the Emperor by Napoleon.[1] When the Holy Roman Empire was abolished in 1806, its prince, William I, chose to retain the title of Elector, even though there was no longer an Emperor to elect. In 1807, with the Treaties of Tilsit, the area was annexed to the Kingdom of Westphalia, but in 1814, the Congress of Vienna restored the electorate.

Electorate of Hesse
Kurfürstentum Hessen
1803–1807
1814–1866
Flag
Coat of arms (1818)
Hesse-Kassel (red) in 1866, just before the Austro-Prussian War
StatusState of the Holy Roman Empire
State of the German Confederation
CapitalKassel
Common languagesGerman
Northern Hessian dialect
Religion
Protestant (Calvinist), Judaism
GovernmentAbsolute monarchy
Elector of Hesse 
• 1803–1821
William I
• 1821–1847
William II
• 1847–1866
Frederick William
History 
• Established
1803
• Raised to Electorate
1803
1807
• Reestablished
1814
• Annexed by Kingdom of Prussia
1866
CurrencyHesse-Kassel thaler (to 1858)
Hesse-Kassel vereinsthaler (1858–1873)
Today part ofGermany

The state was the only electorate within the German Confederation. It consisted of several detached territories to the north of Frankfurt, which survived until the state was annexed by Prussia in 1866 following the Austro-Prussian War.

The Elector's formal titles included "Elector of Hesse, Prince of Fulda (Fürst von Fulda), Prince of Hersfeld, Hanau, Fritzlar and Isenburg, Count of Katzenelnbogen, Dietz, Ziegenhain, Nidda, and Schaumburg."[2]

History Edit

The Landgraviate of Hesse-Kassel originated in 1567 with the division of the Landgraviate of Hesse between the heirs of Philip I of Hesse ("the Magnanimous") after his death. Philip's eldest son, William IV, received Hesse-Kassel, which comprised about half the area of the Landgraviate of Hesse, including the capital, Kassel. William's brothers received Hesse-Marburg and Hesse-Rheinfels, but their lines died out within a generation, and the territories then reverted to Hesse-Kassel and to the Landgraviate of Hesse-Darmstadt.

The Reign of William I Edit

The reign of the Landgrave William IX was an important epoch in the history of Hesse-Kassel. Ascending the throne in 1785, he took part in the War of the First Coalition against French First Republic a few years later, but in 1795 the Peace of Basel was signed. In 1801 he lost his possessions on the left bank of the Rhine, but in 1803 he was compensated for these losses with some former French territory around Mainz, and at the same time he was raised to the dignity of Prince-elector (Kurfürst) William I, a title he retained even after the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire.[3]

In 1806, William I signed a treaty of neutrality with Napoleon Bonaparte, but after the Battle of Jena-Auerstedt, the latter, suspecting William's designs, occupied his country and expelled him. Hesse-Kassel was then incorporated to the Kingdom of Westphalia under the rule of Jérôme Bonaparte.

After the Battle of Leipzig in 1813, the French were driven out of Hesse-Kassel, and on 21 November, the Elector returned in triumph to his capital, Kassel. A treaty concluded by him with the Coalition (2 December) stipulated that he was to receive back all his former territories, or their equivalent, and at the same time restored the ancient constitution of his country. This treaty, so far as the territories were concerned, was implemented by the Great Powers at the Congress of Vienna. They refused, however, the Elector's request to be recognized as "King of the Chatti" (König der Katten). At the Congress of Aix-la-Chapelle (1818), he was listed with the grand dukes as a "Royal Highness."[4] William chose to retain the now empty title of prince-elector, with the predicate of "Royal Highness".[3]

William I had marked his restoration by abolishing with a stroke of the pen all the reforms introduced under the French regime, repudiating the Westphalian debt and declaring null and void the sale of the crown domains. Everything was set back to its condition on 1 November 1806; even the officials had to descend to their former rank, and the army to revert to the old uniforms and powdered pigtails.[3]

The Estates (Parliament), indeed, were summoned in March 1815, but the attempt to devise a constitution broke down; their appeal to the Federal Assembly Bundesversammlung at Frankfurt to call the Elector to order in the matter of the debt and the domains came to nothing, owing to the intervention of Klemens von Metternich; and in May 1816 the Estates were dissolved.[3]

William I died on 27 February 1821 and was succeeded by his son, William II. Under him, the constitutional crisis in Kassel came to a head. He was arbitrary and avaricious, like his father, and moreover shocked public sentiment by his treatment of his wife, a popular Prussian princess, and his relations with his mistress, one Emilie Ortlöpp, whom he created Countess of Reichenbach-Lessonitz and loaded with wealth.[3]

The Revolution of 1830 Edit

The July Revolution in Paris gave the signal for disturbances; William II was forced to summon the Estates, and on 6 January 1831, a constitution on the ordinary Liberal basis[clarification needed] was signed. The Elector now retired to Hanau, appointed his son Frederick William as regent, and took no further part in public affairs.[3]

Frederick William, without his father's coarseness, had a full share of his arbitrary and avaricious temper. Constitutional restrictions were intolerable to him; and the consequent friction with the Diet (lower house) was aggravated when, in 1832, Hans Hassenpflug was placed at the head of the administration. All the efforts of William II and his minister were directed to nullifying the constitutional controls vested in the Diet; and the Opposition was fought by manipulating the elections, packing the judicial bench, and a vexatious and petty persecution of political "suspects", and this policy continued after the retirement of Hassenpflug in 1837.[3]

 
Coat of arms of Hesse-Kassel (1846)

The Revolution of 1848 Edit

The consequences emerged in the revolutionary year 1848 in a general manifestation of public discontent; and Frederick William, who had become Elector on his father's death (20 November 1847), was forced to dismiss his reactionary ministry and to agree to a comprehensive programme of democratic reform. This, however, was short lived. After the breakdown of the Frankfurt Parliament, Frederick William joined the Prussian Northern Union, and deputies from Hesse-Kassel were sent to the Erfurt Parliament. But as Austria recovered strength, the Elector's policy changed.[3]

The Hessian Crisis Edit

On 23 February 1850, Hassenpflug was again placed at the head of the administration and threw himself with renewed zeal into the struggle against the constitution and into opposition to the Kingdom of Prussia. On 2 September, the Diet was dissolved; the taxes were continued by Electoral ordinance; and the country was placed under martial law. It was at once clear, however, that the Elector could not depend on his officers or troops, who remained faithful to their oath to the constitution. Hassenpflug persuaded the Elector to leave Kassel secretly with him, and on 15 October, appealed for aid to the reconstituted federal diet, which willingly passed a decree of "intervention". On 1 November an Austrian and Bavarian force marched into the Electorate.[3]

This was a direct challenge to Prussia, which under conventions with the Elector had the right to use the military roads through Hesse that were her sole means of communication with her exclaves in the Rhine provinces. War seemed imminent; Prussian troops also entered the country, and shots were exchanged between the outposts. But Prussia was in no condition to take up the challenge; and the diplomatic contest that followed resulted in the Austrian triumph at Olmütz (1851). Hesse was surrendered to the federal diet; the taxes were collected by the federal forces, and all officials who refused to recognize the new order were dismissed.[3]

In March 1852, the federal diet abolished the constitution of 1831, together with the reforms of 1848, and in April issued a new provisional constitution, under which the new diet had very narrow powers; and the elector was free to carry out his policy of amassing money, forbidding the construction of railways and factories, and imposing strict orthodoxy on churches and schools. In 1855, however, Hassenpflug who had returned with the Elector was dismissed; and five years later, after a period of growing agitation, a new constitution was granted with the consent of the federal diet (30 May 1860).[3]

The new chambers demanded the constitution of 1831; and, after several dissolutions which always resulted in the return of the same members, the federal diet decided to restore the constitution of 1831 (14 May 1862). This had been due to a threat of Prussian occupation; and it needed another such threat to persuade the Elector to reassemble the chambers, which he had dismissed at the first sign of opposition; and he avenged himself by refusing to transact any public business.[3]

Annexation by Prussia Edit

In 1866, the end came. The elector, Frederick William, full of grievances against Prussia, threw in his lot with Austria; the electorate was at once overrun with Prussian troops; Kassel was occupied (20 June); and the Elector was taken as a prisoner to Stettin. By the Peace of Prague, Hesse-Kassel was annexed to Prussia. The elector Frederick William (d. 1875) had been, by the terms of the treaty of cession, guaranteed the entailed property of his house. This was, however, sequestered in 1868 owing to his intrigues against Prussia; part of the income was paid, however, to the eldest agnate, the landgrave Frederick (d. 1884), and part, together with certain castles and palaces, was assigned to the also dispossessed cadet lines of Hesse-Philippsthal and Hesse-Philippsthal-Barchfeld.[3]

References Edit

  1. ^ Thus it was both a landgraviate and an electorate. A landgraviate is a kind of state; an electorate is such a state whose ruler also chooses the Emperor.
  2. ^ Univerersity of Würzburg, Verfassungsurkunde für das Kurfürstentum Hessen 5. Januar 1831
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Chisholm 1911, p. 411.
  4. ^ Satow, Ernest Mason (1932). A Guide to Diplomatic Practice. London: Longmans.

Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Hesse" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 13 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 410–411.

electorate, hesse, kurhessen, redirects, here, prussian, province, province, kurhessen, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, remo. Kurhessen redirects here For the Prussian province see Province of Kurhessen 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 Electorate of Hesse news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Electorate of Hesse German Kurfurstentum Hessen also known as Hesse Kassel or Kurhessen was a landgraviate whose prince was given the right to elect the Emperor by Napoleon 1 When the Holy Roman Empire was abolished in 1806 its prince William I chose to retain the title of Elector even though there was no longer an Emperor to elect In 1807 with the Treaties of Tilsit the area was annexed to the Kingdom of Westphalia but in 1814 the Congress of Vienna restored the electorate Electorate of HesseKurfurstentum Hessen1803 18071814 1866Flag Coat of arms 1818 Hesse Kassel red in 1866 just before the Austro Prussian WarStatusState of the Holy Roman EmpireState of the German ConfederationCapitalKasselCommon languagesGermanNorthern Hessian dialectReligionProtestant Calvinist JudaismGovernmentAbsolute monarchyElector of Hesse 1803 1821William I 1821 1847William II 1847 1866Frederick WilliamHistory Established1803 Raised to Electorate1803 Annexed by Kingdom of Westphalia1807 Reestablished1814 Annexed by Kingdom of Prussia1866CurrencyHesse Kassel thaler to 1858 Hesse Kassel vereinsthaler 1858 1873 Preceded by Succeeded byLandgraviate of Hesse KasselKingdom of Westphalia Kingdom of WestphaliaProvince of Hesse NassauToday part ofGermanyThe state was the only electorate within the German Confederation It consisted of several detached territories to the north of Frankfurt which survived until the state was annexed by Prussia in 1866 following the Austro Prussian War The Elector s formal titles included Elector of Hesse Prince of Fulda Furst von Fulda Prince of Hersfeld Hanau Fritzlar and Isenburg Count of Katzenelnbogen Dietz Ziegenhain Nidda and Schaumburg 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 The Reign of William I 1 2 The Revolution of 1830 1 3 The Revolution of 1848 1 4 The Hessian Crisis 1 5 Annexation by Prussia 2 ReferencesHistory EditThe Landgraviate of Hesse Kassel originated in 1567 with the division of the Landgraviate of Hesse between the heirs of Philip I of Hesse the Magnanimous after his death Philip s eldest son William IV received Hesse Kassel which comprised about half the area of the Landgraviate of Hesse including the capital Kassel William s brothers received Hesse Marburg and Hesse Rheinfels but their lines died out within a generation and the territories then reverted to Hesse Kassel and to the Landgraviate of Hesse Darmstadt The Reign of William I Edit The reign of the Landgrave William IX was an important epoch in the history of Hesse Kassel Ascending the throne in 1785 he took part in the War of the First Coalition against French First Republic a few years later but in 1795 the Peace of Basel was signed In 1801 he lost his possessions on the left bank of the Rhine but in 1803 he was compensated for these losses with some former French territory around Mainz and at the same time he was raised to the dignity of Prince elector Kurfurst William I a title he retained even after the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire 3 In 1806 William I signed a treaty of neutrality with Napoleon Bonaparte but after the Battle of Jena Auerstedt the latter suspecting William s designs occupied his country and expelled him Hesse Kassel was then incorporated to the Kingdom of Westphalia under the rule of Jerome Bonaparte After the Battle of Leipzig in 1813 the French were driven out of Hesse Kassel and on 21 November the Elector returned in triumph to his capital Kassel A treaty concluded by him with the Coalition 2 December stipulated that he was to receive back all his former territories or their equivalent and at the same time restored the ancient constitution of his country This treaty so far as the territories were concerned was implemented by the Great Powers at the Congress of Vienna They refused however the Elector s request to be recognized as King of the Chatti Konig der Katten At the Congress of Aix la Chapelle 1818 he was listed with the grand dukes as a Royal Highness 4 William chose to retain the now empty title of prince elector with the predicate of Royal Highness 3 William I had marked his restoration by abolishing with a stroke of the pen all the reforms introduced under the French regime repudiating the Westphalian debt and declaring null and void the sale of the crown domains Everything was set back to its condition on 1 November 1806 even the officials had to descend to their former rank and the army to revert to the old uniforms and powdered pigtails 3 The Estates Parliament indeed were summoned in March 1815 but the attempt to devise a constitution broke down their appeal to the Federal Assembly Bundesversammlung at Frankfurt to call the Elector to order in the matter of the debt and the domains came to nothing owing to the intervention of Klemens von Metternich and in May 1816 the Estates were dissolved 3 William I died on 27 February 1821 and was succeeded by his son William II Under him the constitutional crisis in Kassel came to a head He was arbitrary and avaricious like his father and moreover shocked public sentiment by his treatment of his wife a popular Prussian princess and his relations with his mistress one Emilie Ortlopp whom he created Countess of Reichenbach Lessonitz and loaded with wealth 3 The Revolution of 1830 Edit The July Revolution in Paris gave the signal for disturbances William II was forced to summon the Estates and on 6 January 1831 a constitution on the ordinary Liberal basis clarification needed was signed The Elector now retired to Hanau appointed his son Frederick William as regent and took no further part in public affairs 3 Frederick William without his father s coarseness had a full share of his arbitrary and avaricious temper Constitutional restrictions were intolerable to him and the consequent friction with the Diet lower house was aggravated when in 1832 Hans Hassenpflug was placed at the head of the administration All the efforts of William II and his minister were directed to nullifying the constitutional controls vested in the Diet and the Opposition was fought by manipulating the elections packing the judicial bench and a vexatious and petty persecution of political suspects and this policy continued after the retirement of Hassenpflug in 1837 3 Coat of arms of Hesse Kassel 1846 The Revolution of 1848 Edit The consequences emerged in the revolutionary year 1848 in a general manifestation of public discontent and Frederick William who had become Elector on his father s death 20 November 1847 was forced to dismiss his reactionary ministry and to agree to a comprehensive programme of democratic reform This however was short lived After the breakdown of the Frankfurt Parliament Frederick William joined the Prussian Northern Union and deputies from Hesse Kassel were sent to the Erfurt Parliament But as Austria recovered strength the Elector s policy changed 3 The Hessian Crisis Edit On 23 February 1850 Hassenpflug was again placed at the head of the administration and threw himself with renewed zeal into the struggle against the constitution and into opposition to the Kingdom of Prussia On 2 September the Diet was dissolved the taxes were continued by Electoral ordinance and the country was placed under martial law It was at once clear however that the Elector could not depend on his officers or troops who remained faithful to their oath to the constitution Hassenpflug persuaded the Elector to leave Kassel secretly with him and on 15 October appealed for aid to the reconstituted federal diet which willingly passed a decree of intervention On 1 November an Austrian and Bavarian force marched into the Electorate 3 This was a direct challenge to Prussia which under conventions with the Elector had the right to use the military roads through Hesse that were her sole means of communication with her exclaves in the Rhine provinces War seemed imminent Prussian troops also entered the country and shots were exchanged between the outposts But Prussia was in no condition to take up the challenge and the diplomatic contest that followed resulted in the Austrian triumph at Olmutz 1851 Hesse was surrendered to the federal diet the taxes were collected by the federal forces and all officials who refused to recognize the new order were dismissed 3 In March 1852 the federal diet abolished the constitution of 1831 together with the reforms of 1848 and in April issued a new provisional constitution under which the new diet had very narrow powers and the elector was free to carry out his policy of amassing money forbidding the construction of railways and factories and imposing strict orthodoxy on churches and schools In 1855 however Hassenpflug who had returned with the Elector was dismissed and five years later after a period of growing agitation a new constitution was granted with the consent of the federal diet 30 May 1860 3 The new chambers demanded the constitution of 1831 and after several dissolutions which always resulted in the return of the same members the federal diet decided to restore the constitution of 1831 14 May 1862 This had been due to a threat of Prussian occupation and it needed another such threat to persuade the Elector to reassemble the chambers which he had dismissed at the first sign of opposition and he avenged himself by refusing to transact any public business 3 Annexation by Prussia Edit In 1866 the end came The elector Frederick William full of grievances against Prussia threw in his lot with Austria the electorate was at once overrun with Prussian troops Kassel was occupied 20 June and the Elector was taken as a prisoner to Stettin By the Peace of Prague Hesse Kassel was annexed to Prussia The elector Frederick William d 1875 had been by the terms of the treaty of cession guaranteed the entailed property of his house This was however sequestered in 1868 owing to his intrigues against Prussia part of the income was paid however to the eldest agnate the landgrave Frederick d 1884 and part together with certain castles and palaces was assigned to the also dispossessed cadet lines of Hesse Philippsthal and Hesse Philippsthal Barchfeld 3 References Edit Holy Roman Empire portal Thus it was both a landgraviate and an electorate A landgraviate is a kind of state an electorate is such a state whose ruler also chooses the Emperor Univerersity of Wurzburg Verfassungsurkunde fur das Kurfurstentum Hessen 5 Januar 1831 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Chisholm 1911 p 411 Satow Ernest Mason 1932 A Guide to Diplomatic Practice London Longmans Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Hesse Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 13 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 410 411 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Electorate of Hesse amp oldid 1162457221, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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