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Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach

Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (German: Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach) was a German state, created as a duchy in 1809 by the merger of the Ernestine duchies of Saxe-Weimar and Saxe-Eisenach, which had been in personal union since 1741. It was raised to a grand duchy in 1815 by resolution of the Congress of Vienna. In 1903, it officially changed its name to the Grand Duchy of Saxony (German: Großherzogtum Sachsen), but this name was rarely used. The grand duchy came to an end in the German Revolution of 1918–19 with the other monarchies of the German Empire. It was succeeded by the Free State of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, which was merged into the new Free State of Thuringia two years later.

(Grand) Duchy of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (1809–1903)
(Groß-)Herzogtum Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach
Grand Duchy of Saxony (1903–1918)
Großherzogtum Sachsen
Free State of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (1918–1920)
Freistaat Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach
1809–1920
Top: Flag
(1813–1897)
Bottom: Flag
(1897–1920)
Anthem: Weimars Volkslied
Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach within the German Empire
Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, shown within the Ernestine duchies
StatusState of the Confederation of the Rhine (1809-1813)
State of the German Confederation (1815-1866)
Federal State of the North German Confederation (1867-1871)
Federal State of the German Empire (1871-1918)
Federal State of the Weimar Republic (1918-1920)
CapitalWeimar
Common languagesGerman
Thuringian dialect
GovernmentAbsolute monarchy (1809–1816)
Constitutional monarchy (1816-1918)
Republic (1918–1920)
Grand Duke 
• 1809–1828
Karl August (first)
• 1901–1918
William Ernest (last)
Historical eraMiddle Ages
 
1741
• Merger of Eisenach and Weimar
September 20, 1809
• Raised to grand duchy
1815
• German Revolution
1918
• Joined Thuringia
1920
CurrencySaxon thaler (to 1857)
Saxon Vereinsthaler (1857–1873)
German gold mark (1873–1918)
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Today part ofGermany

The full grand ducal style was Grand Duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, Landgrave in Thuringia, Margrave of Meissen, Princely Count of Henneberg, Lord of Blankenhayn, Neustadt and Tautenburg.

The Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach branch has been the most genealogically senior extant branch of the House of Wettin since 1672.

Geography edit

The Grand Duchy of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach consisted of three greater areas, each of which formed a Kreis administratively, plus several exclaves. Neighboring countries were Prussia, Saxony, Bavaria, Hesse-Kassel (until 1866, when it was incorporated in the Prussian Province of Hesse-Nassau), and all the other Thuringian states (Saxe-Altenburg, Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, Saxe-Meiningen, Reuss Elder Line, Reuss Junior Line, Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt and Schwarzburg-Sondershausen).

The northern part of the Weimar district was flat and part of the Thuringian Basin; the southern and eastern parts were situated on the Ilm-Saale Plateau and in the Saale valley. The northern part of Eisenach district was hilly (Hörselberge and Hainich hills); the central part with the town of Eisenach was in the Hörsel valley; further south were the mountains of the Thuringian Forest, followed by the Werra valley, the Kupenrhön mountains and finally, in the far south, the main chain of the Rhön mountains. The district Neustadt was located in hills with altitudes between 200 and 400 meters.

The main rivers in the country were:

The highest elevation in the grand duchy were the Kickelhahn (861 m above sea level (NN)) near Ilmenau, the Ellenbogen (814 m above sea level (NN)) in the Rhön and the Ettersberg (477 m above sea level (NN)) near Weimar.

In 1895, the Grand Duchy of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach was administratively divided into three districts Kreise:

District Area in square kilometers Residents Cities exclaves
District Weimar 1752.59 191,975 Weimar, Apolda, Jena, Ilmenau, Allstedt, Rastenberg, Buttstädt, Buttelstedt, Neumark, Dornburg, Bürgel, Lobeda, Bad Sulza, Magdala, Bad Berka, Blankenhain, Remda, Kranichfeld and Tannroda Ilmenau, Bösleben, Klein Kröbitz, Allstedt and Oldisleben
District Eisenach 1214.03 95,226 Eisenach, Creuzburg, Berka/Werra, Ruhla, Vacha, Stadtlengsfeld, Geisa, Ostheim vor der Rhön and Kaltennordheim Seebach, Ostheim vor der Rhön and Zillbach
District Neustadt 628.71 52,016 Neustadt an der Orla, Triptis, Auma, Weida, Thuringia and Berga/Elster Rußdorf, Teichwolframsdorf and Förthen

Furthermore, the districts of Weimar and Eisenach were each subdivided into two Bezirke. In the case of Weimar, these were: Weimar and Apolda, in the case of Eisenach they were the Eisenach and Dermbach. In all, there were 31 cities and 594 municipalities in the Grand Duchy. The Grand Dukes of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach granted "city" status to three localities in the state, namely Berka/Werra (Eisenach district, 1847), Ruhla (Eisenach district, 1886, administered jointly with the Duke of Saxe-Gotha) and Münchenbernsdorf (Neustadt district, 1904).

In 1840, there were 13 cities with over 2,000 inhabitants. In the 70 years to 1910, the Grand Duchy industrialized heavily and the population of the largest cities grew, while the medium-sized cities remained constant or even lost population. The population of Stadtlengsfeld shrank dramatically after the Jewish emancipation, when most of the city's Jewish citizens migrated to larger cities.

City Population
1 Dec 1840
Weimar 11,444
Eisenach 9,377
Jena 5,949
Neustadt an der Orla 4,154
Apolda 4,128
Weida 3,756
Ilmenau 2,721
Allstedt 2,507
Ostheim vor der Rhön 2,497
Stadtlengsfeld 2,239
Vacha 2,239
Buttstädt 2,164
Creuzburg 2,103
City Population
1 Dec 1910
Change
from 1840
Jena 38,487 + 547%
Eisenach 38,362 + 309%
Weimar 34,582 + 202%
Apolda 22,610 + 448%
Ilmenau 12,202 + 348%
Weida 9,036 + 141%
Neustadt an der Orla 7,095 + 71%
Allstedt 3,353 + 34%
Buttstädt 2,843 + 32%
Ostheim vor der Rhön 2,277 – 9%
Vacha 2,240 0 %
Creuzburg 2,062 – 2%
Stadtlengsfeld 1,593 – 29%

In 1910, several other towns had grown past the 2,000 inhabitants mark: Ruhla (Weimar part: 3917 v. 1533: +156%), Blankenhain (3405 v. 1689: +102%), Bad Sulza, (3052 v. 1422: +115%), Auma (2978 v. 1701, +75%), Triptis (2948 v. 1480: +99%), Tiefenort (2539 v. 1237: +105%), Bad Berka (2379 v. 1228: +94%), Oberweimar (2095 v. 621: +237%), Oldisleben (2064 v. 1332: +55) and Mihla (2008 v. 1294: +55%).

History edit

 
Schloss Weimar
 
Wartburg Castle near Eisenach

The duchies of Saxe-Weimar and Saxe-Eisenach had been ruled in personal union by the same branch of the House of Wettin since 1741, after the Eisenach line had died out upon the death of Duke Wilhelm Heinrich. The first Duke of the personal union was Ernest Augustus I, who built the Belvedere Palace in Weimar. His son Ernest Augustus II reigned for only three years, and died at the age of 20. At the age of 18, he married the Brunswick Princess Anna Amalia, one year his junior and a niece of King Frederick the Great of Prussia. A year later she gave birth to her son, Charles Augustus and after another year, when she was already a widow, to her son Constantine.

As Dowager Duchess Anna Amalia actively took up the regency, with the approval of the Empress Maria Theresa and the support of her ethical Minister Baron von Fritsch. As educator for her sons, she employed the poet Christoph Martin Wieland, who was a professor at the University of Erfurt.

At 18 years of age, Charles Augustus married Princess Louise of Hesse-Darmstadt. He employed the poet Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, with whom he soon became friends. Goethe, in turn, invited the authors Johann Gottfried Herder and Friedrich Schiller to Weimar, thus laying the foundation for the Weimar Classicism circle, which was supported in the background by Anna Amalia. Later regents would see it as main task to guard this heritage.

In 1804 Duke Charles Augustus' eldest son and heir Charles Frederick married Maria Pavlovna Romanova, sister of Emperor Alexander I of Russia, a conjugal union which decisively promoted the rise of the Ernestine Saxe-Weimar dynasty. It also gave the duchy some protection during the turmoil of the Napoleonic Wars. Though at first an ally of Prussia in the Napoleonic War of the Fourth Coalition, Duke Charles Augustus escaped his deposition by joining the Confederation of the Rhine on 15 December 1806.

After the official merger in 1809, the Duchy of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach consisted of the separate districts around the capital Weimar in the north and Eisenach in the west. Thanks to their Russian connection, the duchy gained substantially from the Congress of Vienna in 1815. In the east, it gained most of the Neustädter Kreis [de] (Neustadt district; 629 km2, 243 sq mi) from the Kingdom of Saxony. It also received most of the Principality of Erfurt, which had been an exclave of Mainz before the war and a directly administered French fief under occupation. It further gained smaller possessions, such as Blankenhain and Kranichfeld. In the Rhön area, the Eisenacher Oberland [de] was created from adjacent former parts of Hesse-Kassel and territories held by the secularized Princely Abbey of Fulda. Finally, the country was raised to a grand duchy.

The cosmopolitan Grand Duke Charles Augustus gave his grand duchy the first liberal constitution in Germany, on 5 May 1816. Students of the University of Jena organized themselves as Germany's first fraternity, the Urburschenschaft and celebrated Wartburg Festival at the Wartburg in October 1817. Many liberal-minded people participated and the speakers, most of them students, must be regarded as having been among the earliest democrats in Germany.

Maria Pavlovna, who was grand duchess from 1828, featuring composers like Franz Liszt and Peter Cornelius. Her art-loving son Charles Alexander (1818–1901), who was grand duke from 1853, also supported the arts, and music in particular. He was married to Sophie, who supported his plans, and he rebuilt the decaying Wartburg the romantic historicism style of the day and had it painted by Moritz von Schwind. He also supported, albeit half-heartedly, the founding of the School of Applied Arts in Weimar, which merged to form the Bauhaus in 1919.

A member of the German Confederation from 1815, the grand duchy was not seriously affected by the German revolutions of 1848 and remained neutral during the growing friction between Austria and Prussia over the following two decades. After the Austro-Prussian War the grand duchy became a member of the North German Confederation and in 1871 joined the new German Empire as a constituent state.

In 1901 Charles Alexander was succeeded by his grandson William Ernest, who was married to Caroline Reuss of Greiz and later to Feodora of Saxe-Meiningen. In 1903, the grand duchy officially changed its name to Grand Duchy of Saxony. However, many people continued to call it Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, to avoid confusion with the neighbouring Kingdom of Saxony.

William Ernest abdicated the throne on 9 November 1918, thereby ending the monarchy in the state. It continued as the Free State of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, until 1920, when it merged with most of its neighbours to form Thuringia, with Weimar as the state capital.

Religion edit

In the Grand Duchy of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, as in all the Thuringian states, the Lutheran faith was the most prevalent. Specifically, in 1895, the reported religious affiliations of the 339,217 were:

  • Evangelical: 325,315 (95.9%)
  • Catholic: 12,112 (3.6%)
  • Jewish: 1,290 (0.4%)
  • Other / Non-denominational: 500 (0.1%)

In the district of Eisenach, the distribution was slightly different. Of the 95,226 inhabitants were:

  • Evangelical: 85,319 (89.6%)
  • Catholic: 8,809 (9.3%)
  • Jewish: 979 (1.0%)
  • Other / Non-denominational: 119 (0.1%)

The Catholic and Jewish minorities in the district Eisenach lived mainly in the Rhön. The area around the town of Geisa was predominantly Catholic and belonged to the Diocese of Fulda.

Constitution and administration edit

Under the Constitution of 5 May 1816 (revised 15 October 1850), Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach was a constitutional monarchy, hereditary in the male line. Under the Electoral Act of 1852, the Landtag had 31 members, of whom 21 were elected in general elections. One member was elected by the landed former Imperial Knights, four were elected by other wealthy landowners, and five by voters who had an annual income exceeding 1000 Thaler from other sources. The latter group of voters were popularly called "thousand thaler men". The Electoral Act of 17 April 1896 enlarged the parliament to 33 members. The grand duchy had one vote in the Imperial Bundesrat and three members in the Reichstag.

In 1909, general suffrage was introduced, under the auspices of Alfred Appelius, the later Speaker of the Landtag. The large landowners and the "thousand thaler men" retained their extra votes, and five new special members were added to the parliament, representing the University of Jena, the Chamber of Commerce, the Chamber of Trade, the Chamber of Agriculture and the Chamber of Labour[1]

The highest court in the land was the Court of Appeals in Jena, which dealt with appeals from all Thuringian states. There were Regional Courts in Weimar and Eisenach.

The grand duchy had one infantry regiment, which after 1871 was part of the Imperial German Army's 11th Army Corps.

Rulers of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach edit

Dukes of Saxe-Weimar and Saxe-Eisenach, 1741–1809 edit

Dukes of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, 1809–1815 edit

Grand Dukes of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, 1815–1918 edit

Economy edit

Agriculture edit

In 1895, 37.9% of the workforce were employed in the agriculture and forestry industries, 38.9% worked in the manufacturing sector, and 16.4% were employed in the service sector.

Until 1900, agriculture was the most important branch in the economy of the grand duchy. A total of 56% of the duchy's territory was used for agriculture, mainly in the districts Weimar and Neustadt and the exclaves Allstedt and Oldisleben in the Goldene Aue area.

The harvest of 1895 consisted of:

Crop Area (km2) Yield (metric tons)
Wheat 216 27,100
Rye 295 33,300
Barley 276 41,900
Oats 334 39,600
Potatoes 225 232,200
Hay 574 192,717
Fodder 92 152,400

Fruit was mainly grown in the Saale valley, around Jena and Bürgel. There was some viticulture north of Jena, between Dornburg and Camburg.

Stock breeding was also widespread. In 1892, there were 19,121 horses in the grand duchy, 119,720 cattle, 113,208 sheep, 122,974 pigs, 46,405 goats and 16,999 beehives.

Game was only found near Eisenach, in Eichenzell and in the Ilmenau exclave, where the grand duke's largest hunting ground was located on the banks of the Gabelbach. About 50% of the forests were state-owned (450 km2 [170 sq mi]). The dominant tree species were beech (in the Weimar district), pine (especially in the Neustadt district) and spruce (in the Eisenach district and around Ilmenau). The grand duchy's State Forestry Office was based in Eisenach.

Manufacturing Industries edit

A versatile array of manufacturing industries developed in the grand duchy. For example, in Bürgel and Ilmenau, there were porcelain factories (in all, there were 39 such factories in the country).

In Ilmenau and Jena, glass was made (in particular, in the Schott factories). The glass industry was specialized in industrial glass (for example measuring devices such as thermometers in the area around Ilmenau) and optical products, around Jena. In 1846, Carl Zeiss found a precision engineering and optical company that quickly developed into a world leader. In 1917, the company had 10000 employees. In 1889, Ernst Abbe founded the Carl-Zeiss-Stiftung, which became the sole share holder of the companies Carl Zeiss AG and Schott AG.

The textile industry was also important. It was concentrated in Apolda (mostly hosiery knitting mills) and Neustadt an der Orla. Other major textile plants could be found in Wenigenjena, Eisenach, Weida, Remda and Blankenhain. In 1895, the textile industry employed approximately 7000 people.

Ruhla was a center of the metalworking industry. The country's first car plant was built in 1895 in Eisenach. Chemical industries, such as a paint factory, could also be found in Eisenach. Furthermore, there were a paper mill in Oberweimar and a toy factory in Ilmenau. Wicker-work was manufactured in the Kuppenrhön area and pipes were made in Geisa. In 1895, there were 257 breweries in the grand duchy; the largest of these were in Apolda and Ilmenau.

Mining industry edit

Ilmenau and Ruhla were important mining centers in the Thuringian Forest. Around 1900, potash industry began to develop in the Werra valley, around Vacha and Berka/Werra. There were salt works in Creuzburg and Bad Sulza.

Trade edit

The major transport centers were Weimar and Eisenach. Many banks opened branch offices here. In 1895, there were 23 branch offices of savings banks in the grand duchy, and they were managing deposits totalling approximately 40 million Reichsmark.

The grand duchy was part of the Thuringian Toll Union, except for the exclaves Ostheim, Oldisleben, and Allstedt.

Education edit

There was one state university in the grand duchy, the University of Jena, which was funded by Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach together with the other Thuringian states. There were several art and music schools in Weimar, and in Ilmenau, there was the Technische Universität Ilmenau, a privately owned university providing technical and scientific education. Gymnasiums existed in Weimar, Eisenach and Jena; Realschules were found in Weimar, Apolda, Jena, Eisenach, Neustadt and Ilmenau. In 1895, there were 462 primary schools, and any child would receive at least four years of primary education. Large libraries of 200000 volumes each were maintained in Weimar and Jena. In 1869, a State Museum was founded in Weimar.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The new Electoral Act, in: Berliner Tageblatt, morning edition of 5 March 1909, p. 2

References edit

  • Carl Ferdinand Weiland: General Charte von dem Großherzogthume Weimar-Eisenach nach den besten vorhandenen Hülfsmitteln entworfen und gezeichnet von C. F. Weiland, Geographical Institute of Weimar, 1817, reprinted: Rockstuhl, Bad Langensalza 2009, ISBN 978-3-86777-136-8, (in German)
  • Karl Helmrich: Geschichte des Großherzogthums Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach für Schule und Haus, Albrecht, Weimar, 1852, (in German)
  • Constantin Kronfeld (1878), Geschichte des Landes, Landeskunde des Großherzogthums Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach (in German), vol. 1, Weimar: Hermann Böhlau
  • Constantin Kronfeld (1879), Topographie des Landes, Landeskunde des Großherzogthums Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach (in German), vol. 2, Weimar: Hermann Böhlau
  • Detlef Ignasiak (1996), Regenten-Tafeln Thüringischer Fürstenhäuser. Mit einer Einführung in die Geschichte der Dynastien in Thüringen (in German), Jena: Quartus, ISBN 3-931505-20-0

External links edit

  • "Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach genealogy". Archived from the original on 2012-06-30.
  • Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.

50°59′0″N 11°10′0″E / 50.98333°N 11.16667°E / 50.98333; 11.16667

saxe, weimar, eisenach, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, 200. 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 Saxe Weimar Eisenach news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2007 Learn how and when to remove this message This article includes a list of references related reading or external links but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations Please help improve this article by introducing more precise citations October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message Saxe Weimar Eisenach German Sachsen Weimar Eisenach was a German state created as a duchy in 1809 by the merger of the Ernestine duchies of Saxe Weimar and Saxe Eisenach which had been in personal union since 1741 It was raised to a grand duchy in 1815 by resolution of the Congress of Vienna In 1903 it officially changed its name to the Grand Duchy of Saxony German Grossherzogtum Sachsen but this name was rarely used The grand duchy came to an end in the German Revolution of 1918 19 with the other monarchies of the German Empire It was succeeded by the Free State of Saxe Weimar Eisenach which was merged into the new Free State of Thuringia two years later Grand Duchy of Saxe Weimar Eisenach 1809 1903 Gross Herzogtum Sachsen Weimar EisenachGrand Duchy of Saxony 1903 1918 Grossherzogtum SachsenFree State of Saxe Weimar Eisenach 1918 1920 Freistaat Sachsen Weimar Eisenach1809 1920Top Flag 1813 1897 Bottom Flag 1897 1920 Coat of armsAnthem Weimars VolksliedSaxe Weimar Eisenach within the German EmpireSaxe Weimar Eisenach shown within the Ernestine duchiesStatusState of the Confederation of the Rhine 1809 1813 State of the German Confederation 1815 1866 Federal State of the North German Confederation 1867 1871 Federal State of the German Empire 1871 1918 Federal State of the Weimar Republic 1918 1920 CapitalWeimarCommon languagesGermanThuringian dialectGovernmentAbsolute monarchy 1809 1816 Constitutional monarchy 1816 1918 Republic 1918 1920 Grand Duke 1809 1828Karl August first 1901 1918William Ernest last Historical eraMiddle Ages Saxe Eisenach and Saxe Weimar held in personal union 1741 Merger of Eisenach and WeimarSeptember 20 1809 Raised to grand duchy1815 German Revolution1918 Joined Thuringia1920CurrencySaxon thaler to 1857 Saxon Vereinsthaler 1857 1873 German gold mark 1873 1918 Preceded by Succeeded by Saxe Weimar Saxe Eisenach ThuringiaToday part ofGermany The full grand ducal style was Grand Duke of Saxe Weimar Eisenach Landgrave in Thuringia Margrave of Meissen Princely Count of Henneberg Lord of Blankenhayn Neustadt and Tautenburg The Saxe Weimar Eisenach branch has been the most genealogically senior extant branch of the House of Wettin since 1672 Contents 1 Geography 2 History 2 1 Religion 3 Constitution and administration 4 Rulers of Saxe Weimar Eisenach 4 1 Dukes of Saxe Weimar and Saxe Eisenach 1741 1809 4 2 Dukes of Saxe Weimar Eisenach 1809 1815 4 3 Grand Dukes of Saxe Weimar Eisenach 1815 1918 5 Economy 5 1 Agriculture 5 2 Manufacturing Industries 5 3 Mining industry 5 4 Trade 6 Education 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksGeography editThe Grand Duchy of Saxe Weimar Eisenach consisted of three greater areas each of which formed a Kreis administratively plus several exclaves Neighboring countries were Prussia Saxony Bavaria Hesse Kassel until 1866 when it was incorporated in the Prussian Province of Hesse Nassau and all the other Thuringian states Saxe Altenburg Saxe Coburg Gotha Saxe Meiningen Reuss Elder Line Reuss Junior Line Schwarzburg Rudolstadt and Schwarzburg Sondershausen The northern part of the Weimar district was flat and part of the Thuringian Basin the southern and eastern parts were situated on the Ilm Saale Plateau and in the Saale valley The northern part of Eisenach district was hilly Horselberge and Hainich hills the central part with the town of Eisenach was in the Horsel valley further south were the mountains of the Thuringian Forest followed by the Werra valley the Kupenrhon mountains and finally in the far south the main chain of the Rhon mountains The district Neustadt was located in hills with altitudes between 200 and 400 meters The main rivers in the country were the Saale flowing through Jena in the east the Werra in Vacha and Eisenach and its tributaries the Felda and Ulster in the west the Unstrut in the exclaves Allstedt and Oldisleben in the north the White Elster in Berga in the far east the Ilm flowing through Ilmenau Apolda and the capital Weimar in the centre Acting Prime Minister Goethe once described Weimar as Athens on the Ilm The highest elevation in the grand duchy were the Kickelhahn 861 m above sea level NN near Ilmenau the Ellenbogen 814 m above sea level NN in the Rhon and the Ettersberg 477 m above sea level NN near Weimar In 1895 the Grand Duchy of Saxe Weimar Eisenach was administratively divided into three districts Kreise District Area in square kilometers Residents Cities exclaves District Weimar 1752 59 191 975 Weimar Apolda Jena Ilmenau Allstedt Rastenberg Buttstadt Buttelstedt Neumark Dornburg Burgel Lobeda Bad Sulza Magdala Bad Berka Blankenhain Remda Kranichfeld and Tannroda Ilmenau Bosleben Klein Krobitz Allstedt and Oldisleben District Eisenach 1214 03 95 226 Eisenach Creuzburg Berka Werra Ruhla Vacha Stadtlengsfeld Geisa Ostheim vor der Rhon and Kaltennordheim Seebach Ostheim vor der Rhon and Zillbach District Neustadt 628 71 52 016 Neustadt an der Orla Triptis Auma Weida Thuringia and Berga Elster Russdorf Teichwolframsdorf and Forthen Furthermore the districts of Weimar and Eisenach were each subdivided into two Bezirke In the case of Weimar these were Weimar and Apolda in the case of Eisenach they were the Eisenach and Dermbach In all there were 31 cities and 594 municipalities in the Grand Duchy The Grand Dukes of Saxe Weimar Eisenach granted city status to three localities in the state namely Berka Werra Eisenach district 1847 Ruhla Eisenach district 1886 administered jointly with the Duke of Saxe Gotha and Munchenbernsdorf Neustadt district 1904 In 1840 there were 13 cities with over 2 000 inhabitants In the 70 years to 1910 the Grand Duchy industrialized heavily and the population of the largest cities grew while the medium sized cities remained constant or even lost population The population of Stadtlengsfeld shrank dramatically after the Jewish emancipation when most of the city s Jewish citizens migrated to larger cities City Population1 Dec 1840 Weimar 11 444 Eisenach 9 377 Jena 5 949 Neustadt an der Orla 4 154 Apolda 4 128 Weida 3 756 Ilmenau 2 721 Allstedt 2 507 Ostheim vor der Rhon 2 497 Stadtlengsfeld 2 239 Vacha 2 239 Buttstadt 2 164 Creuzburg 2 103 City Population1 Dec 1910 Changefrom 1840 Jena 38 487 547 Eisenach 38 362 309 Weimar 34 582 202 Apolda 22 610 448 Ilmenau 12 202 348 Weida 9 036 141 Neustadt an der Orla 7 095 71 Allstedt 3 353 34 Buttstadt 2 843 32 Ostheim vor der Rhon 2 277 9 Vacha 2 240 0 Creuzburg 2 062 2 Stadtlengsfeld 1 593 29 In 1910 several other towns had grown past the 2 000 inhabitants mark Ruhla Weimar part 3917 v 1533 156 Blankenhain 3405 v 1689 102 Bad Sulza 3052 v 1422 115 Auma 2978 v 1701 75 Triptis 2948 v 1480 99 Tiefenort 2539 v 1237 105 Bad Berka 2379 v 1228 94 Oberweimar 2095 v 621 237 Oldisleben 2064 v 1332 55 and Mihla 2008 v 1294 55 History edit nbsp Schloss Weimar nbsp Wartburg Castle near Eisenach The duchies of Saxe Weimar and Saxe Eisenach had been ruled in personal union by the same branch of the House of Wettin since 1741 after the Eisenach line had died out upon the death of Duke Wilhelm Heinrich The first Duke of the personal union was Ernest Augustus I who built the Belvedere Palace in Weimar His son Ernest Augustus II reigned for only three years and died at the age of 20 At the age of 18 he married the Brunswick Princess Anna Amalia one year his junior and a niece of King Frederick the Great of Prussia A year later she gave birth to her son Charles Augustus and after another year when she was already a widow to her son Constantine As Dowager Duchess Anna Amalia actively took up the regency with the approval of the Empress Maria Theresa and the support of her ethical Minister Baron von Fritsch As educator for her sons she employed the poet Christoph Martin Wieland who was a professor at the University of Erfurt At 18 years of age Charles Augustus married Princess Louise of Hesse Darmstadt He employed the poet Johann Wolfgang von Goethe with whom he soon became friends Goethe in turn invited the authors Johann Gottfried Herder and Friedrich Schiller to Weimar thus laying the foundation for the Weimar Classicism circle which was supported in the background by Anna Amalia Later regents would see it as main task to guard this heritage In 1804 Duke Charles Augustus eldest son and heir Charles Frederick married Maria Pavlovna Romanova sister of Emperor Alexander I of Russia a conjugal union which decisively promoted the rise of the Ernestine Saxe Weimar dynasty It also gave the duchy some protection during the turmoil of the Napoleonic Wars Though at first an ally of Prussia in the Napoleonic War of the Fourth Coalition Duke Charles Augustus escaped his deposition by joining the Confederation of the Rhine on 15 December 1806 After the official merger in 1809 the Duchy of Saxe Weimar Eisenach consisted of the separate districts around the capital Weimar in the north and Eisenach in the west Thanks to their Russian connection the duchy gained substantially from the Congress of Vienna in 1815 In the east it gained most of the Neustadter Kreis de Neustadt district 629 km2 243 sq mi from the Kingdom of Saxony It also received most of the Principality of Erfurt which had been an exclave of Mainz before the war and a directly administered French fief under occupation It further gained smaller possessions such as Blankenhain and Kranichfeld In the Rhon area the Eisenacher Oberland de was created from adjacent former parts of Hesse Kassel and territories held by the secularized Princely Abbey of Fulda Finally the country was raised to a grand duchy The cosmopolitan Grand Duke Charles Augustus gave his grand duchy the first liberal constitution in Germany on 5 May 1816 Students of the University of Jena organized themselves as Germany s first fraternity the Urburschenschaft and celebrated Wartburg Festival at the Wartburg in October 1817 Many liberal minded people participated and the speakers most of them students must be regarded as having been among the earliest democrats in Germany Maria Pavlovna who was grand duchess from 1828 featuring composers like Franz Liszt and Peter Cornelius Her art loving son Charles Alexander 1818 1901 who was grand duke from 1853 also supported the arts and music in particular He was married to Sophie who supported his plans and he rebuilt the decaying Wartburg the romantic historicism style of the day and had it painted by Moritz von Schwind He also supported albeit half heartedly the founding of the School of Applied Arts in Weimar which merged to form the Bauhaus in 1919 A member of the German Confederation from 1815 the grand duchy was not seriously affected by the German revolutions of 1848 and remained neutral during the growing friction between Austria and Prussia over the following two decades After the Austro Prussian War the grand duchy became a member of the North German Confederation and in 1871 joined the new German Empire as a constituent state In 1901 Charles Alexander was succeeded by his grandson William Ernest who was married to Caroline Reuss of Greiz and later to Feodora of Saxe Meiningen In 1903 the grand duchy officially changed its name to Grand Duchy of Saxony However many people continued to call it Saxe Weimar Eisenach to avoid confusion with the neighbouring Kingdom of Saxony William Ernest abdicated the throne on 9 November 1918 thereby ending the monarchy in the state It continued as the Free State of Saxe Weimar Eisenach until 1920 when it merged with most of its neighbours to form Thuringia with Weimar as the state capital Religion edit In the Grand Duchy of Saxe Weimar Eisenach as in all the Thuringian states the Lutheran faith was the most prevalent Specifically in 1895 the reported religious affiliations of the 339 217 were Evangelical 325 315 95 9 Catholic 12 112 3 6 Jewish 1 290 0 4 Other Non denominational 500 0 1 In the district of Eisenach the distribution was slightly different Of the 95 226 inhabitants were Evangelical 85 319 89 6 Catholic 8 809 9 3 Jewish 979 1 0 Other Non denominational 119 0 1 The Catholic and Jewish minorities in the district Eisenach lived mainly in the Rhon The area around the town of Geisa was predominantly Catholic and belonged to the Diocese of Fulda Constitution and administration editUnder the Constitution of 5 May 1816 revised 15 October 1850 Saxe Weimar Eisenach was a constitutional monarchy hereditary in the male line Under the Electoral Act of 1852 the Landtag had 31 members of whom 21 were elected in general elections One member was elected by the landed former Imperial Knights four were elected by other wealthy landowners and five by voters who had an annual income exceeding 1000 Thaler from other sources The latter group of voters were popularly called thousand thaler men The Electoral Act of 17 April 1896 enlarged the parliament to 33 members The grand duchy had one vote in the Imperial Bundesrat and three members in the Reichstag In 1909 general suffrage was introduced under the auspices of Alfred Appelius the later Speaker of the Landtag The large landowners and the thousand thaler men retained their extra votes and five new special members were added to the parliament representing the University of Jena the Chamber of Commerce the Chamber of Trade the Chamber of Agriculture and the Chamber of Labour 1 The highest court in the land was the Court of Appeals in Jena which dealt with appeals from all Thuringian states There were Regional Courts in Weimar and Eisenach The grand duchy had one infantry regiment which after 1871 was part of the Imperial German Army s 11th Army Corps Rulers of Saxe Weimar Eisenach editDukes of Saxe Weimar and Saxe Eisenach 1741 1809 edit Ernest Augustus I 1741 1748 Duke of Saxe Weimar since 1707 Ernest Augustus II 1748 1758 Charles Augustus 1758 1809 until 1775 under the regency of his mother Duchess Anna Amalia of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel Dukes of Saxe Weimar Eisenach 1809 1815 edit Charles Augustus 1809 1815 Duke of Saxe Weimar and Saxe Eisenach since 1758 Grand Dukes of Saxe Weimar Eisenach 1815 1918 edit Charles Augustus 1815 1828 Charles Frederick 1828 1853 Charles Alexander 1853 1901 William Ernest 1901 1918Economy editAgriculture edit In 1895 37 9 of the workforce were employed in the agriculture and forestry industries 38 9 worked in the manufacturing sector and 16 4 were employed in the service sector Until 1900 agriculture was the most important branch in the economy of the grand duchy A total of 56 of the duchy s territory was used for agriculture mainly in the districts Weimar and Neustadt and the exclaves Allstedt and Oldisleben in the Goldene Aue area The harvest of 1895 consisted of Crop Area km2 Yield metric tons Wheat 216 27 100 Rye 295 33 300 Barley 276 41 900 Oats 334 39 600 Potatoes 225 232 200 Hay 574 192 717 Fodder 92 152 400 Fruit was mainly grown in the Saale valley around Jena and Burgel There was some viticulture north of Jena between Dornburg and Camburg Stock breeding was also widespread In 1892 there were 19 121 horses in the grand duchy 119 720 cattle 113 208 sheep 122 974 pigs 46 405 goats and 16 999 beehives Game was only found near Eisenach in Eichenzell and in the Ilmenau exclave where the grand duke s largest hunting ground was located on the banks of the Gabelbach About 50 of the forests were state owned 450 km2 170 sq mi The dominant tree species were beech in the Weimar district pine especially in the Neustadt district and spruce in the Eisenach district and around Ilmenau The grand duchy s State Forestry Office was based in Eisenach Manufacturing Industries edit A versatile array of manufacturing industries developed in the grand duchy For example in Burgel and Ilmenau there were porcelain factories in all there were 39 such factories in the country In Ilmenau and Jena glass was made in particular in the Schott factories The glass industry was specialized in industrial glass for example measuring devices such as thermometers in the area around Ilmenau and optical products around Jena In 1846 Carl Zeiss found a precision engineering and optical company that quickly developed into a world leader In 1917 the company had 10000 employees In 1889 Ernst Abbe founded the Carl Zeiss Stiftung which became the sole share holder of the companies Carl Zeiss AG and Schott AG The textile industry was also important It was concentrated in Apolda mostly hosiery knitting mills and Neustadt an der Orla Other major textile plants could be found in Wenigenjena Eisenach Weida Remda and Blankenhain In 1895 the textile industry employed approximately 7000 people Ruhla was a center of the metalworking industry The country s first car plant was built in 1895 in Eisenach Chemical industries such as a paint factory could also be found in Eisenach Furthermore there were a paper mill in Oberweimar and a toy factory in Ilmenau Wicker work was manufactured in the Kuppenrhon area and pipes were made in Geisa In 1895 there were 257 breweries in the grand duchy the largest of these were in Apolda and Ilmenau Mining industry edit Ilmenau and Ruhla were important mining centers in the Thuringian Forest Around 1900 potash industry began to develop in the Werra valley around Vacha and Berka Werra There were salt works in Creuzburg and Bad Sulza Trade edit The major transport centers were Weimar and Eisenach Many banks opened branch offices here In 1895 there were 23 branch offices of savings banks in the grand duchy and they were managing deposits totalling approximately 40 million Reichsmark The grand duchy was part of the Thuringian Toll Union except for the exclaves Ostheim Oldisleben and Allstedt Education editThere was one state university in the grand duchy the University of Jena which was funded by Saxe Weimar Eisenach together with the other Thuringian states There were several art and music schools in Weimar and in Ilmenau there was the Technische Universitat Ilmenau a privately owned university providing technical and scientific education Gymnasiums existed in Weimar Eisenach and Jena Realschules were found in Weimar Apolda Jena Eisenach Neustadt and Ilmenau In 1895 there were 462 primary schools and any child would receive at least four years of primary education Large libraries of 200000 volumes each were maintained in Weimar and Jena In 1869 a State Museum was founded in Weimar See also editErnestine duchies Thuringian statesNotes edit The new Electoral Act in Berliner Tageblatt morning edition of 5 March 1909 p 2References editCarl Ferdinand Weiland General Charte von dem Grossherzogthume Weimar Eisenach nach den besten vorhandenen Hulfsmitteln entworfen und gezeichnet von C F Weiland Geographical Institute of Weimar 1817 reprinted Rockstuhl Bad Langensalza 2009 ISBN 978 3 86777 136 8 in German Karl Helmrich Geschichte des Grossherzogthums Sachsen Weimar Eisenach fur Schule und Haus Albrecht Weimar 1852 in German Constantin Kronfeld 1878 Geschichte des Landes Landeskunde des Grossherzogthums Sachsen Weimar Eisenach in German vol 1 Weimar Hermann Bohlau Constantin Kronfeld 1879 Topographie des Landes Landeskunde des Grossherzogthums Sachsen Weimar Eisenach in German vol 2 Weimar Hermann Bohlau Detlef Ignasiak 1996 Regenten Tafeln Thuringischer Furstenhauser Mit einer Einfuhrung in die Geschichte der Dynastien in Thuringen in German Jena Quartus ISBN 3 931505 20 0External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saxe Weimar Eisenach Saxe Weimar Eisenach genealogy Archived from the original on 2012 06 30 Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Saxe Weimar Eisenach Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Saxe Weimar Eisenach Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press 50 59 0 N 11 10 0 E 50 98333 N 11 16667 E 50 98333 11 16667 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Saxe Weimar Eisenach amp oldid 1219404334, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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