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Rhineland

The Rhineland (German: Rheinland; French: Rhénanie; Dutch: Rijnland; Kölsch: Rhingland; Latinised name: Rhenania) is a loosely defined area of Western Germany along the Rhine, chiefly its middle section.

Coat of arms of the Rhineland

Term edit

 
The Rhine Province (green) as of 1830 superimposed on modern borders.

Historically, the term "Rhinelands"[1] refers (physically speaking) to a loosely defined region embracing the land on the banks of the Rhine in Central Europe, which were settled by Ripuarian and Salian Franks and became part of Frankish Austrasia. In the High Middle Ages, numerous Imperial States along the river emerged from the former stem duchy of Lotharingia, without developing any common political or cultural identity.

A "Rhineland" conceptualization can be traced to the period of the Holy Roman Empire from the sixteenth until the eighteenth centuries when the Empire's Imperial Estates (territories) were grouped into regional districts in charge of defence and judicial execution, known as Imperial Circles. Three of the ten circles through which the Rhine flowed referred to the river in their names: the Upper Rhenish Circle, the Electoral Rhenish Circle and the Lower Rhenish-Westphalian Circle (very roughly equivalent to the present-day German federal state of North Rhine Westphalia). In the twilight period of the Empire, after the War of the First Coalition, a short-lived Cisrhenian Republic was established (1797–1802). The term covered the whole French conquered territory west of the Rhine (German: Linkes Rheinufer), but also including a small portion of the bridgeheads on the eastern banks. After the collapse of the French empire, the regions of Jülich-Cleves-Berg and Lower Rhine were annexed to the Kingdom of Prussia. In 1822 the Prussian administration reorganized the territory as the Rhine Province (Rheinprovinz, also known as Rhenish Prussia), a tradition that continued in the naming of the current German states of Rhineland-Palatinate and North Rhine-Westphalia.

Following the First World War, the western part of Rhineland was occupied by Entente forces, then demilitarized under the 1919 Treaty of Versailles and then the 1925 Locarno Treaties. German forces remilitarized the territory in 1936, as part of a diplomatic test of will, three years before the outbreak of the Second World War.

Geography edit

 
Deutsches Eck, Koblenz

To the west the area stretches to the borders with Luxembourg, Belgium and the Netherlands; on the eastern side it encompasses the towns and cities along the river and the Bergisches Land area up to the Westphalian (Siegerland) and Hessian regions. Stretching down to the North Palatine Uplands in the south, this area, except for the Saarland, more or less corresponds with the modern use of the term.

The southern and eastern parts are mainly hill country (Westerwald, Hunsrück, Siebengebirge, Taunus and Eifel), cut by river valleys, principally the Middle Rhine up to Bingen (or very rarely between the confluence with the Neckar and Cologne[2]) and its Ahr, Moselle and Nahe tributaries. The border of the North German plain is marked by the lower Ruhr. In the south, the river cuts the Rhenish Massif.

The area encompasses the western part of the Ruhr industrial region and the Cologne Lowland. Some of the larger cities in the Rhineland are Aachen, Bonn, Cologne, Duisburg, Düsseldorf, Essen, Koblenz, Krefeld, Leverkusen, Mainz, Mönchengladbach, Mülheim an der Ruhr, Oberhausen, Remscheid, Solingen, Trier and Wuppertal.

Toponyms as well as local family names often trace back to the Frankish heritage. The lands on the western shore of the Rhine are strongly characterized by Roman influence, including viticulture. In the core territories, large parts of the population are members of the Catholic Church.

History edit

Pre-Roman edit

At the earliest historical period, the territories between the Ardennes and the Rhine were occupied by the Treveri, the Eburones and other Celtic tribes, who, however, were all more or less modified and influenced by their Germanic neighbors. On the East bank of the Rhine, between the Main and the Lahn, were the settlements of the Mattiaci, a branch of the Germanic Chatti, while farther to the north were the Usipetes and Tencteri.[3]

Roman and Frankish conquests edit

 
Roman and barbarian parts of the Rhineland

Julius Caesar conquered the Celtic tribes on the West bank, and Augustus established numerous fortified posts on the Rhine, but the Romans never succeeded in gaining a firm footing on the East bank. As the power of the Roman empire declined the Franks pushed forward along both banks of the Rhine, and by the end of the 5th century had conquered all the lands that had formerly been under Roman influence. By the 8th century, the Frankish dominion was firmly established in western Germania and northern Gaul.

On the division of the Carolingian Empire at the Treaty of Verdun the part of the province to the east of the river fell to East Francia, while that to the west remained with the kingdom of Lotharingia.[3]

Holy Roman Empire edit

 
The Holy Roman Empire in 1618
 
Attack by the Swedish army on the Spanish troops in Bacharach during the Thirty Years' War

By the time of Emperor Otto I (d. 973) both banks of the Rhine had become part of the Holy Roman Empire, and in 959 the Rhenish territory was divided between the duchies of Upper Lorraine, on the Mosel, and Lower Lorraine on the Meuse.

As the central power of the Holy Roman Emperor weakened, the Rhineland disintegrated into numerous small independent principalities, each with its separate vicissitudes and special chronicles. The old Lotharingian divisions became obsolete, and while the Lower Lorraine lands were referred to as the Low Countries, the name of Lorraine became restricted to the region on the upper Moselle that still bears it. After the Imperial Reform of 1500/12, the territory was part of the Lower Rhenish–Westphalian, Upper Rhenish, and Electoral Rhenish Circles. Notable Rhenish Imperial States included:

In spite of its dismembered condition and the sufferings it underwent at the hands of its French neighbors in various periods of warfare, the Rhenish territory prospered greatly and stood in the foremost rank of German culture and progress. Aachen was the place of coronation of the German emperors, and the ecclesiastical principalities of the Rhine played a large role in German history.[3]

French Revolution edit

At the Peace of Basel in 1795, the whole of the left bank of the Rhine was taken by France. The population was about 1.6 million in numerous small states. In 1806, the Rhenish princes all joined the Confederation of the Rhine, a puppet of Napoleon. France took direct control of the Rhineland until 1814 and radically and permanently liberalized the government, society and economy. The Coalition of France's enemies made repeated efforts to retake the region, but France repelled all the attempts.[4]

The French swept away centuries worth of outmoded restrictions and introduced unprecedented levels of efficiency.[5] The chaos and barriers in a land divided and subdivided among many different petty principalities gave way to a rational, simplified, centralized system controlled by Paris and run by Napoleon's relatives. The most important impact came from the abolition of all feudal privileges and historic taxes, the introduction of legal reforms of the Napoleonic Code, and the reorganization of the judicial and local administrative systems. The economic integration of the Rhineland with France increased prosperity, especially in industrial production, while business accelerated with the new efficiency and lowered trade barriers. The Jews were liberated from the ghetto. There was limited resistance; most Germans welcomed the new regime, especially the urban elites, but one sour point was the hostility of the French officials toward the Roman Catholic Church, the choice of most of the residents.[6] The reforms were permanent. Decades later workers and peasants in the Rhineland often appealed to Jacobinism to oppose unpopular government programs, while the intelligentsia demanded the maintenance of the Napoleonic Code (which stayed in effect for a century).[7][8]

Prussian influence edit

 
Regierungsbezirke of the Prussian Rhine Province, 1905 map

A Prussian influence began on a small scale in 1609 by the occupation of the Duchy of Cleves. A century later, Upper Guelders and Moers also became Prussian. The Congress of Vienna expelled the French and assigned the whole of the lower Rhenish districts to Prussia, who left them in undisturbed possession of the liberal institutions to which they had become accustomed under the French.[3] The Rhine Province remained part of Prussia after Germany was unified in 1871.[9]

1918–1945 edit

The occupation of the Rhineland took place following the Armistice with Germany of 11 November 1918. The occupying armies consisted of American, Belgian, British and French forces. Under the Treaty of Versailles, German troops were banned from all territory west of the Rhine and within 50 kilometers east of the Rhine.

In 1920, under massive French pressure, the Saar was separated from the Rhine Province and administered by the League of Nations until a plebiscite in 1935, when the region was returned to Germany. At the same time, in 1920, the districts of Eupen and Malmedy were transferred to Belgium (see German-Speaking Community of Belgium).

In January 1923, in response to Germany's failure to meet its reparations obligations, French and Belgian troops occupied the Ruhr district, strictly controlling all important industrial areas. The Germans responded with passive resistance, which led to hyperinflation,[10] and the French gained very little of the reparations they wanted. French troops left the Ruhr in August 1925.

The occupation of the remainder of the Rhineland ended on 30 June 1930.[11]

On 7 March 1936, in violation of the Treaty of Versailles, German troops marched into the Rhineland and other regions along the Rhine. German territory west of the Rhine had been off-limits to the German military.

In 1945, the Rhineland was the scene of major fighting as the Allied forces overwhelmed the German defenders.[12]

Post-1946 edit

In 1946, the Rhineland was divided into the newly founded states of Hesse, North Rhine-Westphalia, and Rhineland-Palatinate. North Rhine-Westphalia is one of the prime German industrial areas, containing significant mineral deposits, (coal, lead, lignite, magnesium, oil, and uranium) and water transport. In Rhineland-Palatinate agriculture is more important, including the vineyards in the Ahr, Mittelrhein, and Mosel regions.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Dickinson, Robert E. (1964). Germany: A regional and economic geography (2nd ed.). London: Methuen. pp. 357f. ASIN B000IOFSEQ.
  2. ^ Marsden, Walter (1973). The Rhineland. New York: Hastings House. ISBN 0-8038-6324-1.
  3. ^ a b c d "Rhine Province" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 23 (11th ed.). 1911. pp. 242–243.
  4. ^ Blanning, T. C. W. (15 December 1983). The French Revolution in Germany: Occupation and Resistance in the Rhineland 1792-1802. ISBN 978-0198225645.
  5. ^ source?
  6. ^ Hajo Holborn, A History of Modern Germany, 1648-1840 (1964) pp 386-87
  7. ^ Michael Rowe, "Between Empire and Home Town: Napoleonic Rule on the Rhine, 1799-1814", Historical Journal (1999) 42#2 pp. 643-674 in JSTOR
  8. ^ Michael Rowe, From Reich to state: the Rhineland in the revolutionary age, 1780-1830 (2003)
  9. ^ Muirhead, James Fullarton (1886). "Prussia, Rhenish" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. XX (9th ed.).
  10. ^ "Hyperinflation and the invasion of the Ruhr". The Holocaust Explained. Retrieved 27 November 2023.
  11. ^ "Erster Weltkrieg und Besatzung 1918–1930 in Rheinland-Pfalz: 9. Der Abzug der Besatzungstruppen am 30. Juni 1930" [The First World War and the Occupation 1918–1930 in Rhineland-Palatinate: 9. The withdrawal of the occupying troops on 30 June 1930]. regionalgeschichte.net (in German). Retrieved 21 November 2023.
  12. ^ Ken Ford, The Rhineland 1945: The Last Killing Ground in the West (Osprey, 2000)

Further reading edit

  • Brophy, James M. (9 August 2007). Popular Culture and the Public Sphere in the Rhineland, 1800-1850. ISBN 9780521847698.
  • Collar, Peter (28 February 2013). The Propaganda War in the Rhineland: Weimar Germany, Race and Occupation After World War I. ISBN 9781780763460.
  • Diefendorf, Jeffry M. (14 July 2014). Businessmen and Politics in the Rhineland, 1789-1834. ISBN 9781400853786.
  • Emmerson, James Thomas (1977). The Rhineland Crisis. 7 March 1936. A Study in Multilateral Diplomacy. Introd. By Donald Cameron Watt.
  • Ford, Ken; Brian, Tony (2000). The Rhineland 1945: The Last Killing Ground in the West. Oxford: Osprey. ISBN 1-85532-999-9.
  • Rowe, Michael (31 July 2003). From Reich to State: The Rhineland in the Revolutionary Age, 1780-1830. ISBN 9780521824439.
  • Sperber, Jonathan (1989). "Echoes of the French Revolution in the Rhineland, 1830-1849". Central European History. 22 (2): 200–217. doi:10.1017/S000893890001150X. JSTOR 4546146. S2CID 144043871.
  • Sperber, Jonathan (20 December 1992). Rhineland Radicals: The Democratic Movement and the Revolution of 1848-1849. ISBN 0691008663.

rhineland, rhenish, redirects, here, other, uses, rhenish, disambiguation, disambiguation, this, article, about, region, historical, period, from, 1822, until, 1946, rhine, province, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, art. Rhenish redirects here For other uses see Rhenish disambiguation and Rhineland disambiguation This article is about the Rhineland as a region For the historical period from 1822 until 1946 see Rhine Province You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German September 2018 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 8 987 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Wikipedia article at de Rheinland see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated de Rheinland to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The Rhineland German Rheinland French Rhenanie Dutch Rijnland Kolsch Rhingland Latinised name Rhenania is a loosely defined area of Western Germany along the Rhine chiefly its middle section Coat of arms of the Rhineland Contents 1 Term 2 Geography 3 History 3 1 Pre Roman 3 2 Roman and Frankish conquests 3 3 Holy Roman Empire 3 4 French Revolution 3 5 Prussian influence 3 6 1918 1945 3 7 Post 1946 4 See also 5 References 6 Further readingTerm edit nbsp The Rhine Province green as of 1830 superimposed on modern borders Historically the term Rhinelands 1 refers physically speaking to a loosely defined region embracing the land on the banks of the Rhine in Central Europe which were settled by Ripuarian and Salian Franks and became part of Frankish Austrasia In the High Middle Ages numerous Imperial States along the river emerged from the former stem duchy of Lotharingia without developing any common political or cultural identity A Rhineland conceptualization can be traced to the period of the Holy Roman Empire from the sixteenth until the eighteenth centuries when the Empire s Imperial Estates territories were grouped into regional districts in charge of defence and judicial execution known as Imperial Circles Three of the ten circles through which the Rhine flowed referred to the river in their names the Upper Rhenish Circle the Electoral Rhenish Circle and the Lower Rhenish Westphalian Circle very roughly equivalent to the present day German federal state of North Rhine Westphalia In the twilight period of the Empire after the War of the First Coalition a short lived Cisrhenian Republic was established 1797 1802 The term covered the whole French conquered territory west of the Rhine German Linkes Rheinufer but also including a small portion of the bridgeheads on the eastern banks After the collapse of the French empire the regions of Julich Cleves Berg and Lower Rhine were annexed to the Kingdom of Prussia In 1822 the Prussian administration reorganized the territory as the Rhine Province Rheinprovinz also known as Rhenish Prussia a tradition that continued in the naming of the current German states of Rhineland Palatinate and North Rhine Westphalia Following the First World War the western part of Rhineland was occupied by Entente forces then demilitarized under the 1919 Treaty of Versailles and then the 1925 Locarno Treaties German forces remilitarized the territory in 1936 as part of a diplomatic test of will three years before the outbreak of the Second World War Geography edit nbsp Deutsches Eck KoblenzTo the west the area stretches to the borders with Luxembourg Belgium and the Netherlands on the eastern side it encompasses the towns and cities along the river and the Bergisches Land area up to the Westphalian Siegerland and Hessian regions Stretching down to the North Palatine Uplands in the south this area except for the Saarland more or less corresponds with the modern use of the term The southern and eastern parts are mainly hill country Westerwald Hunsruck Siebengebirge Taunus and Eifel cut by river valleys principally the Middle Rhine up to Bingen or very rarely between the confluence with the Neckar and Cologne 2 and its Ahr Moselle and Nahe tributaries The border of the North German plain is marked by the lower Ruhr In the south the river cuts the Rhenish Massif The area encompasses the western part of the Ruhr industrial region and the Cologne Lowland Some of the larger cities in the Rhineland are Aachen Bonn Cologne Duisburg Dusseldorf Essen Koblenz Krefeld Leverkusen Mainz Monchengladbach Mulheim an der Ruhr Oberhausen Remscheid Solingen Trier and Wuppertal Toponyms as well as local family names often trace back to the Frankish heritage The lands on the western shore of the Rhine are strongly characterized by Roman influence including viticulture In the core territories large parts of the population are members of the Catholic Church History editPre Roman edit At the earliest historical period the territories between the Ardennes and the Rhine were occupied by the Treveri the Eburones and other Celtic tribes who however were all more or less modified and influenced by their Germanic neighbors On the East bank of the Rhine between the Main and the Lahn were the settlements of the Mattiaci a branch of the Germanic Chatti while farther to the north were the Usipetes and Tencteri 3 Roman and Frankish conquests edit nbsp Roman and barbarian parts of the RhinelandJulius Caesar conquered the Celtic tribes on the West bank and Augustus established numerous fortified posts on the Rhine but the Romans never succeeded in gaining a firm footing on the East bank As the power of the Roman empire declined the Franks pushed forward along both banks of the Rhine and by the end of the 5th century had conquered all the lands that had formerly been under Roman influence By the 8th century the Frankish dominion was firmly established in western Germania and northern Gaul On the division of the Carolingian Empire at the Treaty of Verdun the part of the province to the east of the river fell to East Francia while that to the west remained with the kingdom of Lotharingia 3 Holy Roman Empire edit nbsp The Holy Roman Empire in 1618 nbsp Attack by the Swedish army on the Spanish troops in Bacharach during the Thirty Years WarBy the time of Emperor Otto I d 973 both banks of the Rhine had become part of the Holy Roman Empire and in 959 the Rhenish territory was divided between the duchies of Upper Lorraine on the Mosel and Lower Lorraine on the Meuse As the central power of the Holy Roman Emperor weakened the Rhineland disintegrated into numerous small independent principalities each with its separate vicissitudes and special chronicles The old Lotharingian divisions became obsolete and while the Lower Lorraine lands were referred to as the Low Countries the name of Lorraine became restricted to the region on the upper Moselle that still bears it After the Imperial Reform of 1500 12 the territory was part of the Lower Rhenish Westphalian Upper Rhenish and Electoral Rhenish Circles Notable Rhenish Imperial States included the ecclesiastical electorates of Cologne without Westphalian possessions and Trier the duchies of Julich Cleves and Berg forming the United Duchies of Julich Cleves Berg from 1521 the County of Sponheim and numerous further Imperial Counties the Free Imperial Cities of Aachen and Cologne In spite of its dismembered condition and the sufferings it underwent at the hands of its French neighbors in various periods of warfare the Rhenish territory prospered greatly and stood in the foremost rank of German culture and progress Aachen was the place of coronation of the German emperors and the ecclesiastical principalities of the Rhine played a large role in German history 3 French Revolution edit Main article Left Bank of the Rhine At the Peace of Basel in 1795 the whole of the left bank of the Rhine was taken by France The population was about 1 6 million in numerous small states In 1806 the Rhenish princes all joined the Confederation of the Rhine a puppet of Napoleon France took direct control of the Rhineland until 1814 and radically and permanently liberalized the government society and economy The Coalition of France s enemies made repeated efforts to retake the region but France repelled all the attempts 4 The French swept away centuries worth of outmoded restrictions and introduced unprecedented levels of efficiency 5 The chaos and barriers in a land divided and subdivided among many different petty principalities gave way to a rational simplified centralized system controlled by Paris and run by Napoleon s relatives The most important impact came from the abolition of all feudal privileges and historic taxes the introduction of legal reforms of the Napoleonic Code and the reorganization of the judicial and local administrative systems The economic integration of the Rhineland with France increased prosperity especially in industrial production while business accelerated with the new efficiency and lowered trade barriers The Jews were liberated from the ghetto There was limited resistance most Germans welcomed the new regime especially the urban elites but one sour point was the hostility of the French officials toward the Roman Catholic Church the choice of most of the residents 6 The reforms were permanent Decades later workers and peasants in the Rhineland often appealed to Jacobinism to oppose unpopular government programs while the intelligentsia demanded the maintenance of the Napoleonic Code which stayed in effect for a century 7 8 Prussian influence edit See also Rhine Province nbsp Regierungsbezirke of the Prussian Rhine Province 1905 mapA Prussian influence began on a small scale in 1609 by the occupation of the Duchy of Cleves A century later Upper Guelders and Moers also became Prussian The Congress of Vienna expelled the French and assigned the whole of the lower Rhenish districts to Prussia who left them in undisturbed possession of the liberal institutions to which they had become accustomed under the French 3 The Rhine Province remained part of Prussia after Germany was unified in 1871 9 1918 1945 edit Main article Allied occupation of the Rhineland The occupation of the Rhineland took place following the Armistice with Germany of 11 November 1918 The occupying armies consisted of American Belgian British and French forces Under the Treaty of Versailles German troops were banned from all territory west of the Rhine and within 50 kilometers east of the Rhine In 1920 under massive French pressure the Saar was separated from the Rhine Province and administered by the League of Nations until a plebiscite in 1935 when the region was returned to Germany At the same time in 1920 the districts of Eupen and Malmedy were transferred to Belgium see German Speaking Community of Belgium In January 1923 in response to Germany s failure to meet its reparations obligations French and Belgian troops occupied the Ruhr district strictly controlling all important industrial areas The Germans responded with passive resistance which led to hyperinflation 10 and the French gained very little of the reparations they wanted French troops left the Ruhr in August 1925 The occupation of the remainder of the Rhineland ended on 30 June 1930 11 Main article Remilitarization of the Rhineland On 7 March 1936 in violation of the Treaty of Versailles German troops marched into the Rhineland and other regions along the Rhine German territory west of the Rhine had been off limits to the German military In 1945 the Rhineland was the scene of major fighting as the Allied forces overwhelmed the German defenders 12 Post 1946 edit In 1946 the Rhineland was divided into the newly founded states of Hesse North Rhine Westphalia and Rhineland Palatinate North Rhine Westphalia is one of the prime German industrial areas containing significant mineral deposits coal lead lignite magnesium oil and uranium and water transport In Rhineland Palatinate agriculture is more important including the vineyards in the Ahr Mittelrhein and Mosel regions See also edit nbsp Germany portalCologne Bonn Region Lower Rhine region Rhineland Palatinate North Rhine Westphalia 6070 RheinlandReferences edit Dickinson Robert E 1964 Germany A regional and economic geography 2nd ed London Methuen pp 357f ASIN B000IOFSEQ Marsden Walter 1973 The Rhineland New York Hastings House ISBN 0 8038 6324 1 a b c d Rhine Province Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 23 11th ed 1911 pp 242 243 Blanning T C W 15 December 1983 The French Revolution in Germany Occupation and Resistance in the Rhineland 1792 1802 ISBN 978 0198225645 source Hajo Holborn A History of Modern Germany 1648 1840 1964 pp 386 87 Michael Rowe Between Empire and Home Town Napoleonic Rule on the Rhine 1799 1814 Historical Journal 1999 42 2 pp 643 674 in JSTOR Michael Rowe From Reich to state the Rhineland in the revolutionary age 1780 1830 2003 Muirhead James Fullarton 1886 Prussia Rhenish Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol XX 9th ed Hyperinflation and the invasion of the Ruhr The Holocaust Explained Retrieved 27 November 2023 Erster Weltkrieg und Besatzung 1918 1930 in Rheinland Pfalz 9 Der Abzug der Besatzungstruppen am 30 Juni 1930 The First World War and the Occupation 1918 1930 in Rhineland Palatinate 9 The withdrawal of the occupying troops on 30 June 1930 regionalgeschichte net in German Retrieved 21 November 2023 Ken Ford The Rhineland 1945 The Last Killing Ground in the West Osprey 2000 Further reading editBrophy James M 9 August 2007 Popular Culture and the Public Sphere in the Rhineland 1800 1850 ISBN 9780521847698 Collar Peter 28 February 2013 The Propaganda War in the Rhineland Weimar Germany Race and Occupation After World War I ISBN 9781780763460 Diefendorf Jeffry M 14 July 2014 Businessmen and Politics in the Rhineland 1789 1834 ISBN 9781400853786 Emmerson James Thomas 1977 The Rhineland Crisis 7 March 1936 A Study in Multilateral Diplomacy Introd By Donald Cameron Watt Ford Ken Brian Tony 2000 The Rhineland 1945 The Last Killing Ground in the West Oxford Osprey ISBN 1 85532 999 9 Rowe Michael 31 July 2003 From Reich to State The Rhineland in the Revolutionary Age 1780 1830 ISBN 9780521824439 Sperber Jonathan 1989 Echoes of the French Revolution in the Rhineland 1830 1849 Central European History 22 2 200 217 doi 10 1017 S000893890001150X JSTOR 4546146 S2CID 144043871 Sperber Jonathan 20 December 1992 Rhineland Radicals The Democratic Movement and the Revolution of 1848 1849 ISBN 0691008663 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rhineland amp oldid 1187246880, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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