Bezirk Lothringen

District of Lorraine
Bezirk Lothringen (German)
Présidence de Lorraine (French)
District of Alsace-Lorraine

 

1871–1918/1920

Coat of arms

Lorraine district with its subdistricts in different colours (1890)
Capital Metz
Government regional administration
Bezirkspräsident
  1871–1872 G.H. von Donnersmarck
  1872–1873 Botho zu Eulenburg
  1875–1876 Robert von Puttkamer
Präsident des Bezirkstags (speaker of parl.)
  1874–1881 Auguste-François Adam
  1881–1911 Eduard Jaunez
  1911–1918 Georges Ditsch
Legislature Bezirkstag (parliament)
Historical era 19th and 20th century
  Franco-Prussian War 1870–1871
  seized to Germany 19 May 1871 1871
  reorganisation acc.
to German standards

1871
  Bezirkstag est. 1874
  reg. carsign VI C 1906
  French occupation 1918–1920
  seized to France
Versailles Tr. (effective)

10 January 1920 1918/1920
  reconstituted as
Moselle dept.
1920
Area
  1900 6,223 km2 (2,403 sq mi)
  1910 6,228 km2 (2,405 sq mi)
Population
  1900 564,829 
Density 90.8 /km2  (235.1 /sq mi)
  1910 655,211 
Density 105.2 /km2  (272.5 /sq mi)
Political subdivisions 8 rural districts (as of 1901)
1 urban district (Metz)

Bezirk Lothringen (French: Présidence [1] de la Lorraine;[2] i.e. Department of Lorraine), also called German Lorraine (deutsches Lothringen), was the name for a Department ("Bezirk") in the western part of Alsace-Lorraine when it was part of the German Empire from 1871 to 1918.

History

The District of Lorraine was unlike Prussian government regions no simple governorate but a corporation of self-rule of the pertaining rural and urbans subdistricts and cantons, similar to regions in the then neighbouring Bavaria (Palatinate). Thus the district parliaments delegated deputies to the General Council (parliament), the Bezirkstag von Lothringen (French: Conseil Général de la Lorraine). The capital of the District of Lorraine was Metz.

Territorial composition

The department comprised the districts ("Kreise") of :

  1. Metz, independent city (Stadtkreis)
  2. "Kreis Bolchen", seated in Bolchen (Boulay)
  3. "Kreis Château-Salins", seated in Château-Salins
  4. "Lreis Diedenhofen-Ost", seated in Thionville
  5. "Kreis Diedenhofen-West", seated in Thionville
  6. "Kreis Forbach", seated in Forbach
  7. "Kreis Metz-Land", seated in Metz
  8. "Kreis Saarburg",[3] seated in Sarrebourg
  9. "Kreis Saargemünd", seated in Sarreguemines

The district of Lorraine corresponds exactly to the current département of Moselle. After the outbreak of the Second World War and the defeat of France in 1940, the département of Moselle, renamed CdZ-Gebiet Lothringen, was added to the Gau Westmark on 30 November 1940.[4]

District Presidents

(German: Bezirkspräsident/French: Président de district)

References

  1. F. ROTH La Présidence de Lorraine dans l’Empire allemand de 1871 à 1918, Annales de l’Est, Mémoire n° 50, Nancy, 1976, Moulin-les-Metz, 720 pages
  2. German was the official language and its promotion was furthered, but bearing the strong proportion of French-speaking Lorrainese in mind several bilingual publications appeared especially referring to the area of their settlement in the west and south of the Department or referring to department-wide events and organisations. In official bilingual publications the Bezirk Lothringen is translated as Département de la Lorraine. Cf. the title of the department's legal gazette: Amtsblatt für den Bezirk Lothringen / Recueil officiel des actes administratifs du Département de la Lorraine.
  3. Not to be confused with the former Rhenish Kreis Saarburg, seated in Saarburg in the Rhineland.
  4. Jacques Lorraine (Edmond Huntzbuchler): Les Allemands en France. Origines, Bretagne, Zone interdite Est, Bourgogne, Alsace et Lorraine, Alger-Oran: editions du Désert, 1945, pp. 121–124.

Biography

External links

Coordinates: 49°02′N 6°39′E / 49.033°N 6.650°E / 49.033; 6.650

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