Former countries in Europe after 1815
This article gives a detailed listing of all the countries, including puppet states, that have existed in Europe since the Congress of Vienna in 1815 to the present day. Each country has information separated into columns: name of the distinct country, its lifespan, the country or countries that hold all or some of the territory it once did, and further information about it.[1][2]
Article scope
The scope of this article begins in 1815, after a round of negotiations about European borders and spheres of influence were agreed upon at the Congress of Vienna.[3] The Congress of Vienna was a nine-month, pan-European meeting of statesmen who met to settle the many issues arising from the destabilising impact of the French Revolutionary Wars, the Napoleonic Wars, and the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire.[4]
The immediate background was Napoleonic France's defeat and surrender in May 1814, which brought an end to twenty-five years of nearly continuous war during which France had caused the annexation or geopolitical reorganisation of myriad European microstates as well as some larger. The Congress of Vienna was the first of a series of international meetings that came to be known as the Concert of Europe, which was an attempt to forge a peaceful balance of power in Europe,[5] including restoring or reorganising many of the states which had previously been removed from Europe's political map.
Sovereign countries
This is a list of all the independent countries or puppet states that existed between 1815 and the present day that no longer exist. (Lifespan of each is based on that country's sovereignty. This means that those countries may have existed outside of those dates as well but not under full independence.)
Former countries | Lifespan of sovereignty | Today part of | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Albania (kingdom) | 1928–1939 | Albania | The president of the Albanian Republic during the 1920s decided to reinstate the monarchy along with social darwinism but instead of reinstating the previous dynasty{{fact}} he became the new monarch, laying claim to the dynasty that ruled Albania in the Middle Ages; the country and his power were overthrown in 1939 by Fascist Italy. |
Albania (military occupation) | 1939–1943 1943–1944 |
Albania, Serbia, Macedonia | Albania was occupied by Axis Powers during World War II first by Fascist Italy and then by Nazi Germany |
Albania (People’s Republic) | 1946–1992 | Albania | Communist government of Albania after World War II. |
Principality of Albania | 1912–1925 | Albania | Gained independence from the Ottoman Empire during its final years of decline; was only actually ruled by a prince until the outbreak of World War I and was dissolved into a republic shortly after the war due to him being of German ethnicity |
Albanian Republic | 1925–1928 | Albania | Predecessor of the Albanian Kingdom |
Anhalt (Duchy) | 1813–1867 | Germany | Became a member of the North German Confederation Federal State. |
Armenia (Democratic Republic) | 1918–1920 | Armenia | The Transcaucasian Democratic Federative Republic temporarily broke up and the Democratic Republic of Armenia was created as one of its successor states but was reunified with the other two to create the Transcaucasian SSR in 1922. |
Austrian Empire | 1804–1867 | Austria, Hungary, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland, Ukraine, Romania, Serbia, Italy, Slovenia, Croatia | The first unified empire under the Habsburg Monarchy until Hungarian uprisings in 1848 and the Hungarian Compromise of 1867. |
Austro-Hungarian Empire | 1867–1918 | Austria, Hungary, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland, Ukraine, Romania, Serbia, Italy, Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia & Herzegovina | Successor state of the Austrian Empire with Hungarian self-government within the Habsburg Empire. |
Avar Khanate | 13th century–1864 | Russia | Comprised Circassia and Dagestan; it was the last country in the Caucasus to be annexed by the Russian Empire: Dagestan in 1859 and Circassia in 1864. |
Azerbaijan (Democratic Republic) | 1918–1920 | Azerbaijan | The Transcaucasian Democratic Federative Republic temporarily broke up and the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic was created as one of its successor states but was reunified with the other two to create the Transcaucasian SSR in 1922 |
Baden (Grand Duchy) | 1806–1871 | Germany | Joined the German Empire and became one of its members. |
Bavaria (Kingdom) | 1806–1871 | Germany | Joined the German Empire and became one of its members. |
Belarus (People's Republic) | 1918–1919 | Belarus | Gained independence from the Russian SFSR and quickly was swallowed by the Russian Soviets |
Bremen (Free City) | 1813–1867 | Germany | Became a member of the North German Confederation Federal State |
Brunswick (Duchy) | 1815–1867 | Germany | Became a member of the North German Confederation Federal State |
Bulgaria (Kingdom) | 1908–1946 | Bulgaria, Serbia, Macedonia, Greece | One of the last countries under the Ottoman Empire to gain independence; it suffered badly after World War I due to fighting as part of the Central Powers and lost some of its territory; it attempted to regain all of its territory and more during World War II |
Bulgaria (People's Republic) | 1946–1990 | Bulgaria | Communist government of Bulgaria after World War II behind the Iron Curtain |
Carpatho-Ukraine | 1938–1939 | Ukraine | It was an autonomous region within Czechoslovakia from late 1938 to March 15, 1939. It declared itself an independent republic on March 15, 1939, but was annexed by Hungary between March 15 and March 16, 1939, remaining under Hungarian control until the end of World War II, when it was ceded to the Soviet Union. |
Catalan Republic | 1931 | Spain | The leader of the Republican Left of Catalonia, Francesc Macià, proclaimed in Barcelona in April 14, 1931 the Catalan Republic under Iberian Federation a few hours before the proclamation of the Spanish Republic in Madrid. This fact was never accepted by the new authorities of Spain, but Macià ruled the Catalan Republic as his President until April 17, when after the negotiations between the Catalan and Spanish governments Catalonia becames an autonomous region inside Spain. |
Cospaia | 1440–1826 | Italy | By error, a small strip of land went unmentioned in a sale treaty, and its inhabitants promptly declared independence; nearly 400 years later it was absorbed into the Papal States and Tuscany equally. |
Couto Mixto | 10th century–1864 | Spain and Portugal | Neutral territory between Portugal and Spain which was divided between Portugal and Spain in 1864 |
Cretan State | 1898–1913 | Greece | Gained independence after several rebellions against the Ottoman Empire and after only 15 years of independence joined the Kingdom of Greece |
Crimea (Republic) | 2014 | Russia (disputed with Ukraine) | Unrecognized state which gained independence after a referendum and then joined Russia a day later |
Croatia (puppet state of Nazi Germany) | 1941–1945 | Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia | A puppet state of Nazi Germany during World War II. |
Czechoslovakia (Democratic Republic) | 1918–1938 1938–1939 1945–1948 |
Czech Republic, Slovakia, Ukraine | Democratic unified government of the Czechs and Slovaks after World War I |
Czechoslovakia (People's Republic) | 1948–1992 | Czech Republic, Slovakia | Communist government of the Czechs and Slovaks after World War II behind the Iron Curtain |
Danzig (League of Nations) | 1920–1939 | Poland | Protectorate of the League of Nations; annexed by Nazi Germany during the invasion of Poland in World War II |
Gurian Republic | 1905-06 | Georgia | Part of the Russian Empire |
German Democratic Republic | 1949–1990 | Germany | Also known as East Germany; was the Soviet-controlled government of Germany after World War II. |
Finnish Democratic Republic | 1939–1940 | Russia | A puppet state of the Soviet Union during World War II created from southern Finland which was quickly annexed into the Soviet Union |
France (Kingdom) | 1815–1830 1830–1848 |
France | Even though the French Revolution had intentionally ended the French crown in 1792, monarchical systems were in power for long periods of time between 1800 until finally ending in 1870. |
French State | 1940/1942–1944 | France, Belgium | In 1940, Nazi Germany occupied France and Belgium, unifying Belgium with northern and western France and a neutral puppet state called Vichy France was set up in the south until it, too, was invaded by Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy two years later. |
France (Imperial Monarchy) | 1852–1870 | France | President Napoleon III declared himself Emperor, but was swiftly defeated after 18 years of rule; France also lost Alsace-Lorraine and it returned to the Germanic lands now unifying under the first national state. |
Frankfurt (Free City) | 1816–1866 | Germany | Annexed by Prussia in 1866 |
German Empire | 1871–1918 | Germany, Poland, Denmark, Russia, France, Belgium, Lithuania | Germany at its greatest extent |
Georgia (Democratic Republic) | 1918–1921 | Georgia | The Transcaucasian Democratic Federative Republic temporarily broke up and the Democratic Republic of Georgia was created as one of its successor states but was reunified with the other two to create the Transcaucasian SSR in 1922 |
Greece (Kingdom) | 1832–1924 1935–1941 1944–1974 |
Greece, Turkey | Wavering between monarchy and dictatorship the Kingdom of Greece existed three times in history always on rocky foundations |
Hamburg (Free City) | 1813–1867 | Germany | Became a member of the North German Confederation Federal State |
Hanover (Kingdom) | 1814–1866 | Germany | In personal union with the United Kingdom until accession of Queen Victoria in 1837; annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia in 1866. |
Hesse (Grand Duchy) | 1806–1867/1871 | Germany | Northern part became a member of the North German Confederation Federal State and then the German Empire, with the southern part joining the German Empire as well. |
Hesse-Homburg | 1622–1866 | Germany | Annexed by Prussia in 1866 |
Hesse-Kassel | 1813–1866 | Germany | Annexed by Prussia in 1866 |
Hohenzollern-Hechingen | 1576–1850 | Germany | Annexed by Prussia in 1850 |
Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen | 1576–1850 | Germany | Annexed by Prussia in 1850 |
Hungary (Regency) | 1920–1946 | Hungary, Slovakia, Romania, Ukraine | Hungarian experiment with restoring the monarchy, which ended up only having a regent, and became a puppet state of Nazi Germany during World War II. |
Hungary (People's Republic) | 1946–1989 | Hungary | Communist government of Hungary after World War II behind the Iron Curtain. |
Hungarian Democratic Republic | 1918–1919 | Hungary | Short-lived experiment of Hungary with democracy after the fall of the Habsburg Empire. |
Hungarian Soviet Republic | 1919 | Hungary | Short-lived experiment of Hungary with Communism after the fall of the Habsburg Empire. |
Iceland (Kingdom) | 1918–1944 | Iceland | In personal union with the Kingdom of Denmark; previously a Danish colony since 1380 |
Italian Social Republic | 1943–1945 | Italy | A puppet state of Nazi Germany during World War II |
Italy (Unified Kingdom) | 1861–1946 | Italy, Slovenia, Croatia | Italian unification progressed to its fullest from 1861-1870 adding the territory of the Italian unified state in central Italy and the Two Sicilies to Sardinia as well as the annexations of Austrian Italy and the Papal States; during 1922-1943 it was the period of fascist dictatorship in Italy under Benito Mussolini |
Irish Free State | 1922–1937 | Ireland | Dominion of the British Empire after independence movements in the early 20th century from the former United Kingdom |
Irish Republic | 1919–1922 | United Kingdom, Ireland | Partly recognized, revolutionary state. Declared independence from the United Kingdom after the 1918 election during the Irish War of Independence. Partitioned into the Irish Free State and United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland after the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty. |
Kraków (Free City) | 1815–1846 | Poland | Protectorate of the Kingdom of Prussia, the Russian Empire and the Empire of Austria, later annexed into the Austrian Empire |
Kuban People's Republic | 1917–1920 | Russia | From the fall of the Russian Empire in 1917 until it was annexed by the Russian SFSR it existed as a small short-lived country in the Northern Caucasus and has never regained its independence |
Lichtenberg (Principality) | 1815–1834 | Germany | Owned by a branch of the Saxe-Coburgs; sold to the Kingdom of Prussia in 1834 |
Lippe (Principality) | 1123–1867 | Germany | Became a member of the North German Confederation Federal State |
Lübeck (Free City) | 1815–1867 | Germany | Became a member of the North German Confederation Federal State |
Lucca (Duchy) | 1815–1847 | Italy | Annexed by Tuscany in 1847 |
Luxembourg (Duchy) | 1839–1867 | Luxembourg | Predecessor of the Grand Duchy of Luxemburg which still exists today |
Massa and Carrara (Duchy) | 1473–1829 | Italy | Annexed by Modena and Reggio in 1829 |
Mecklenburg-Schwerin | 1352–1867 | Germany | Became a member of the North German Confederation Federal State |
Mecklenburg-Strelitz | 1701–1867 | Germany | Became a member of the North German Confederation Federal State |
Modena and Reggio (Duchy) | 1814–1859 | Italy | Joined the United Provinces of Central Italy, (one of the predecessors of the Kingdom of Italy) |
Moldavian Democratic Republic | 1918 | Moldova | From the fall of the Russian Empire in 1917 until 1918 and the Versailles Treaty which added this territory to the Kingdom of Romania the Moldavian Democratic Republic existed as one of the Imperial Russian successor countries in Europe |
Montenegro (Kingdom) | 1910–1918 | Montenegro | A kingdom which was annexed by Serbia during the Serbian Expansion after World War I to create Yugoslavia |
Montenegro (Principality) | 1878–1910 | Montenegro | Predecessor of the Kingdom of Montenegro |
Mountainous Republic of the Northern Caucasus | 1917–1920 | Russia | From the fall of the Russian Empire in 1917 until 1920 this country existed for a short time before annexation by the Russian SFSR and never has regained independence |
Nassau (Duchy) | 1806–1866 | Germany | Annexed by Prussia in 1866 |
Nazi Germany | 1933–1945 | Germany, Poland, Russia, Austria, Czech Republic, France, Luxembourg, Ukraine | Was the period of fascist dictatorship in Germany under Adolf Hitler before and until the end of World War II. |
North German Confederation Federal State | 1867–1871 | Germany, Poland, Denmark, Russia | First federal German state and predecessor of the German Empire |
Oldenburg (Grand Duchy) | 1180–1867 | Germany | Became a member of the North German Confederation Federal State |
Ottoman Empire | 1299–1923 | Turkey, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Serbia, Romania, Montenegro, Albania, Macedonia, Bulgaria, Greece | one of the greatest and longest lasting empires of all time this empire rose out of the Near East and fluctuated drastically in territory and economic status throughout its history; it was radically dissolved after World War I by a republican leader after the Allies had nearly annexed all of its remaining territory |
Papal States | 752–1870 | Italy | The entire eastern region joined the United Provinces of Central Italy, (one of the predecessors of the Kingdom of Italy); however, the remaining strip of land along the west coast did not join Italy until it was annexed in 1870 |
Parma (Duchy) | 1814–1859 | Italy | joined the United Provinces of Central Italy, (one of the predecessors of the Kingdom of Italy) |
Poland (People's Republic) | 1944–1990 | Poland | Communist government of Poland after World War II behind the Iron Curtain |
Portugal (Kingdom) | 1139–1910 | Portugal | After centuries of existence, revolution toppled the Portuguese monarchy in 1910. |
Prussia (Kingdom) | 1701–1867 | Germany, Poland, Denmark, Russia | Became a member of the North German Confederation Federal State |
Reuss Junior Line | 1806–1867 | Germany | Became a member of the North German Confederation Federal State (a region of Anhalt) |
Reuss Elder Line | 1778–1867 | Germany | Became a member of the North German Confederation Federal State (a region of Anhalt) |
Romania (Kingdom) | 1881–1947 | Romania, Moldova, Ukraine, Bulgaria | The Romanian monarchy was finally dissolved |
Romania (People’s Republic) | 1947–1989 | Romania | communist government of Romania after World War II behind the Iron Curtain |
Romania (Principality) | 1859–1881 | Romania | Predecessor of the Kingdom of Romania |
Russian Empire | 1721–1917 | Russia, Finland, Poland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Belarus, Ukraine, Moldova, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan | one of the great powers of the 18th and 19th centuries as well as the second largest modern empire in history |
Russian SFSR | 1917–1922 | Russia | From the fall of the Russian Empire in 1917 until 1922 the Russian SFSR was an independent communist state comprising almost all of the territory the Russian Empire had possessed in its final years; in 1922 it became the leading and dominating state in the Soviet Union until the union’s end in 1991 |
Saar (League of Nations) | 1920–1935 | Germany | League of Nations mandate within Weimar Germany |
Saar (French protectorate) | 1947–1956 | Germany | French-administered region which was later given to West Germany |
San Marco Republic | 1848–1849 | Italy | Revolutionary state, existing for 17 months in 1848–49. Based on the Venetian Lagoon, it extended into most of Venetia, or the Terraferma territory of the Venetian Republic. |
Sardinia (Kingdom) | 1720–1861 | Italy, France | Comprised the Italian regions of Sardinia and Piedmont; the leading state that unified the Italian Peninsula. |
Saxe-Altenburg | 1826–1867 | Germany | Became a member of the North German Confederation Federal State (a province of Thuringia) |
Saxe-Coburg and Gotha | 1826–1867 | Germany | Became a member of the North German Confederation Federal State (a province of Thuringia) |
Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld | 1699–1826 | Germany | Merged to form Saxe-Coburg and Gotha in 1826 |
Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg | 1680–1826 | Germany | Merged to form Saxe-Coburg and Gotha in 1826 |
Saxe-Meiningen | 1675–1867 | Germany | Became a member of the North German Confederation Federal State (a province of Thuringia) |
Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach | 1809–1867 | Germany | Became a member of the North German Confederation Federal State (a province of Thuringia) |
Saxony (Kingdom) | 1806–1867 | Germany | Became a member of the North German Confederation Federal State |
Schaumburg-Lippe | 1643–1867 | Germany | Became a member of the North German Confederation Federal State |
Schleswig (Duchy) | 1864–1866 | Germany, Denmark | Independence from Denmark in 1864; annexed by Prussia in 1866 |
Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt | 1599–1867 | Germany | Became a member of the North German Confederation Federal State (a province of Thuringia) |
Schwarzburg-Sondershausen | 1599–1867 | Germany | Became a member of the North German Confederation Federal State (a province of Thuringia) |
Serbia (Kingdom) | 1882–1918 | Serbia, Macedonia | Predecessor of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia which was formed from the annexations of other states |
Serbia (Principality) | 1815–1882 | Serbia | Predecessor of the Kingdom of Serbia |
Serbia and Montenegro | 2003–2006 | Serbia, Montenegro | Re-instated constitution of Yugoslavia ending that title and giving semi-autonomy to Montenegro before its independence from Serbia in 2006. |
Septinsular Republic | 1800–1815 | Greece | An archipelagic republic that existed from 1800 to 1807 under nominal Ottoman sovereignty in the Ionian Islands and then under the French Empire. |
Slovak State | 1939–1945 | Slovakia | A puppet state of Nazi Germany during World War II |
Spanish Republic | 1873–1874, | Spain | Spain has been a republic at two occasions; the Second Republic was defeated in the Spanish Civil War. |
Spanish State | 1939–1975 | Spain | Was the period of fascist dictatorship in Spain under Francisco Franco |
State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs | 1918 | Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Serbia | A short-lived, independent country which was annexed by Serbia during the Serbian Expansion after World War I to create Yugoslavia |
Swiss Restoration | 1815–1848 | Switzerland | From the crush of Napoleon to a new constitution which still exists today |
Transcaucasian Democratic Federative Republic | 1918 | Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan | From the fall of the Russian Empire in 1917 until 1918 and the temporary breakup of the Transcaucasian DFR, it was an independent state comprising Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan all three of which gained independence and then rejoined together in 1922 to form the Transcaucasian SSR. |
Trieste (Free Territory) | 1947–1975 | Italy, Slovenia, Croatia | De facto split in 1954 between neighbouring countries Italy and Yugoslavia, it was formally removed in 1975 with an agreement between these two countries |
Tuscany (Grand Duchy) | 1815–1859 | Italy | Joined the United Provinces of Central Italy, (one of the predecessors of the Kingdom of Italy) |
Two Sicilies (Kingdom) | 1816–1860 | Italy | Comprised the Italian regions of Naples and Sicily; was annexed by the Kingdom of Sardinia in March 1860 |
Ukraine (People’s Republic) | 1917–1921 | Ukraine | Gained independence from the Russian SFSR and quickly was swallowed by the Russian Soviets |
United Baltic Region (puppet state of Nazi Germany) | 1941–1944 | Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Belarus | A puppet state of Nazi Germany during World War II |
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics | 1922–1991 | Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, Moldova, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania | One of the greatest superpowers in modern times comprising most of the territory that once was under the Russian Empire including some new territory after World War II in Europe annexed from Germany, Poland and Czechoslovakia |
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland | 1801–1922 | United Kingdom, Republic of Ireland | Unified sovereign state of the Kingdom of Great Britain and the Kingdom of Ireland until the Irish independence movements in the early 20th century |
United Kingdom of the Netherlands | 1815–1839 | Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg | Unified sovereign state of the Dutch lands after the crush of Napoleon; only the area of Luxembourg was part of the German Confederation |
United Provinces of Central Italy | 1859–1860 | Italy | First step of Italian unification comprising Tuscany, Parma, Modena and Reggio, and the eastern region of the Papal States; was annexed by the Kingdom of Sardinia in March 1860 |
United States of the Ionian Islands | 1815–1864 | Greece | Was a state and amical protectorate of the United Kingdom. It was the successor state of the Septinsular Republic |
Waldeck-Pyrmont | 1180–1867 | Germany | Became a member of the North German Confederation Federal State |
Weimar Germany | 1919–1933 | Germany, Poland, Russia | First German democracy |
West Ukrainian People's Republic | 1918–1919 | Ukraine | Successor state of Ukrainians after the fall of the Austro-Hungarian Empire |
Württemberg (Kingdom) | 1806–1871 | Germany | Joined the German Empire and became one of its members |
Yugoslavia (Federal Republic) | 1992–2003 | Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia & Herzegovina | Democratic Yugoslavia after the fall of communism; Bosnia & Herzegovina gained independence between 1991 and 1993 |
Yugoslavia (Kingdom) | 1918–1941 | Serbia, Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Montenegro, Macedonia | Unified Slavic country after World War I |
Yugoslavia (People's Republic) | 1944–1992 | Serbia, Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Montenegro, Macedonia | Communist government of the south Slavic ethnicities after World War II outside of the Iron Curtain |
Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia | 1938–1945 | Czech Republic | A puppet state of Nazi Germany during World War II. |
First Austrian Republic | 1918–1934 | Austria | |
Federal State of Austria | 1934–1938 | Austria |
Autonomous countries or incorporated protectorates
This is a list of all the dependencies of countries that existed between 1815 to the present day that no longer exist. (Lifespan of each is based on that country’s autonomy. This means that those countries may have existed outside of those dates as well but as independent countries).
Former dependencies | Lifespan of dependency | Within present-day countries | Further information |
---|---|---|---|
Abkhazia (Principality) | 1810–1864 | Georgia | the principality was actually in existence since the 12th century and even managed to keep its autonomous home rule after being conquered by the Ottoman Empire in the 15th and 16th centuries; the autonomous principality was transferred to the Russian Empire in 1810 and was completely dissolved and assimilated into Russia by 1864 |
Bulgaria (Principality) | 1878–1908 | Bulgaria, Serbia | during the Russian-Turkish Wars of 1878, and the independence of Montenegro, Serbia and Romania, Bulgaria gained autonomous status within the Ottoman Empire; the principality gained complete independence in 1908 |
Erivan (Khanate) | 1604–1828 | Armenia | it was an autonomous region of the Persian Empire since 1604 and was annexed by the Russian Empire in 1828 |
Finland (Grand Duchy) | 1809–1918 | Finland, Russia | was an autonomous monarchy of the Russian Empire with the Russian Tsar as its grand duke |
Guria (Principality) | 1810–1829 | Georgia | the principality was actually in existence since the 15th century and even managed to keep its autonomous home rule after being conquered by the Ottoman Empire in the 16th century; the autonomous principality was transferred to the Russian Empire in 1810 and was completely dissolved and assimilated into Russia by 1829 |
Lombardy–Venetia (Kingdom) | 1815–1866 | Italy | comprised the Italian regions of Lombardy and Venetia; an autonomous kingdom within the Austrian Empire |
Montenegro (Principality) | 1815–1878 | Montenegro | after being a puppet state of Napoleon’s Europe it regained autonomous status within the Ottoman Empire until its independence in 1878 with Russian support |
Moresnet | 1816-1919 | Belgium | In 1816 Neutral Moresnet became a territory under common administration of the Netherlands and Prussia. The Netherlands were replaced by Belgium in 1830. After World War I in 1919 the territory was ceded to Belgium by Germany under Treaty of Versailles and formally annexed in 1920. |
Nakhchevan (Khanate) | 1747–1828 | Azerbaijan, Armenia | it was an autonomous region of the Persian Empire since 1747 and was annexed by the Russian Empire in 1828 |
Poland (protectorate) | 1815–1830 | Poland, Lithuania | was an autonomous monarchy of the Russian Empire with the Russian Tsar as its king; at home it was called the ‘Kingdom of Poland’ but internationally known as Congress Poland and functioned more like a protectorate |
Romania (Principality) | 1859–1878 | Romania | in 1859 Moldovia and Wallachia unified into the United Principalities and gained autonomous status within the Ottoman Empire until its independence in 1878 with Russian support |
Samegrelo (Principality) | 1803–1857 | Georgia | the principality was actually in existence since the 4th century BC and even managed to keep its autonomous home rule after being conquered by the Ottoman Empire in the 16th century; the autonomous principality was transferred to the Russian Empire in 1803 and was completely dissolved and assimilated into Russia by 1857 |
Serbia (Principality) | 1817–1878 | Serbia | a rebellion broke out in 1804 and 1817 Serbia gained autonomous status within the Ottoman Empire until its independence in 1878 with Russian support |
Proposed states
This is a list of all the independent countries that could or would have existed between 1815 to the present day that for some reason or another never did.
Proposed states | Proposed formation | Current states | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
United Baltic Duchy | 1918 | Estonia and Latvia | idea first brought forth by the Germans but was rejected after the Versailles Treaty and the Baltic Region became the three present day countries |
United States of Greater Austria | 1905 | Austria, Hungary, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland, Ukraine, Romania, Serbia, Italy, Slovenia, Croatia | concept brought forth by the Habsburgs in reaction to tensions within the empire of autonomy; the autocratic empire would be changed into a united autonomous country where each nation governed itself with some support from a much weaker Habsburg monarchy |
See also
General:
References
- ↑ This information is based on the main articles on these former countries.
- ↑ http://www.progenealogists.com/germany/articles/ganatomy.htm
- ↑ Bloy, Marjie (30 April 2002). "The Congress of Vienna, 1 November 1814 – 8 June 1815". The Victorian Web. Retrieved 2009-01-09.
- ↑ Bloy, Marjie (30 April 2002). "The Congress of Vienna, 1 November 1814 – 8 June 1815". The Victorian Web. Retrieved 2009-01-09.
- ↑ Bloy, Marjie (30 April 2002). "The Congress of Vienna, 1 November 1814 – 8 June 1815". The Victorian Web. Retrieved 2009-01-09.