|
IMPERIAL CITIES OR TOWNS , the usual See also: English See also: translation of Reichsstddte, an expression of frequent occurrence in See also: German See also: history
.
These were cities and towns subject to no authority except that of the emperor, or German See also: king, in other words they were immediate; the earliest of them stood on the demesne
See also: land of their See also: sovereign, and they often See also: grew up around his palaces
.
A distinction was thus made between a Reichsstadt and a Landstadt, the latter being dependent upon some See also: prince, not upon the emperor See also: direct
.
The See also: term Freie Reichsstadt, which is sometimes used in the same sense as Reichsstadt, is rightly only applicable to seven cities, See also: Basel, Strassburg, See also: Spires, See also: Worms, See also: Mainz, Cologne and See also: Regensburg
.
Having freed themselves from the domination of their ecclesiastical lords these called themselves Freistddte and in practice their position was in-distinguishable from that of the Reichsstddte
.
In the See also: middle ages many other places won the coveted position of a Reichsstadt
.
Some gained it by gift and others by See also: purchase; some won it by force of arms, others usurped it during times of anarchy, while a number secured it through the extinction of dominant families, like the See also: Hohenstaufen
.
There were many more See also: free towns in See also: southern than in See also: northern See also: Germany, but their number was continually fluctuating, for their liberties were lost much more quickly than they were gained
.
Mainz was conquered and subjected to the archbishop in 1462
.
Some free towns See also: fell into the hands of various princes of the See also: Empire and others placed themselves voluntarily under such See also: protection
.
Some, like See also: Donauworth in 1607, were deprived of their privileges by the emperor on account of real, or supposed, offences, while others were separated from the Empire by See also: conquest
.
In 1648 See also: Besancon passed into the possession of See also: Spain, Basel had already thrown in its See also: lot with the Swiss confederation, while Strassburg, See also: Colmar, See also: Hagenau and others were seized by See also: Louis XIV
.
Meanwhile the free towns had been winning valuable privileges in addition to those which they already possessed, and the wealthier among them, like See also: Lubeck and Augsburg, were practically imperia is imperio, waging war and making See also: peace, and ruling their See also: people without any outside interference
.
But, they had also learned that union is strength
.
They formed alliances among themselves, both for offence and for defence, and these Stadlebiinde had an important influence on the course of German history in the 14th and 15th centuries
.
These leagues were frequently at war with the ecclesiastical and secular potentates of their See also: district and in general they were quite able to hold their own in these quarrels
.
The right of the free towns to be represented in the imperial See also: diet was formally recognized in 148h, and about the same See also: time they divided themselves into two See also: groups,or benches, the Rhenish and the Swabian
.
By the peace of Westphalia in 1648 they were formally constituted as the third See also: college of the diet
.
A See also: list See also: drawn up in 1422 mentions 75 free cities, another drawn up in 1521 mentions 84, but at the time of the French Revolution the number had decreased to 51
.
At this time the Rhenish free cities were: Cologne, See also: Aix-la-Chapelle, Lubeck, Worms, Spires, See also: Frankfort-on-the-See also: Main, See also: Goslar, See also: Bremen, See also: Hamburg, See also: Muhlhausen, See also: Nordhausen, See also: Dortmund, See also: Friedberg and See also: Wetzlar
.
The Swabian free cities were: Regensburg, Augsburg, See also: Nuremberg, See also: Ulm, See also: Esslingen, See also: Reutlingen, See also: Nordlingen, Rothenburg-on-the-Tauber, Schwabisch-See also: Hall,
See also: Rottweil, Ueberlingen, See also: Heilbronn, See also: Memmingen, See also: Gmund, Dinkelsbtihl, See also: Lindau, See also: Biberach, See also: Ravensburg, See also: Schweinfurt, See also: Kempten, Windsheim, Kaufbeuern, Weil, Wangen, Isny, Pfullendorf, See also: Offenburg, Leutkirch, Wimpfen, See also: Weissenburg, Giengen, Gengenbach, Zell, Buchorn, See also: Aalen, Buchan and Bopfingen
.
But a large proportion of them had as little claim to their exceptional positions as the See also: pocket boroughs of See also: Great Britain and See also: Ireland had before the passing of the Reform See also: Bill of 1832
.
By the peace of See also: Luneville in 1801 Cologne, Aix-la-Chapelle, Worms and Spires were taken by See also: France, and by the decision of the imperial deputation of 1803 six cities only: Hamburg, Lubeck, Bremen, Augsburg, Frankfort-on-Main and Nuremberg, were allowed to keep their Reichsfreiheit, or in other words to hold directly of the Empire
.
This number was soon further reduced
.
On the dissolution of the Empire in 18o6 Augsburg and Nuremburg passed under theSee also: sovereignty of See also: Bavaria, and Frankfort was made the seat of a duchy for Karl Theodor von See also: Dalberg, elector and archbishop of Mainz, who was appointed prince primate of the Confederation of the Rhine
.
When the German Confederation was established in 1815 Hamburg, Lubeck, Bremen and Frankfort were recognized as free cities, and the first three hold that position in the See also: modern German empire; but Frankfort, in consequence of the See also: part it took in the war of 1866, lost its independence and was annexed by Prussia
.
In the earlier years of their existence the free cities were tinder the jurisdiction of an imperial officer, who was called the Reichsvogt or imperial advocate, or sometimes the Reichsschultheiss or imperial procurator
.
As time went on many of the cities See also: purchased the right of filling these offices with their own nominees; and in several instances the imperial authority fell practically into desuetude except when it was stirred into See also: action by See also: peculiar circumstances
.
The See also: internal constitution of the free cities was organized after no See also: common See also: model, although several of them had a constitution drawn up in imitation of that of Cologne, which was one of the first to assert its independence
.
For the history of the free cities, see J
.
J
.
Moser, Reichsstddtisches Handbuch (See also: Tubingen, 1732) ; D
.
Hanlein, Anmerkungen fiber die Geschichte der Reichsstddte (Ulm, 1775) ; A
.
See also: Wendt, Beschreibung der kaiserlichen freien Reichsstddte (See also: Leipzig, 18o4); G
.
W
.
Hugo, Die Mediatisirung der deutschen Reichsstddte (Carlsruhe, 1838) ; G
.
See also: Waite, Deutsche Verfassungsgeschichte (See also: Kiel, 1844 fol.); G
.
L. von See also: Maurer, Geschichte der Stadteverfassung in Deutschland (See also: Erlangen, 1869–1871); W
.
See also: Arnold, Verfassungsgeschichte der deutschen Freistadte (See also: Gotha, 1854) ; P
.
Brullcke, Die Entwickelung der Reichsstandschaft der Stadte (Hamburg, 1881) ; A
.
M
.
Ehrentraut, Untersuchungen fiber die Frage der Frei- and Reichsstddte (Leipzig, Igoe) ; and S
.
See also: Rietschel, Untersuchungen zur Geschichte der deutschen Stadtverfassung (Leipzig, 1905)
.
See also the article COMMUNE
.
(A
.
W
.
|
|
|
[back] IMPERIAL CHAMBER (Reichskammergericht) |
[next] IMPERIAL TO |
There are no comments yet for this article.
Do not copy, download, transfer, or otherwise replicate the site content in whole or in part.
Links to articles and home page are encouraged.