Haut-Rhin department

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Haut-Rhin
Coat of arms of the Haut-Rhin department
Finistère Côtes-d’Armor Ille-et-Vilaine Morbihan Loire-Atlantique Vendée Manche Mayenne Orne Calvados Maine-et-Loire Sarthe Indre-et-Loire Vienne Deux-Sèvres Indre Loir-et-Cher Eure Eure-et-Loir Seine-Maritime Oise Aisne Somme Pas-de-Calais Nord Ardennes Marne Meuse Meurthe-et-Moselle Haute-Marne Vosges Moselle Haut-Rhin Bas-Rhin Territoire de Belfort Cher Loiret Yonne Aube Côte-d’Or Nièvre Haute-Saône Essonne Yvelines Seine-et-Marne Val-d’Oise Hauts-de-Seine Val-de-Marne Seine-Saint-Denis Paris Doubs Jura Saône-et-Loire Allier Creuse Haute-Vienne Charente Charente-Maritime Corrèze Dordogne Gironde Puy-de-Dôme Loire Rhône Ain Haute-Savoie Cantal Lot Savoie Haute-Loire Isère Ardèche Landes Lot-et-Garonne Hautes-Alpes Drôme Alpes-Maritimes Var Alpes-de-Haute-Provence Vaucluse Bouches-du-Rhône Gard Hérault Lozère Aveyron Tarn Tarn-et-Garonne Gers Pyrènèes-Atlantiques Hautes-Pyrénées Aude Pyrénées-Orientales Haute-Garonne Ariège Haute-Corse Corse-du-Sud Vereinigtes Königreich Andorra Guernsey Jersey Niederlande Belgien Luxemburg Deutschland Liechtenstein Monaco Österreich Schweiz Italien SpanienLocation of the Haut-Rhin department in France
About this picture
region Grand Est
prefecture Colmar
Sub-prefecture (s) Altkirch
Colmar
Mulhouse
Thann
Residents 764.030 (Jan. 1, 2017)
Population density 217 inhabitants per km²
surface 3,528.39 km²
Arrondissements 4th
Community associations 17th
Cantons 17th
Communities 366
President of the
Department Council
Brigitte Klinkert
ISO-3166-2 code FR-68
Location of the Haut-Rhin
Location of the department of Haut-Rhin in the
region Grand Est

The department of Haut-Rhin [ o D ] (literally Upper Rhine , German  Upper Rhine ) is the French department with the serial number 68. Its capital is Colmar . It is located in the Grand Est region in the east of the country and, in contrast to the other Alsatian department Bas-Rhin (literally Lower Rhine ), is named after its location on the Rhine , which is closer to the source and forms the border with Germany .

According to a survey in 2013, 38% of the population still spoke an Alemannic dialect . This means that the German dialects are less widespread here than in the Bas-Rhin department and more than in the Moselle department in Lorraine .

The departments of Haut-Rhin and Bas-Rhin are (as of March 18, 2020) the departments in France most affected by the COVID-19 pandemic .

geography

The department is located in the south-east of the Grand Est region and in the south of Alsace . Its eastern border is the Upper Rhine , in the west the Vosges stretch through the country and in the south the foothills of the Swiss Jura .

The department borders in the north on the Alsatian department Bas-Rhin, in the east on the federal state Baden-Württemberg , in the southeast on the Swiss cantons Basel-Stadt , Basel-Landschaft and Solothurn , in the south on the canton Jura , in the southwest on the department Territoire de Belfort of the Franche-Comté region and, in the west, to the Vosges department of the former Lorraine region .

Landscape near the Haut-Rhin with a view of Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines
Lac Blanc near Orbey

history

Foundation and older history

The department was formed during the French Revolution on March 4, 1790 from the southern part of the then existing province of Alsace . It was divided into the three districts (French: district ) Altkirch, Belfort and Colmar, the forerunners of the arrondissements . The department and the districts were again divided into 32 cantons and had around 290,000 inhabitants. Even then, the capital was Colmar.

The arrondissements of Altkirch , Belfort , Colmar , Delémont ( Delsberg ) and Porrentruy ( Pruntrut , former Département du Mont Terrible ) were established on February 17, 1800. On May 30, 1814, the Delémont and Porrentruy arrondissements were dissolved because the Congress of Vienna had awarded their territory to the Swiss canton of Bern . In 1857 the Altkirch arrondissement was replaced by Mulhouse .

District of Upper Alsace

District of Upper Alsace 1890

From May 10, 1871 ( Peace of Frankfurt ) to June 28, 1919 ( Peace Treaty of Versailles ), the department was part of the German Empire . As the district of Upper Alsace , it belonged to the realm of Alsace-Lorraine . The district was divided into six districts: Altkirch (as before), Gebweiler , Colmar (as before), Mülhausen (as before), Rappoltsweiler and Thann . The arrondissement of Belfort with its French-speaking population remained as Territoire de Belfort in France. The Oberelsaß district covered 3,508 km² and in 1885 had 462,549 inhabitants.

At the head of the district stood a district president; District presidents were:

president Term of office
Robert von der Heydt 1871-1875
Adolf Ernst von Ernsthausen 1875-1879
Ludwig Ferdinand Timme 1880-1888
Gustav of Jordan 1888-1898
Alexander zu Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst 1898-1906
Albert August Wilhelm von Puttkamer 1906-1918

The parliament in the district was the district day . This elected ten members to the regional committee of the realm of Alsace-Lorraine until the state parliament was set up in 1911 with the constitution.

Since the end of the First World War

With the reintegration of the department into France in 1919, the structure of the districts was almost completely taken over into arrondissements. Gebweiler became Guebwiller again, Mulhouse became Mulhouse, Rappoltsweiler became Ribeauvillé, only Colmar was divided into Colmar-Ville and Colmar-Campagne, which were merged again in 1934. The Territoire de Belfort was not reintegrated into the Haut-Rhin department, but became an independent department of France in 1922. In 1941 he was assigned the number 90.

From 1960 to 2015, Alsace formed its own region, which in 2016 became part of the Grand Est region.

Cities

The most populous communes in the Haut-Rhin are:

city Population
(2017)
Arrondissement
Mulhouse ( Mulhouse ) 109,443 Mulhouse
Colmar 69.105 Colmar
Saint-Louis ( Saint Ludwig ) 21,177 Mulhouse
Illzach 14,691
Wittenheim 14,317
Rixheim 13,902
Kingersheim 13,055
Riedisheim 12,645
Cernay ( Sennheim ) 11,565 Thann
Guebwiller ( Gebweiler ) 11.094 Guebwiller

Administrative division

Communes and arrondissements in the Haut-Rhin department

The Haut-Rhin department is divided into 4 arrondissements , 17 cantons and 364 communes . On January 1, 2015, the arrondissements of Guebwiller and Ribeauvillé were dissolved.

Arrondissement Cantons Communities Residents
January 1, 2017
Area
km²
Density of
population / km²
Code
INSEE
Altkirch 2 108 000000000069851.000000000069,851 666.10 000000000000105.0000000000105 681
Colmar-Ribeauvillé 5 98 000000000211312.0000000000211,312 1,147.99 000000000000184.0000000000184 682
Mulhouse 8th 79 000000000352817.0000000000352.817 707.16 000000000000499.0000000000499 684
Thann-Guebwiller 5 81 000000000130050.0000000000130.050 907.14 000000000000143.0000000000143 686
Haut-Rhin department 17th 366 000000000764030.0000000000764.030 3,528.39 000000000000217.0000000000217 68

See also:

coat of arms

Description: In red, a golden oblique bar with three golden lily crowns placed on both sides after the bar .

Web links

Commons : Département Haut-Rhin  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Etude sur le dialecte alsacien (PDF) Accessed February 4, 2014
  2. Comité consultatif pour la promotion des langues régionales et de la pluralité linguistique intern : Redéfinir une politique publique en faveur des langues régionales et de la pluralité linguistique intern . July 2013, p. 94 (French, Rapport Langues de France - comité consultatif [accessed on April 16, 2017]).
  3. FAZ.net March 18, 2020: There are no more Covid 19 beds
  4. Administrative history
  5. Gérard Lang: Le Code officiel geographique. (PDF; 1.9 MB) In: Courrier des statistiques 108 (2003), pp. 53–62, here p. 55.
  6. Decree No. 2014-1720 of the French Ministry of the Interior to dissolve the arrondissements of Guebwiller and Ribeauvillé and to reclassify the communes of the arrondissement of Thann in the Haut-Rhin department

Coordinates: 47 ° 55 '  N , 7 ° 20'  E