Duchy of Salzburg
Electorate of Salzburg (1803–1806) Austrian Salzach district (1806–1810) Duchy of Salzburg (1849 / 50–1918) |
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Official language | German | ||||
Capital | Salzburg from 1849 | ||||
Form of government | Electorate / Duchy ( Austrian Empire before 1867, Austria-Hungary until 1918) | ||||
Head of state | 1803 to 1806 elector , no head of state since 1806, as part of Bavaria for a short time and then part of the monarchy. | ||||
Head of government | State President / Governor (from 1850) | ||||
currency | 1 Thaler ( Convention Thaler ) = 2 (Austrian) Gulden = 100 Kreutzer = 400 Pfennig = 800 Heller ; from 1857 ( Vienna Coin Agreement ): 1 thaler ( Vereinstaler ) = 1½ gulden = 150 Neukreuzer ; from 1892: 1 crown = 100 hellers |
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founding | 1803 Electorate, secularization of the Prince Archbishopric of Salzburg , 1806 Austrian Salzachkreis, 1810 Bavarian. Salzachkreis, 1816 Austrian Salzachkreis, 1849 own Kronland Salzburg) | ||||
resolution | 1918 | ||||
Coat of arms: Meyers, 1888 |
The Duchy of Salzburg (1849–1918) emerged from the Prince Archbishopric of Salzburg and the Electorate of Salzburg . From 1805 to 1809 the area formed the Salzachkreis of the Austrian Empire, from 1810 to the end of 1815 the Kingdom of Bavaria , from 1816 again the Salzachkreis of the Austrian state of Austria ob der Enns until it was raised to an independent Crown Land of Salzburg in 1849 . The federal state of Salzburg was formed from it in 1918 . Salzburg was not really called duchy in the 19th century. Rather, the title of "Duke of Salzburg" was one of countless titles that were intended to glorify the emperor. Politically, this title had no direct impact on the administration of the area that is now called the State of Salzburg.
history
The prince-archbishopric was converted into a secular electorate as the territory of the Holy Roman Empire by the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss and together with the formerly ecclesiastical and now secularized territories of the prince-provost of Berchtesgaden , the bishopric of Eichstätt and part of the bishopric of Passau to Ferdinand III. handed over by Habsburg-Tuscany . Ferdinand was compensated for the Grand Duchy of Tuscany , which he ceded to Ludwig of Parma in 1802 under pressure from the victorious Napoleon Bonaparte with the Treaty of Paris . After the abdication of Archbishop Count Hieronymus Colloredo on February 11, 1803, Ferdinand was elected on February 25, 1803.
With the Peace of Pressburg , Salzburg went to the Austrian Empire at the end of 1805 , but without Eichstätt and Passau, both of which were annexed to the Kingdom of Bavaria after the elector had reigned for three years . With the simultaneous end of the Holy Roman Empire, the electoral dignity, which was an electoral office for the Roman-German royal dignity , became obsolete , and Salzburg became an Austrian province in 1806. The formal title of ducal dignity went to the Emperor of Austria (at the time of Ferdinand's brother Franz II / I ) and was also included in his title . Ferdinand, on the other hand, was compensated with the Grand Duchy of Würzburg .
After the Treaty of Schönbrunn , the Duchy of Salzburg became part of Napoleonic France in 1809 and, with the reorganization of Europe in 1810, part of the Kingdom of Bavaria, where it formed the Salzachkreis with Kitzbühel , Traunstein and Ried im Innkreis .
After the Peace of Paris in 1814 , large parts of it were returned to Austria through the Treaty of Munich in 1816 . The Rupertiwinkel on the left bank of the Salzach as well as Berchtesgaden remained with Bavaria. Apart from that, Salzburg became the fifth district to be attached to the state of Austria ob der Enns . The area around the Zillertal and the Defreggental went to Tyrol. The city of Friesach was ceded to Carinthia as early as 1803. In 1824 the Archdiocese of Salzburg was established as a purely spiritual organizational unit. Archbishop Andreas Rohracher did not renounce the title of Prince Archbishop until 1951, after Pope Pius XII had used this title and the secular symbols of dignity associated with it (such as the prince's hat and coat ) . had been abolished.
In 1849 the Salzach district of Upper Austria (Austria ob der Enns) became an independent Austrian crown land , which was administered from Linz until 1854. Like the other Austrian crown lands, it existed until the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian dual monarchy at the end of the First World War and had undergone three structural changes during this period.
Lords of Salzburg
Elector of Salzburg:
- 1803-1805: Ferdinand III. from Austria-Tuscany
- (1805: French military administration )
Bearer of the title "Duke of Salzburg":
- 1805–1809: Franz , Emperor of Austria (I.) etc.
- (1809–1810: French military administration )
- (1810–1816: Maximilian Joseph , King in Bavaria (I.); Governor General of the Salzach District: Crown Prince Ludwig )
- 1816–1835: Franz, Emperor of Austria, (again, today's Salzburg as the "Salzachkreis" was part of Austria above the Enns)
- 1835–1848: Ferdinand , Emperor of Austria (I.) etc. (today's Salzburg as the "Salzachkreis" was part of Austria above the Enns)
- 1848–1916: Franz Joseph , Emperor of Austria (I.), Apostolic King of Hungary (I.) etc.
- 1916–1918: Karl , Emperor of Austria (I.), King of Hungary (IV.) Etc.
Upper civil service:
literature
- Gerhard Ammerer , Alfred Stefan Weiss (ed.): The secularization of Salzburg in 1803. Requirements - events - consequences . Lang Verlag, Frankfurt am Main 2005, ISBN 3-631-51918-4 .
- Fritz Koller, Hermann Rumschöttel: Bavaria and Salzburg in the 19th and 20th centuries, from the Salzach district to the EUregio . Samson Verlag, 2006, ISBN 3-921635-98-5 .
- Contemporary reference works
- Salzburg - previously an archbishopric, but since 1803 secularized and elevated to electorate. In: Brockhaus Conversations-Lexikon . 1st edition. tape 5 . Amsterdam 1809, p. 42-43 ( zeno.org ).
- Salzburg [1]. Salzburg, the duchy. Austrian crown land. In: Herders Conversations-Lexikon . tape 5 . Freiburg im Breisgau 1854, p. 32 ( zeno.org ).
- Salzburg . In: Heinrich August Pierer , Julius Löbe (Hrsg.): Universal Lexicon of the Present and the Past . 4th edition. tape 14 . Altenburg 1862, p. 819-821 ( zeno.org ).
- Salzburg (Duchy), Austria. Crown land, formed from the former archbishopric of the same name . In: Meyers Konversations-Lexikon . 4th edition. Volume 14, Verlag des Bibliographisches Institut, Leipzig / Vienna 1885–1892, p. 241.
- Salzburg, Duchy and Crown Land of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy . In: Brockhaus Konversations-Lexikon 1894–1896, Volume 14, p. 235.
- Salzburg [1]: Salzburg, Duchy. In: Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon . 6th edition. tape 17 . Leipzig 1909, p. 499-500 ( zeno.org ).
- Salzburg [2]: Salzburg, former German archbishopric. In: Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon . 6th edition. tape 17 . Leipzig 1909, p. 500–501 ( zeno.org - history until 1849).
- Salzburg, Duchy, crown land of the Zisleithan part of the Austro-Hungarians. Monarchy In: Brockhaus' Kleines Konversations-Lexikon . 5th edition. tape 2 . Leipzig 19, p. 599 ( zeno.org ).
Web links
- 1805: Salzburg for the first time near Austria ( Memento from August 25, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
- In 1816 Salzburg finally came to Austria ( Memento of August 26, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
Individual evidence
- ↑ today's coat of arms . This is derived from the Habsburg-Austrian land with the ducal hat as the crown of rank
- ^ Electorate of Salzburg. In: SalzburgWiki. SN , March 12, 2009, accessed June 15, 2009 .
- ^ Franz Gall : Austrian heraldry. Handbook of coat of arms science. 2nd edition Böhlau Verlag, Vienna 1992, p. 219, ISBN 3-205-05352-4 .